9.1 Multiple Choice Questions
9.1 Multiple Choice Questions
9.1 Multiple Choice Questions
Rank the five terrestrial worlds in order of size from smallest to largest:
A)
2)
any process by which a planet's surface evolves differently from another planet's surface
D)
any process by which one part of a planet's surface evolves differently from another part of the same planet's surface
E)
any process by which a planet evolves differently from its moons
Answer:
3)
The planet must be geologically active, that is, have volcanoes, planetquakes, and erosion from weather.
E)
4)
conducts electricity.
Answer:
5)
The core, mantle, and crust of a planet are defined by differences in their
A)
geological activity.
B)
temperature.
C)
strength.
D)
composition.
Answer:
D
6)
the rigid rocky material of the crust and uppermost portion of the mantle.
D)
7)
What is the most important factor that determines the thickness, and therefore strength, of the lithosphere?
A)
pressure
B)
viscosity
C)
composition
D)
internal temperature
E)
8)
The terrestrial planet cores contain mostly metal because
A)
metals condensed first in the solar nebula and the rocks then accreted around them.
C)
metals sank to the center during a time when the interiors were molten throughout.
D)
9)
Which internal energy source produces heat by converting gravitational potential energy into thermal energy?
A)
accretion
B)
differentiation
C)
radioactivity
D)
both A and B
E)
10)
Which internal energy source is the most important in continuing to heat the terrestrial planets today?
A)
accretion
B)
differentiation
C)
radioactivity
D)
tidal heating
E)
11)
It is the process in which warm material expands and rises while cool material contracts and falls.
C)
It is the process in which warm material gets even warmer and cool material gets even cooler.
D)
It is the process in which a liquid separates according to density, such as oil and water separating in a jar.
E)
It is the process in which bubbles of gas move upward through a liquid of the same temperature.
Answer:
B
12)
What are the circumstances under which convection can occur in a substance?
A)
13)
14)
The main process by which heat flows upward through the lithosphere is
A)
conduction.
B)
convection.
C)
radiation.
D)
accretion.
E)
differentiation.
Answer:
15)
Heat escapes from a planet's surface into space by thermal radiation. Planets radiate almost entirely in the wavelength
range of the
A)
infrared.
B)
radio.
C)
visible.
D)
ultraviolet.
E)
16)
Which of the following worlds have the thinnest lithospheres?
A)
17)
Which of the following best describes why the smaller terrestrial worlds have cooler interiors than the larger ones?
A)
They had more volcanic eruptions in the past, which released their internal heat.
Answer:
D
18)
Mars
B)
Earth
C)
the Moon
D)
Venus
E)
Mercury
Answer:
19)
Why does Earth have the strongest magnetic field among the terrestrial worlds?
A)
It is the only one that has both a partially molten metallic core and reasonably rapid rotation.
D)
20)
Which of the following most likely explains why Venus does not have a strong magnetic field?
A)
It is too large.
E)
21)
What are the conditions necessary for a terrestrial planet to have a strong magnetic field?
A)
22)
its composition
B)
its size
C)
its mass
Answer:
23)
Which two properties are most important in determining the surface temperature of a planet?
A)
24)
Which of the following does not have a major effect in shaping planetary surfaces?
A)
impact cratering
B)
volcanism
C)
tectonics
D)
erosion
E)
magnetism
Answer:
25)
10 times larger
D)
26)
The relatively few craters that we see within the lunar maria
A)
were formed by impacts that occurred before those that formed most of the craters in the lunar highlands.
B)
were formed by impacts that occurred after those that formed most of the craters in the lunar highlands.
C)
were created by the same large impactor that led to the formation of the maria.
D)
27)
When we see a region of a planet that is not as heavily cratered as other regions, we conclude that
A)
the planet is rotating very slowly and only one side was hit by impactors.
C)
the planet formed after the age of bombardment and missed out on getting hit by leftover planetesimals.
D)
the surface in the region is older than the surface in more heavily cratered regions.
E)
the surface in the region is younger than the surface in more heavily cratered regions.
Answer:
28)
29)
30)
C
31)
internal temperature changes that caused the crust to expand and stretch
C)
the circulation of convection cells in the mantle, which dragged against the lithosphere
D)
cooling and contracting of the planet's interior, which caused the mantle and lithosphere to be compressed
E)
volcanism, which produced heavy volcanoes that bent and cracked the lithosphere
Answer:
32)
the wearing down or building up of geological features by wind, water, ice, and other phenomena of planetary weather
Answer:
33)
the wearing down or building up of geological features by wind, water, ice, and other phenomena of planetary weather
Answer:
34)
the wearing down or building up of geological features by wind, water, ice, and other phenomena of planetary weather
Answer:
35)
the wearing down or building up of geological features by wind, water, ice, and other phenomena of planetary weather
Answer:
36)
a dense atmosphere.
Answer:
D
37)
mountains
B)
valleys
C)
volcanos
D)
cliffs
E)
38)
What is basalt?
A)
any substance that evaporates easily and is a gas, liquid, or ice on Earth
B)
39)
How did the lunar maria form?
A)
Large impacts fractured the Moon's lithosphere, allowing lava to fill the impact basins.
B)
The early bombardment created heat that melted the lunar surface in the regions of the maria.
C)
Volatiles escaping from the Moon's interior heated and eroded the surface in the regions of the maria.
D)
The giant impact that created the Moon left smooth areas that we call the maria.
E)
The maria are the result of gradual erosion by micrometeorites striking the Moon.
Answer:
40)
Why does the Moon have a layer of powdery "soil" on its surface?
A)
The soil exists because the Moon accreted from powdery material after a giant impact blasted Earth.
C)
Volatiles escaping from the Moon's interior bubble upward and make the soil.
D)
The soil is the result of the same processes that make powdery sand on Earth.
E)
41)
The Caloris Basin on Mercury covers a large region of the planet, but few smaller craters have formed on top of it. From
this we conclude that
A)
the Caloris Basin formed toward the end of the solar system's period of heavy bombardment.
E)
42)
They were probably formed by tectonic stresses when the entire planet shrank as its core cooled.
C)
They probably formed when a series of large impacts hit Mercury one after the other.
D)
They represent one of the greatest mysteries in the solar system, as no one has suggested a reasonable hypothesis for their
formation.
Answer:
B
43)
Olympus Mons is a
A)
stratovolcano on Mercury.
C)
44)
Valles Marineris is a
A)
45)
Which of the following does not provide evidence that Mars once had flowing water?
A)
the presence of vast canals discovered in the late 1800s by Giovanni Schiaparelli and mapped by Percival Lowell
D)
rocks of many different types jumbled together, as would occur if there had once been a great flood in the region, found
by the Mars Pathfinder
E)
some very old craters that appear to have been eroded by rain
Answer:
46)
47)
How have we been able to construct detailed maps of surface features on Venus?
A)
by studying Venus with powerful optical telescopes on spacecraft that were sent to orbit Venus
C)
48)
Which two geological processes appear to have been most important in shaping the present surface of Venus?
A)
D
49)
the Moon
B)
Mercury
C)
Venus
D)
Mars
E)
50)
Mercury.
B)
Venus.
C)
Moon.
D)
Mars.
Answer:
51)
What process has shaped Earth's surface more than any other?
A)
impact cratering
B)
volcanism
C)
plate tectonics
D)
erosion
E)
acid rain
Answer:
52)
Why are there fewer large craters on the seafloor than on the continents?
A)
The oceans slow large impactors and prevent them from making craters.
C)
The oceans erode away craters faster than erosion processes on land.
D)
53)
54)
Continental crust is made from remelted seafloor crust and therefore only the lower-density material rises to form it.
B)
Continental crust is made from volcanic rock called basalt, which is lower in density than what the seafloor crust is made
from.
C)
Continental crust is made of rock, while seafloor crust has more metals.
D)
Seafloor crust is more compact due to the weight of the oceans, but it is made of the same material as the continental
crust.
E)
A
55)
existence of volcanoes
E)
earthquakes
Answer:
56)
57)
How long, approximately, do geologists estimate it takes for the entire seafloor to be replaced due to plate tectonics?
A)
2 million years
B)
20 million years
C)
2 billion years
E)
58)
tidal forces
Answer:
59)
one plate slides under another, returning older crust to the mantle.
B)
hot mantle material rises upward and spreads sideways, pushing the plates apart.
D)
60)
one plate slides under another, returning older crust to the mantle.
B)
hot mantle material rises upward and spreads sideways, pushing the plates apart.
D)
A
61)
Hawaii.
B)
California.
C)
Northeastern Canada.
Answer:
62)
Which of the following regions was the result of plumes of hot mantle rising in a hot spot within a plate?
A)
63)
The geysers and hot springs of Yellowstone National Park result from
A)
plates that have slipped sideways relative to each other, creating a fault.
D)
a fault.
Answer:
64)
millions of years.
B)
65)
Which of the following does not provide evidence for water on Mars?
A)
dry riverbeds
B)
eroded craters
C)
The strength of a rock depends on its composition, its temperature, and the surrounding pressure.
Answer:
TRUE
2)
TRUE
3)
Very high pressures, like those found deep within planetary interiors, can compress rocks so much that they stay solid
even when temperatures are high enough to melt them under ordinary conditions.
Answer:
TRUE
4)
FALSE
5)
Earth is the only planet in the solar system known to have plate tectonics.
Answer:
TRUE
6)
The magnetic and rotational north poles on Earth are the same.
Answer:
FALSE
7)
TRUE
8)
FALSE
9)
FALSE
10)
In the inner solar system, the largest surface features are found on the largest planets.
Answer:
FALSE
11)
Earth is the only terrestrial planet to have experienced tectonic stresses and volcanic activity.
Answer:
FALSE
12)
Much of the land on the west coast of North America began as volcanic islands in the Pacific.
Answer:
TRUE
13)
Spreading centers are marked by mid-ocean ridges where hot mantle material rises upward and then spreads sideways.
Answer:
TRUE
14)
The process in which one plate slides under another is called subduction and is marked by deep ocean trenches.
Answer:
TRUE
How do the size and chemical composition of a planet determine its internal temperature?
Answer:
Size is the most important factor in determining how rapidly a planet loses its internal heat. The larger a planet is, the
deeper is the "insulation" that surrounds the core and keeps in the heat. The chemical composition of a planet determines
the amount of radioactive elements present. Currently the terrestrial planets' primary source of heat is radioactivity.
2)
Accretion is heat generated by the agglomeration of planetesimals when the planet was formed. Differentiation is heat
generated by the energy released as dense objects fall toward the center of a planet during the formation of the core of a
planet. Radioactive decay generates heat by releasing nuclear energy when an unstable (radioactive) isotope decays into a
more stable element.
3)
Explain how we can estimate the geological age of a planetary surface from its number of impact craters.
Answer:
Even though impacts still occur today, the vast majority of craters formed during the bombardment period that ended
around 3.8 billion years ago. A surface region that is still saturated with craters must have remained essentially
undisturbed for the last 3.8 billion years. In contrast, a surface region that has few craters indicates that the original craters
must have been somehow "erased" since then.
4)
What is the main visual difference between the lunar highlands and the lunar maria? What are the implications of this
observation?
Answer:
The lunar highlands are very heavily cratered and the lunar maria are generally smooth. (More specifically, the maria
contain only 3 percent as many craters per unit area as the highlands.) The difference in the amount of craters shows that
the maria formed after the highlands, at the end of the heavy bombardment phase of the solar system. Radiometric dating
of rocks from the highlands and maria shows that the heavy bombardment phase lasted no longer than a few hundred
million years.
5)
The shapes of craters can tell us the type of terrain in which they formed and whether they have been subject to erosion.
Craters that form in rocky surfaces usually have a simple bowl shape. Craters that form in icy ground may look as if they
formed in mud. Craters that lack sharp rims and bowl-shaped floors have probably been reshaped over time by erosion.
6)
Planetary magnetic fields are created in their metallic inner cores. From studying magnetic fields we can learn about the
size and fluidity of their cores, which in turn gives clues as to their formation.
7)
Why do we think Mercury contracted within about a billion years after it formed?
Answer:
The surface of Mercury is marked by long, high cliffs. Such features result from tectonic compression, but there are no
corresponding features due to tectonic stretching. This suggests the whole planet contracted as it rapidly cooled in its
early history. We can date the contraction from the age of the volcanic flows on its surface: volcanic (and all geologic)
activity probably came to an abrupt halt as a result of the planet's contraction.
8)
Briefly explain why Mercury, Venus, and the Moon do not have significant erosion. Relate erosional activity to the four
planetary formation properties.
Answer:
Mercury has a negligible atmosphere from the point of view of erosion, primarily due to its high temperature, related to
its distance from the Sun. Its relatively small size also led to only a small amount of outgassing to form an atmosphere in
the first place. The Moon also has a negligible atmosphere, primarily related to the inability of such a small world to
create or retain an atmosphere. Venus has a great deal of atmosphere but very little erosion. Water erosion doesn't occur
because the planet is too hot, related to its distance from the Sun. It lacks significant wind erosion because its slow
rotation rate leads to very slow winds.
9)
Suppose Mars had turned out to be significantly smaller than its current size, say about the size of our Moon. How would
this have affected the number of geological features due to each of the four major geological processes?
Answer:
If Mars were smaller, it would have undergone less volcanic and tectonic activity because its interior would have cooled
more. With less atmosphere from less outgassing, it is likely that erosion would be less important as well. As a result,
craters would be more widespread on the Martian surface.
10)
Summarize some of the evidence suggesting that Mars once had flowing water.
Answer:
It has what looks like dried-up riverbeds and impact craters that appear to have formed in mud; the Mars Pathfinder found
rocks of many different types jumbled together, as would occur if there had once been a great flood in the region; some
very old craters appear to have been eroded by rain.
11)
Erosion on Earth arises primarily from processes involving water, but also from atmospheric winds. Venus has very little
surface wind because of its slow rotation, and wind on Mars does little damage because of the low atmospheric pressure.
On Earth, water contributes to erosion through processes such as rain and rivers breaking down mountains, carving
canyons, and transporting sand and silt. Water also seeps into cracks and breaks them down from the inside.
12)
Process of Science: Our theory of solar system formation suggests that larger planets cool more slowly than small ones.
What does this suggest regarding geologic activity on Venus? Do we expect Venus to be geologically active? How did
scientists test this hypothesis?
Answer:
Since Venus is about Earth's size, we expect it to still have a hot interior and be active like Earth is. Radar observations of
the Venusian surface showed evidence of tectonic activity and volcanoes.
9.4 MasteringAstronomy Reading Quiz
1)
Suppose we use a baseball to represent Earth. On this scale, the other terrestrial worlds (Mercury, Venus, the Moon, and
Mars) would range in size approximately from that of ________.
A)
2)
From center to surface, which of the following correctly lists the interior layers of a terrestrial world?
A)
3)
What do we mean when we say that the terrestrial worlds underwent differentiation?
A)
When their interiors were molten, denser materials sank toward their centers and lighter materials rose toward their
surfaces.
B)
The five terrestrial worlds all started similarly but ended up looking quite different.
C)
Their surfaces show a variety of different geological features resulting from different geological processes.
D)
4)
a thin layer of rock that lies between the mantle and crust
B)
a layer of hot, molten rock encompassing the core and part of the mantle
D)
a layer of relatively strong, rigid rock, encompassing the crust and part of the mantle
Answer:
5)
The major processes that heat the interiors of the terrestrial worlds are:
A)
(1) Heat deposited as the planets were built from planetesimals; (2) heat of accretion; (3) heat that came from the
gravitational potential energy of incoming planetesimals.
B)
(1) Heat of accretion; (2) heat from convection; (3) heat from thermal radiation.
C)
(1) Heat deposited as the planets were built from planetesimals; (2) heat deposited as the planets underwent
differentiation; (3) heat released by radioactive decay.
D)
6)
warm air expanding and rising while cooler air contracts and fall
B)
A
7)
What are the basic requirements for a terrestrial world to have a global magnetic field?
A)
a core that has a molten layer and a mantle that has convection
Answer:
8)
9)
The processes responsible for virtually all surface geology are ________.
A)
10)
11)
the release by volcanism of gases that had been trapped in a planetary interior
B)
12)
13)
Why does the Moon have a layer of "powdery soil" on its surface?
A)
It is the result of countless tiny impacts by small particles striking the Moon.
D)
It exists because the Moon accreted from powdery material after a giant impact blasted Earth.
Answer:
C
14)
What observational evidence supports the idea that Mercury once shrank by some 20 kilometers in radius?
A)
15)
16)
Which of the following does not provide evidence that Mars once had abundant liquid water on its surface?
A)
the presence of very old craters that appear to have been eroded by rain
D)
the presence of canali, discovered in the late 1800s by Giovanni Schiaparelli and mapped by Percival Lowell
Answer:
17)
Based on its surface features, the most important event on Venus in the past billion years or so was ________.
A)
a global "repaving" that erased essentially all the surface features that had existed earlier
B)
the impact of an unusually large asteroid that left a deep scar on one side of the planet
D)
the onset of mantle convection, which caused Venus's lithosphere to split into plates like those on Earth
Answer:
18)
19)
20)
a place where two plates are slipping sideways against one another
C)
Which of the following places is the result of volcanoes erupting over a hot spot in the mantle?
A)
the Himalayas
B)
the Appalachians
C)
California
D)
Hawaii
Answer:
D
9.5 MasteringAstronomy Concept Quiz
1)
The cores of the terrestrial worlds are made mostly of metal because ________.
A)
metals sunk to the centers a long time ago when the interiors were molten throughout
C)
the core contained lots of radioactive elements that decayed into metals
D)
over billions of years, convection gradually brought dense metals downward to the core
Answer:
2)
Which of the following is not generally true of all the terrestrial world lithospheres?
A)
The lithosphere is broken into a set of large plates that float upon the softer rock below.
B)
The lithosphere extends from somewhere in the mantle all the way to the surface.
D)
The thickness of the lithosphere depends on interior temperature, with cooler interiors leading to thicker lithospheres.
Answer:
3)
Which internal heat source still generates heat within the terrestrial worlds today?
A)
heat of accretion
B)
4)
The reason that small planets tend to lose interior heat faster than larger planets is essentially the same as the reason that
________.
A)
a large baked potato takes longer to cool than a small baked potato
B)
5)
Suppose we had a device that allowed us to see Earth's interior. If we looked at a typical region of the mantle, what would
we see happening?
A)
Not muchon human time scales, the mantle looks like solid rock.
B)
hot molten rock rising upward throughout the mantle and cool, solid rock falling downward
C)
a rapid, up-and-down churning of the material in the mantle
D)
6)
Recent evidence suggests that Mars once had a global magnetic field. Assuming this is true, which of the following could
explain why Mars today lacks a global magnetic field like that of Earth?
A)
Mars's interior has cooled so much its molten core layer no longer undergoes convection.
C)
The Martian core is made of rock, while Earth's core is made of metal.
D)
Mars is too far from the Sun to have a global magnetic field.
Answer:
7)
Which of the following most likely explains why Venus does not have a global magnetic field like Earth?
A)
8)
You discover an impact crater that is 10 kilometers across. Which of the following can you conclude?
A)
9)
Most of the Moon's surface is densely covered with craters, but we find relatively few craters within the lunar maria. What
can we conclude?
A)
The regions of the maria were hit by fewer impacts than the densely cratered regions.
D)
Erosion affects the maria more than it affects other regions of the Moon.
Answer:
10)
Which of the following is the underlying reason why Venus has so little wind erosion?
A)
its small size
B)
11)
Which of the following best describes the geological histories of the Moon and Mercury?
A)
Impact cratering is the only major geological process that has affected their surfaces.
B)
All four geological processes were important in their early histories, but only impact cratering still reshapes their surfaces
today.
C)
Impact cratering shaped these worlds early in their histories. Then, during the past few million years, they were reshaped
by episodes of volcanism and tectonics.
D)
Early in their histories, they suffered many impacts and experienced some volcanism and tectonics, but they now have
little geological activity at all.
Answer:
12)
Many scientists suspect that Venus has a stronger and thicker lithosphere than Earth. If this is true, which of the following
could explain it?
A)
the high surface temperature that has "baked out" all the liquid water from Venus's crust and mantle
B)
the smaller size of Venus, which has allowed it to lose much more internal heat than Earth
C)
13)
All the following statements about Venus are true. Which one offers evidence of a global repaving about a billion years
ago?
A)
Venus has relatively few impact craters and these craters are distributed fairly evenly over the entire planet.
B)
Venus has many circular features, called coronae, which appear to be tectonic in origin.
C)
Venus's largest features are three elevated regions that look somewhat like continents.
D)
Venus appears to lack any water that could lubricate the flow of rock in its crust and mantle.
Answer:
A
14)
What are the two geological features that appear to set Earth apart from all the other terrestrial worlds?
A)
15)
Why are there fewer large impact craters on the Earth's seafloor than on the continents?
A)
Seafloor crust is younger than continental crust, so it has had less time in which to suffer impacts.
B)
The oceans slow large impactors and prevent them from making craters.
C)
Erosion erases impact craters must faster on the ocean bottom than on land.
D)
16)
Continental crust comes from volcanoes while seafloor crust comes from geysers.
C)
Continental crust is made as the lowest-density seafloor crust melts and erupts to the surface near subduction zones.
D)
Continental crust comes from Earth's inner core while seafloor crust comes from the outer core.
Answer:
17)
Which two factors are most important to the existence of plate tectonics on Earth?
A)
18)
What is the fundamental reason that Mars, unlike Earth, has become virtually geologically dead?
A)
19)
Based on all we know about the terrestrial worlds, what single factor appears to play the most important role in a
terrestrial planet's geological destiny?
A)
its composition
B)
its size
Answer:
20)
The choices below describe four hypothetical planets. Which one would you expect to have the hottest interior? (Assume
the planets orbit a star just like the Sun and that they are all the same age as the planets in our solar system.)
A)
Size: same as the Moon. Distance from Sun: same as Mars. Rotation rate: once every 10 days.
B)
Size: twice as big as Earth. Distance from Sun: same as Mercury. Rotation rate: once every 6 months.
C)
Size: same as Mars. Distance from Sun: same as Earth. Rotation rate: once every 18 hours.
D)
Size: same as Venus. Distance from Sun: same as Mars. Rotation rate: once every 25 hours.
Answer:
21)
The choices below describe four hypothetical planets. Which one's surface would you expect to be most crowded with
impact craters? (Assume the planets orbit a star just like the Sun and that they are all the same age as the planets in our
solar system.)
A)
Size: twice as big as Earth. Distance from Sun: same as Mercury. Rotation rate: once every 6 months.
B)
Size: same as Mars. Distance from Sun: same as Earth. Rotation rate: once every 18 hours.
C)
Size: same as the Moon. Distance from Sun: same as Mars. Rotation rate: once every 10 days.
D)
Size: same as Venus. Distance from Sun: same as Mars. Rotation rate: once every 25 hours.
Answer:
22)
The choices below describe four hypothetical planets. Which one would you expect to have the most features of erosion?
(Assume the planets orbit a star just like the Sun and that they are all the same age as the planets in our solar system.)
A)
Size: same as Venus. Distance from Sun: same as Mars. Rotation rate: once every 25 hours.
B)
Size: same as the Moon. Distance from Sun: same as Mars. Rotation rate: once every 10 days.
C)
Size: same as Mars. Distance from Sun: same as Earth. Rotation rate: once every 18 hours.
D)
Size: twice as big as Earth. Distance from Sun: same as Mercury. Rotation rate: once every 6 months.
Answer:
A