Rocks/Rocky objects/Ganymede/Quiz

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In this image of Ganymede's trailing side, the colors are enhanced to emphasize color differences. Credit: NASA/JPL/DLR.

Ganymede is a lecture and an article in the astronomy series and geology series about rocky objects.

You are free to take this quiz based on the Ganymede at any time.

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Quiz

Point added for a correct answer:   
Points for a wrong answer:
Ignore the questions' coefficients:

1. True or False, The leading hemisphere is the hemisphere away from the direction of the orbital motion; the trailing hemisphere faces the reverse direction.

TRUE
FALSE

2. The cryosphere of Ganymede is likely to include which of the following?

water ice
sea ice
rain
lake ice
river ice
snow cover
glaciers
ice caps
ice sheets
frost

3. The science of the behavior of frozen snow is called


4. Chemistry phenomena associated with Ganymede are

water
carbon dioxide
organic compounds
silicates
ozone
O2

5. Complete the text:

Ganymede has a very surface with bright and regions. The surface includes , valleys, craters and flows.

6. Complete the text:

Match up the astroglacial object with each of the possibilities below:
ice cap - A
optical characteristics of sediment suspensions - B
water in solid form - C
behavior of frozen snow - D
ice sheets - E
polar ice caps - F
cryopediology .
lake Veitastrondsvatn .
Ganymede .
cryosphere .
Antarctica and Greenland
Vatnajökull, Iceland .

7. Complete the text:

Match up the object with the image:
Callisto - A
Vatnajökull, Iceland - B
the Cryosphere of Earth - C
Antarctica - D
Ganymede - E
Europa - F
Antarctica 6400px from Blue Marble.jpg
.
Callisto.jpg
.
Europa-moon.jpg
.
Cryosphere Fuller Projection.png
.
Ganymede g1 true 2.jpg
Vatnajökull.jpeg
.

8. Which of the following is not an astronomical cryosphere?

Vatnajökull, Iceland
the last ice sheets in Europe and North America
the cryosphere of Ganymede
the photosphere
frozen snow
ice sheets are in Antarctica and Greenland

9. True or False, During the last glacial period of Ganymede the Wisconsin period ice sheet covered much of Enki Catena.

TRUE
FALSE

10. Which of the following is not an astronomical characteristic of ice?

an albedo as high as 80%
thin water frost deposits
ice knobs
tidal heating events
surface is composed of water ice and is one of the smoothest in the Solar System
the bright terrain on the surface of Ganymede

11. Yes or No, The tidal flexing of the ice on Ganymede may have heated the interior and strained the lithosphere, leading to the development of cracks and horst and graben faulting, which erased the old, dark terrain on 70% of the surface?

No
Yes

Your score is 0 / 0

Research

Hypothesis:

  1. There are volcanoes on Ganymede.

Control groups

This is an image of a Lewis rat. Credit: Charles River Laboratories.

The findings demonstrate a statistically systematic change from the status quo or the control group.

“In the design of experiments, treatments [or special properties or characteristics] are applied to [or observed in] experimental units in the treatment group(s).[1] In comparative experiments, members of the complementary group, the control group, receive either no treatment or a standard treatment.[2]"[3]

Proof of concept

Def. a “short and/or incomplete realization of a certain method or idea to demonstrate its feasibility"[4] is called a proof of concept.

Def. evidence that demonstrates that a concept is possible is called proof of concept.

The proof-of-concept structure consists of

  1. background,
  2. procedures,
  3. findings, and
  4. interpretation.[5]

See also

References

  1. Klaus Hinkelmann, Oscar Kempthorne (2008). Design and Analysis of Experiments, Volume I: Introduction to Experimental Design (2nd ed.). Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-72756-9. http://books.google.com/?id=T3wWj2kVYZgC&printsec=frontcover.
  2. R. A. Bailey (2008). Design of comparative experiments. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-68357-9. http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521683579.
  3. "Treatment and control groups, In: Wikipedia". San Francisco, California: Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. May 18, 2012. Retrieved 2012-05-31.
  4. "proof of concept, In: Wiktionary". San Francisco, California: Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. November 10, 2012. Retrieved 2013-01-13.
  5. Ginger Lehrman and Ian B Hogue, Sarah Palmer, Cheryl Jennings, Celsa A Spina, Ann Wiegand, Alan L Landay, Robert W Coombs, Douglas D Richman, John W Mellors, John M Coffin, Ronald J Bosch, David M Margolis (August 13, 2005). "Depletion of latent HIV-1 infection in vivo: a proof-of-concept study". Lancet 366 (9485): 549-55. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(05)67098-5. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1894952/. Retrieved 2012-05-09.

External links

This is a research project at http://en.wikiversity.org

Development status: this resource is experimental in nature.
Educational level: this is a research resource.
Resource type: this resource is a quiz.
Subject classification: this is an astronomy resource.
Subject classification: this is a Geology resource.
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