Object names in certain locations
User Generated
gehvgg4040
Science
Description
A 10-m sized rocky object has orbital path that causes it to collide with the Earth. What is the
object called in:
Outside of the Earth’s atmosphere, before the collision.
Inside the Earth’s atmosphere, as a bright object in the sky.
User generated content is uploaded by users for the purposes of learning and should be used following Studypool's honor code & terms of service.
This question has not been answered.
Create a free account to get help with this and any other question!
24/7 Homework Help
Stuck on a homework question? Our verified tutors can answer all questions, from basic math to advanced rocket science!
Most Popular Content
Chicago State University Galaxy Zoo Astronomy Project Paper
to read the instructions, please check the attachment Galaxy Zoo is a crowdsourced astronomy project which invites people ...
Chicago State University Galaxy Zoo Astronomy Project Paper
to read the instructions, please check the attachment Galaxy Zoo is a crowdsourced astronomy project which invites people
to assist in the morphological classification of large numbers of
galaxies. It is perhaps so far the most successful project in citizen
science, which asks the public to help in scientific research.
Started in 2007, the first project of Galaxy Zoo received, in 175 days,
more than 40 million classifications from 100,000 volunteers for about
1 million celestial objects in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. After 10
years, Galaxy Zoo developed many projects to classify galaxies from
observations with ground-based telescopes, space-based telescopes,
and even numerical simulations.
In this lab, you are asked to join Galaxy Zoo to help classify 30
random galaxies, and answer some questions related to them. Please
follow these steps:
1.Go to the website: https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/zookeeper/
galaxy-zoo (Galaxy Zoo is now a part of the “zooniverse”).
2.Register yourself and log in (it should be easy) — this is very
important — otherwise, your records cannot be saved!3.Now, back to the project website, scroll down, you will see “Get
Started” with two options “Classic” and “Enhanced”. Let’s click on
“Classic”.
4.Basically, you are ready to go! But, you may need some helps. You
can click on “Tutorial” to learn more. What’s more useful is a link in
the bottom of the right panel: “Need some help with this task?” I
strongly suggest you read it before finishing EACH TASK: one
galaxy has a few tasks, each of them having different help clues.
Page 2 of 4
5.Try to classify 8 objects. Then click the “RECENT” button in the top
right of the webpage. You should be able to see the objects you just
finished.
Very Important: please keep in mind that when clicking on those
options, you are helping human beings to advance our
understanding of the universe! It’s not just for finishing a lab! So
please be careful and responsible — each click counts!
6. Under each image, there are two buttons: “favorite” and “collect”.
Click on the “collect” button, create your own collection (private is
ok), and add each object/image into your collection.
7. Take a screenshot of the “RECENT” webpage with the images of
the 8 objects.
8. Repeat Step 5 and 7 for three more times and finish 30 objects.
Now you should have 4 screenshots, each with 7-8 objects.
9.Print out the 4 screenshots and turn them in with your report. A
black+white printing is ok — no need for using color. Each galaxy is
0.5 point, so the total is 15 points. (Don’t try to copy from your
friends, because galaxies are randomly appeared!)
10.Now, answer the following questions and submit your answers in a
TYPED report. You can write an ID for each galaxy in your
screenshots, then refer to the IDs when answering questions.
3 pages
Lab3 Carbonate 1
Carbonate rocks are fundamentally different than siliciclastic rocks in terms of their depositional environments and chemi ...
Lab3 Carbonate 1
Carbonate rocks are fundamentally different than siliciclastic rocks in terms of their depositional environments and chemistry. To deal with these ...
7 pages
Chm12 Experiment 7 Acidbasetitrations
Titration Curves of Strong and Weak Acids and Bases To calibrate a pH probe. To become familiar with acid-base titration c ...
Chm12 Experiment 7 Acidbasetitrations
Titration Curves of Strong and Weak Acids and Bases To calibrate a pH probe. To become familiar with acid-base titration curves. To determine the
4 pages
CHM151 Phoenix WK6 Stoichiometry of a Precipitation Reaction Lab Report
This document is not meant to be a substitute for a formal laboratory report. The Lab Report Assistant is simply a summary ...
CHM151 Phoenix WK6 Stoichiometry of a Precipitation Reaction Lab Report
This document is not meant to be a substitute for a formal laboratory report. The Lab Report Assistant is simply a summary of the experiment’s ...
Endocrine System main glands nervous components communication
The endocrine system is all about communication. There are two main communication pathways in your body: the nervous syste ...
Endocrine System main glands nervous components communication
The endocrine system is all about communication. There are two main communication pathways in your body: the nervous system and the endocrine system. In the nervous system, signals travel extremely fast and lead to immediate responses. In the endocrine system, chemicals travel slowly through your body, and the response to these chemicals can be delayed and/or long lasting.
Instructions– Create an analogy describing how 3-4 components of the endocrine system communicate with each other and function effectively. For your analogy, be sure to identify the main glands of the endocrine system and describe their function and explain how control mechanisms of the nervous system regulate endocrine secretion(s). Be thorough in your description and explanation. (20 points possible).
Before submitting your written response, check that it:
Identifies and describes 3-4 components of the endocrine system (10 points)
Transfers meaning from one subject (endocrine system) to another (scenario/example) (10 points)
Similar Content
in search of cancer gene
helloi have to write a lap report, i need some one to write around 3 pages it has (abstract, introduction, materials and m...
paraphrase papers in chemistry
paraphrase papers in chemistryparaphrase papers in chemistry...
CCSD Virtual Tour of the Columbia River Gorge Discussion
Virtual Tour of the Columbia River Gorge
Name:
You will be using a web-based virtual tour
https://www.thinglink.com/video/...
The mass number of an atom is equal to A. the number of protons B. the number o
The mass number of an atom is equal toA.the number of protonsB.the number of protons and electronsC.the number of nucleons...
Georgia Military College Aloe Plant Temperature Experiment Analysis
I need an essay written about the aloe plant and its growth. Everything that you need should be in both of those files ri...
Tectonic plates question1
According to the map, which part of the U.S. has the GREATEST potential for earthquake risks? ...
Mercykortuma Module 3 Lab 2 20210223
Next two pics are zoomed in version of the last pic: Next pic is zoomed in version of the last pic:...
Solar System
My mission objective is to visit the moon. The objective for this visit is to learn new scientific facts about the moon. I...
Reproduction In Copperhead Snakes
Reproduction is the process in which an organism can give rise to a viable offspring of a similar species (Avise, 2015). A...
Related Tags
Book Guides
A Farewell To Arms
by Ernest Hemingway
The Book Thief
by Markus Zusak
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
by Mark Twain
My Brilliant Friend
by Elena Ferrante
The Hunger Games
by Suzanne Collins
The Outsiders
by S.E. Hinton
Heart of Darkness
by Joseph Conrad
All Quiet on the Western Front
by Erich Maria Remarque
Where'd You Go Bernadette
by Maria Semple
Get 24/7
Homework help
Our tutors provide high quality explanations & answers.
Post question
Most Popular Content
Chicago State University Galaxy Zoo Astronomy Project Paper
to read the instructions, please check the attachment Galaxy Zoo is a crowdsourced astronomy project which invites people ...
Chicago State University Galaxy Zoo Astronomy Project Paper
to read the instructions, please check the attachment Galaxy Zoo is a crowdsourced astronomy project which invites people
to assist in the morphological classification of large numbers of
galaxies. It is perhaps so far the most successful project in citizen
science, which asks the public to help in scientific research.
Started in 2007, the first project of Galaxy Zoo received, in 175 days,
more than 40 million classifications from 100,000 volunteers for about
1 million celestial objects in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. After 10
years, Galaxy Zoo developed many projects to classify galaxies from
observations with ground-based telescopes, space-based telescopes,
and even numerical simulations.
In this lab, you are asked to join Galaxy Zoo to help classify 30
random galaxies, and answer some questions related to them. Please
follow these steps:
1.Go to the website: https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/zookeeper/
galaxy-zoo (Galaxy Zoo is now a part of the “zooniverse”).
2.Register yourself and log in (it should be easy) — this is very
important — otherwise, your records cannot be saved!3.Now, back to the project website, scroll down, you will see “Get
Started” with two options “Classic” and “Enhanced”. Let’s click on
“Classic”.
4.Basically, you are ready to go! But, you may need some helps. You
can click on “Tutorial” to learn more. What’s more useful is a link in
the bottom of the right panel: “Need some help with this task?” I
strongly suggest you read it before finishing EACH TASK: one
galaxy has a few tasks, each of them having different help clues.
Page 2 of 4
5.Try to classify 8 objects. Then click the “RECENT” button in the top
right of the webpage. You should be able to see the objects you just
finished.
Very Important: please keep in mind that when clicking on those
options, you are helping human beings to advance our
understanding of the universe! It’s not just for finishing a lab! So
please be careful and responsible — each click counts!
6. Under each image, there are two buttons: “favorite” and “collect”.
Click on the “collect” button, create your own collection (private is
ok), and add each object/image into your collection.
7. Take a screenshot of the “RECENT” webpage with the images of
the 8 objects.
8. Repeat Step 5 and 7 for three more times and finish 30 objects.
Now you should have 4 screenshots, each with 7-8 objects.
9.Print out the 4 screenshots and turn them in with your report. A
black+white printing is ok — no need for using color. Each galaxy is
0.5 point, so the total is 15 points. (Don’t try to copy from your
friends, because galaxies are randomly appeared!)
10.Now, answer the following questions and submit your answers in a
TYPED report. You can write an ID for each galaxy in your
screenshots, then refer to the IDs when answering questions.
3 pages
Lab3 Carbonate 1
Carbonate rocks are fundamentally different than siliciclastic rocks in terms of their depositional environments and chemi ...
Lab3 Carbonate 1
Carbonate rocks are fundamentally different than siliciclastic rocks in terms of their depositional environments and chemistry. To deal with these ...
7 pages
Chm12 Experiment 7 Acidbasetitrations
Titration Curves of Strong and Weak Acids and Bases To calibrate a pH probe. To become familiar with acid-base titration c ...
Chm12 Experiment 7 Acidbasetitrations
Titration Curves of Strong and Weak Acids and Bases To calibrate a pH probe. To become familiar with acid-base titration curves. To determine the
4 pages
CHM151 Phoenix WK6 Stoichiometry of a Precipitation Reaction Lab Report
This document is not meant to be a substitute for a formal laboratory report. The Lab Report Assistant is simply a summary ...
CHM151 Phoenix WK6 Stoichiometry of a Precipitation Reaction Lab Report
This document is not meant to be a substitute for a formal laboratory report. The Lab Report Assistant is simply a summary of the experiment’s ...
Endocrine System main glands nervous components communication
The endocrine system is all about communication. There are two main communication pathways in your body: the nervous syste ...
Endocrine System main glands nervous components communication
The endocrine system is all about communication. There are two main communication pathways in your body: the nervous system and the endocrine system. In the nervous system, signals travel extremely fast and lead to immediate responses. In the endocrine system, chemicals travel slowly through your body, and the response to these chemicals can be delayed and/or long lasting.
Instructions– Create an analogy describing how 3-4 components of the endocrine system communicate with each other and function effectively. For your analogy, be sure to identify the main glands of the endocrine system and describe their function and explain how control mechanisms of the nervous system regulate endocrine secretion(s). Be thorough in your description and explanation. (20 points possible).
Before submitting your written response, check that it:
Identifies and describes 3-4 components of the endocrine system (10 points)
Transfers meaning from one subject (endocrine system) to another (scenario/example) (10 points)
Earn money selling
your Study Documents