EBK FOUNDATIONS OF ASTRONOMY
14th Edition
ISBN: 9781337670968
Author: Backman
Publisher: CENGAGE LEARNING - CONSIGNMENT
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Textbook Question
Chapter 25, Problem 22RQ
Why are upper-main-sequence (high-luminosity) host stars unlikely sites for intelligent civilizations?
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In a globular cluster, astronomers (someday) discover a star with the same mass as our Sun, but consisting entirely of hydrogen and helium. Is this star a good place to point our SETI antennas and search for radio signals from an advanced civilization?
Group of answer choices
No, because such a star (and any planets around it) would not have the heavier elements (carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, etc.) that we believe are necessary to start life as we know it.
Yes, because globular clusters are among the closest star clusters to us, so that they would be easy to search for radio signals.
Yes, because we have already found radio signals from another civilization living near a star in a globular cluster.
No, because such a star would most likely not have a stable (main-sequence) stage that is long enough for a technological civilization to develop.
Yes, because such a star is probably old and a technological civilization will have had a long time to evolve and develop there.
Explain pre main sequence evolution, early post main sequence evolution and advanced evolutionary stages.
The Drake equation tells us that the number of technological civilizations in our Galaxy at this time is:
Group of answer choices
About 100,000.
About 14 billion.
About 200 billion.
It cannot predict this number at this time.
About 6,000.
About 1 million.
Somewhere in the range 1-10.
Chapter 25 Solutions
EBK FOUNDATIONS OF ASTRONOMY
Ch. 25 - Explain how astrobiology is a science and not a...Ch. 25 - Describe one special quality of water that makes...Ch. 25 - Mars and Europa are two Solar System bodies that...Ch. 25 - How does the DNA molecule produce a copy of...Ch. 25 - What would happen to a life-form if the genetic...Ch. 25 - What would happen to a life-form if the genetic...Ch. 25 - What would happen to a life-form if the...Ch. 25 - Describe an example of natural selection acting on...Ch. 25 - Prob. 9RQCh. 25 - What evidence do scientists have that life on...
Ch. 25 - Define organic, as in organic molecule. How is...Ch. 25 - Why is liquid water generally considered necessary...Ch. 25 - Some meteorites contain organic molecules. What...Ch. 25 - What is the difference between chemical evolution...Ch. 25 - Prob. 15RQCh. 25 - Why was Earths early atmosphere able to support...Ch. 25 - Molecules of which gas were needed in Earths...Ch. 25 - Does intelligence make a creature more likely to...Ch. 25 - Describe one hypothesis for how cells first...Ch. 25 - What is the evidence that the first organisms on...Ch. 25 - Name three locations in our Solar System to search...Ch. 25 - Why are upper-main-sequence (high-luminosity) host...Ch. 25 - Prob. 23RQCh. 25 - How does the stability of technological...Ch. 25 - Prob. 25RQCh. 25 - Prob. 26RQCh. 25 - Why are scientists confident Earth has never been...Ch. 25 - Why does the Drake equation implicitly assume the...Ch. 25 - A single human cell encloses about 1.5 m of DNA....Ch. 25 - If you represent Earths history by a line that is...Ch. 25 - Consider Figure 25-8. What is the ratio of the...Ch. 25 - Suppose a human generation is defined as the...Ch. 25 - If a star must remain on the main sequence for at...Ch. 25 - Prob. 6PCh. 25 - If you detected radio signals with an average...Ch. 25 - Prob. 8PCh. 25 - The first radio broadcast was made on January 13,...Ch. 25 - Prob. 10PCh. 25 - The DNA in a single cell in your body contains...Ch. 25 - Prob. 2SOPCh. 25 - Look at Figure 25-11. Since the time we sent the...Ch. 25 - The star cluster shown in this image contains a...Ch. 25 - If you could search for life in the galaxy shown...
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- What are some reasons that more advanced civilizations might want to send out messages to other star systems?arrow_forwardWhat is the difference between chemical evolution and biological evolution?arrow_forwardSuppose no stars more massive than about 2 MSunhad ever formed. Would life as we know it have been able to develop? Why or why not?arrow_forward
- Would a human have been possible during the first generation of stars that formed right after the Big Bang? Why or why not?arrow_forwardThe evidence is overwhelming that the Grand Canyon was dug over a span of millions of years by the erosive power of the Colorado River and that river's tributary streams. Does this evidence support a catastrophic theory or an evolutionary theory?arrow_forwardWhat are the advantages to using radio waves for communication between civilizations that live around different stars? List as many as you can.arrow_forward
- If you could search for life in the galaxy shown in this image, would you look among stars in the disk, in the central bulge, in the halo, or in all of those places? Discuss the factors that influence your decision.arrow_forwardWater is life. Nothing survives without water. Water is abundant everywhere. Now, we said before that water contains the primary components of good fuel. The hydrogen. Is there is a possibility that water will be a source of Hydrogen? Or we mean, we can subject water in a certain process and we are deriving Hydrogen from it continuously? If yes, how?arrow_forward
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