
Astronomy C
- JCicc
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Re: Astronomy C
There is a mistake in this exam (the mistake is not on the answer key, but in the exam itself). My apologies to anyone agonizing over this problem. This is from the 2014 PA state exam. The separation of the stars should be listed as 1.56E10 m.


- Unome
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Re: Astronomy C
While you're here - would you happen to know whether to use distance or half of the distance in Kepler's third law? I've seen it both ways in the past but no one I've talked to seems to have a definitive answer on this.JCicc wrote:There is a mistake in this exam (the mistake is not on the answer key, but in the exam itself). My apologies to anyone agonizing over this problem. This is from the 2014 PA state exam. The separation of the stars should be listed as 1.56E10 m.
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Re: Astronomy C
Never mind I was wrong you do actually use the separation for “a.” (And not just because the answer works out, I looked it up). Ahhhhh why do I suck lol...Unome wrote:While you're here - would you happen to know whether to use distance or half of the distance in Kepler's third law? I've seen it both ways in the past but no one I've talked to seems to have a definitive answer on this.JCicc wrote:There is a mistake in this exam (the mistake is not on the answer key, but in the exam itself). My apologies to anyone agonizing over this problem. This is from the 2014 PA state exam. The separation of the stars should be listed as 1.56E10 m.
I was in a bin
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- Alex-RCHS
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Re: Astronomy C
Wait so is it the distance between the stars or half the distance between the stars? Now I'm confused. I always thought it was the semi-major axis of the star's orbit. (half the distance of separation between the two.)jonboyage wrote:Never mind I was wrong you do actually use the separation for “a.” (And not just because the answer works out, I looked it up). Ahhhhh why do I suck lol...Unome wrote:While you're here - would you happen to know whether to use distance or half of the distance in Kepler's third law? I've seen it both ways in the past but no one I've talked to seems to have a definitive answer on this.JCicc wrote:There is a mistake in this exam (the mistake is not on the answer key, but in the exam itself). My apologies to anyone agonizing over this problem. This is from the 2014 PA state exam. The separation of the stars should be listed as 1.56E10 m.
- alchzh
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Re: Astronomy C
Isn't it the sum of the two semi-major axes of the elliptical orbits of the two stars which is just the separation?Alex-RCHS wrote:Wait so is it the distance between the stars or half the distance between the stars? Now I'm confused. I always thought it was the semi-major axis of the star's orbit. (half the distance of separation between the two.)jonboyage wrote:Never mind I was wrong you do actually use the separation for “a.” (And not just because the answer works out, I looked it up). Ahhhhh why do I suck lol...Unome wrote: While you're here - would you happen to know whether to use distance or half of the distance in Kepler's third law? I've seen it both ways in the past but no one I've talked to seems to have a definitive answer on this.
Columbia University. Maybe starting an invitational. No promises.
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Re: Astronomy C
It's the full distance between the two. Consider that the distance between each star and the barycenter in a circular orbit is already a semi-major axis.Alex-RCHS wrote:Wait so is it the distance between the stars or half the distance between the stars? Now I'm confused. I always thought it was the semi-major axis of the star's orbit. (half the distance of separation between the two.)jonboyage wrote:Never mind I was wrong you do actually use the separation for “a.” (And not just because the answer works out, I looked it up). Ahhhhh why do I suck lol...Unome wrote: While you're here - would you happen to know whether to use distance or half of the distance in Kepler's third law? I've seen it both ways in the past but no one I've talked to seems to have a definitive answer on this.
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Re: Astronomy C
It looks like the UT Regional tournament directors decided not to upload the tests. I've put up the astro test here: http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/dkarkada ... 0Regional/.
As always, let me know if you have any questions or think there's an error, so I can correct it. Hope this helps! :)
As always, let me know if you have any questions or think there's an error, so I can correct it. Hope this helps! :)
Last edited by dkarkada on April 28th, 2018, 10:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- antoine_ego
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Re: Astronomy C
I've heard amazing things about this test. I'm excited!dkarkada wrote:It looks like the UT Regional tournament directors decided not to upload the tests. I've put up the astro test here: http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/dkarkada ... al%202018/.
As always, let me know if you have any questions or think there's an error, so I can correct it. Hope this helps!
Rest in Peace Len Joeris
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- Adi1008
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Re: Astronomy C
It hasn't been on any nationals tests or any of the MIT tests (which are written by the national event supervisors) that I've seen.anna1234 wrote:Hey! For those of you who have competed in astro at nationals, has JS9/DS9 software ever showed up on the test?
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