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Classifying GalaxiesCorrect answers are underlined. Content 1. What is a galaxy? a. a cloud of gas held together by momentum 2. Where are galaxies found? a. in the Milky Way 3. What do galaxies look like? a. egg-shaped 4. Edwin Hubble classified galaxies according to their a. color 5. Which sequence of Hubble's class names is arranged from least elongated to most elongated? a. E0 E3 E5 6. How are galaxies in the classes Sa, Sb, and Sc, different? a. How bright they are 7. What does it mean to classify something? Classifying a group of things or ideas means organizing them into sub-classes, based on some rule. For example, in Hubble's galaxy classification, elliptical galaxies were called class E, spirals class S, and barred spirals class SB. One could also classify things by color or size, or any other rule that could be applied to all the items in the group. The Subject: 1. Would you like to learn more about astronomy? 2. What was one thing you learned that you didn't know before? 3. Would you like to learn more about Earth and Space Science? 4. Did you tell anyone outside the class about the internet lesson? ©1997
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