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Students will understand the following:
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Only research materials are required for this activity. You might want to have a selection of sources on hand in the classroom, but students should go to the library or the Internet for additional research.
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Adaptations for Older Students: Have each team member submit a detailed written report on one of the four items included in the team’s report: characteristics, lifetime, locations, evidence of existence. |
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You can evaluate each group’s written product using the following three-point rubric:
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Fantastic Tales Have students discuss the paradoxes associated with black holes and speculate on the possibility of using black holes for time travel. Following the discussion, have students choose from the following activities:
Breaking Free Astronomers use the termescape velocityto refer to the minimum speed necessary to break free from the pull of gravity of a planet, moon, star, or black hole and not be pulled back. To appreciate the limits imposed by mass, have students research and compare the escape velocities for objects on the moon, Earth, Jupiter, the sun, Rigel, a white dwarf, a neutron star, and a black hole. With these comparisons in mind, have the class debate future plans for space exploration. |
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Mysteries of Deep Space: Black Holes, Pulsars, and Quasars Isaac Asimov. Gareth Stevens Publ., 1994. Read about the birth of the sun and other stars, celestial energy, black holes, and quasars. Can you imagine something that spins 33 times a second or is 12 billion light years away? This book helps you understand these concepts and phenomena. Prisons of Light: Black Holes Kitty Ferguson. Cambridge University Press, 1996. What is a black hole? Could we survive a visit? What do black holes teach us about the universe? This comprehensive, detailed, yet easy-to-read book answers questions about these unseen phenomena whose existence has been proven through physics and mathematics. |
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Black Hole Movies Online A collection of computer-generated movies that portray different aspects of black holes. Travel to the event horizon but be careful not to fall in! Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation: No matter how you look at it, from Newton to Einstein, gravity is responsible for the creation of black holes. Newton’s Universal Law of Gravity will give you a start for a later understanding Einstein’s General theory of Relativity. Black Holes - Portals Into The Unknown High school students showcase their work on “Black Holes” in this 1997 THINK QUEST entry rich with links relating to black holes. Encourage your budding webpage designers to submit their creations to the next THINK QUEST competition. |
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Click on any of the vocabulary words below to hear them pronounced and used in a sentence.
Context:Everybody has heard of black holes; no one has really seen them.
Context:Newton reasoned that all matter in the universe has gravity.
Context:The more mass a body has, the more gravity.
Context:When a giant star switches off, it goes out with a bang. While we see the outward explosion as a supernova, this masks the implosion going on inside.
Context:Space and time seem to be woven together to form the flexible four-dimensional fabric of the universe: so-called space-time.
Context:The most terrifying concept of astrophysics lurks at the bottom of a black hole—the singularity—where nothing, not even light, can escape.
Context:Mighty jets of energized particles are blasted into space from invisible engines at the hearts of these so-called radio galaxies–further evidence that a black hole is driving the process. |
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This lesson plan may be used to address the academic standards listed below. These standards are drawn from Content Knowledge: A Compendium of Standards and Benchmarks for K-12 Education: 2nd Edition and have been provided courtesy of theMid-continent Research for Education and Learningin Aurora, Colorado. Grade level:9-12 Subject area:space science Standard: Understands essential ideas about the composition and structure of the universe and the Earth’s place in it. Benchmarks: Knows the ongoing processes involved in star formation and destruction (e.g., stars condense by gravity out of clouds of molecules of the lightest elements; nuclear fusion of light elements into heavier ones occurs in the stars’ extremely hot, dense cores, releasing great amounts of energy; some stars eventually explode, producing clouds of material from which new stars and planets condense). Knows common characteristics of stars in the universe (e.g., types of stars include red and blue giants, white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes; stars differ in size, temperature, and age, but they all appear to be made up of the same elements and to behave according to the same principles; most stars exist in systems of two or more stars orbiting around a common point).
Knows ways in which technology has increased our understanding of the universe (e.g., visual, radio, and x-ray telescopes collect information about the universe from electromagnetic waves; computers interpret vast amounts of data from space; space probes gather information from distant parts of the solar system; accelerators allow us to simulate conditions in the stars and in the early history of the universe).
Understands general concepts related to the theory of special relativity (e.g., in contrast to other moving things, the speed of light is the same for all observers, no matter how they or the light source happen to be moving; nothing can travel faster than the speed of light). |
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Lee Ann Hennig, an astronomy teacher at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology in Alexandria, Virginia. |
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