<u>Answer</u>:
(A) A merry go round
This analogy best describes the shape of how the stars located in the galactic disk orbit.
<u>Explanation</u>:
According to many recent scientific studies, it is estimated that our Milky Way has over 200 billion stars, in which most of all are located in the Galactic disk, close to the nucleus and bulge in the center.
The galactic disk is made of a large quantity and percentage of gas and dust as well a huge number of stars, both old and young ones. In this faction of the milky way, the galactic center is orbited by the stars in circular motions, which is due to the interaction with gravity causing some up and down actions mixed with the circular orbits.
The second civilian astronaut who flew on Apollo 7 was Walter Cunningham
Answer: Option (a)
<u>Explanation:</u>
Apollo 7 mission was proposed in October 1968 and this was the first mission to carry crew(members) to the space.
This mission consists of 3 crew members,
- Commander "Walter M.Schirra" Jr,
- Command module pilot " Donn F. Eisele"
- "Walter Cunningham" as lunar module pilot.
Lunar module pilot was the sole survivor in that mission. Apollo 7 mission lasted for nearly 21 months and it fulfills the drawback of Apollo 1 mission.
The one in the bottom left corner
Perhaps no controversy has generated as much attention as that
surrounding the imposition of the death penalty. Since the adoption of the
Bill of Rights, our Constitution has contained the eighth amendment1
proscription against those punishments which are "cruel and unusual."
Notwithstanding this principle the implementation of capital punishment
has been traditionally accepted as a legitimate function of our system of
criminal justice.
In order to understand the problem of capital punishment, the social
and political background of the movement against capital punishment, both
in the United States2 and abroad, must be examined. Accordingly, before
undertaking an analysis of Furman v. Georgia,5 this Comment will undertake
a detailed and exhaustive examination of capital punishment as it
developed in England and the United States. Such an examination will
set the foundation for a critical evaluation of the arguments for and against
capital punishment as advanced by the Furman Court. The issue of capital
punishment cannot be discussed in a legal vacuum, but must be viewed
from a moral, social, political, and philosophical, as well as legal, perspective.
With this structural background, this Comment will examine the road
to Furman - the legislative history and case law which comprises the
backbone of the eighth amendment. It is only by a combination of the
social and political trends and the legal precedents that Furman can be
fully appreciated