<span>The correct answer would be<em> B</em>
As Earth travels in its orbit, different constellations are visible at different times of the year.
I hope you have a nice day! :D</span>
Part 1
When the solar atmosphere accumulates a lot of magnetic energy
to a point that cannot accumulate more, all that magnetic energy is suddenly released,
and with it, a lot of radiation. So much, that in fact it covers all of the
electromagnetic spectrum; from radio waves to gamma rays. That burst of
radiation is called a solar flare. In a single solar flare the amount of
radiation released is millions of times greater than all the nuclear bombs in
the face if the earth exploding together. Lucky for us, most of the high-energy
radiation dissipates before reaching the Earth, and the radiation that do reach
us, is deflected by the Earth’s magnetic field.
Part 2
1. Not all the radiation
of solar flares that reach the Earth is deflected by its magnetic field; some
of them reach us and charges the upper atmosphere with ionized particles. Those
particles react with the gases in the atmosphere and produce a light; that
light is what we call Auroras borealis or southern nights; One the most beautiful
natural spectacles in earth, who thought Auroras begin their lives as deadly
solar flares.
2. Solar flares
contain a lot of high-energy radiation that is extremely dangerous for our
electronic devices; when they reach the Earth, they can damage sensible
electronics like satellites. A very powerful solar flare could even damage all
the electronic devices on the surface of the Earth.
For the "what is this investigation about", you could pick
the shape of the Earth, the size of the Earth, how the Sun
generates its energy, the distance to the Moon, why the
sky is blue ... things like that. There are millions uvum.
Trustworthy sources of information:
-- an Encyclopedia
-- a library book that's all about the subject of the investigation
-- a magazine that's all about exactly the subject of the investigation
-- a TV program that's ALL ABOUT the subject of the investigation
-- a teacher who teaches the subject of the investigation
-- a high school student whose hobby is the subject of the investigation
-- an adult whose hobby is the subject of the investigation
-- an adult whose JOB is the subject of the investigation
-- a high school student who got a very good grade in a course
where the subject of the investigation was taught
-- a college student who is studying the same subject as the investigation
UN-trustworthy sources of information:
(This doesn't mean that they're always wrong. It means that
they can tell you something, and you just can't be sure of
whether it's right or wrong.)
-- some sources listed on Google
-- some YouTube videos
-- other students in your class
-- other students at your school
-- your next-door neighbor (unless he's on the 'trustworthy' list above)
-- a newspaper article
-- a TV news item, or a TV program that's NOT all about the subject
-- a public opinion poll; (just because everybody thinks so
doesn't mean that it's true)
-- your sister's friend's hairdresser's grocer's mother-in-law
-- anything you hear if you don't know WHO said it
Answer:
Time= 1/frequency
=1/100
=0.01
Explanation: