Stars and Planets: Mystery 3

Stars and Planets: Mystery 3

5th Grade

9 Qs

quiz-placeholder

Similar activities

Planet Earth and neighbours

Planet Earth and neighbours

5th - 7th Grade

13 Qs

Separating Things

Separating Things

5th Grade

13 Qs

Pangea 6th grade

Pangea 6th grade

4th - 6th Grade

11 Qs

Amazing animals

Amazing animals

5th Grade

11 Qs

4th Grade Cluster 5 Review

4th Grade Cluster 5 Review

5th Grade

10 Qs

The Environment and Me

The Environment and Me

4th - 6th Grade

13 Qs

space

space

4th - 5th Grade

9 Qs

LIGHT CLASS 4

LIGHT CLASS 4

3rd - 5th Grade

8 Qs

Stars and Planets: Mystery 3

Stars and Planets: Mystery 3

Assessment

Quiz

Science

5th Grade

Practice Problem

Medium

NGSS
MS-ESS2-4, MS-ESS1-3, MS-ESS1-1

+1

Standards-aligned

Created by

Katie H

Used 74+ times

FREE Resource

AI

Enhance your content in a minute

Add similar questions
Adjust reading levels
Convert to real-world scenario
Translate activity
More...

9 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION

45 sec • 1 pt

1. Why would it be difficult to live on Venus?

a. Venus is far away from the Sun so it is a very cold planet.

b. Venus is far away from the Sun so it is a very hot planet.

c. Venus is close to the Sun so it is a very hot planet.

d. Venus is close to the Sun so it is a very cold planet.

2.

MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION

45 sec • 1 pt

2. What is the “Goldilocks” zone?

A zone where planets get the right amount of heat and light for liquid water to exist.

A zone in our Solar System where aliens live.

A zone where plants get too much sunlight.

A zone on the Earth where most people want to live

Tags

NGSS.MS-ESS2-4

NGSS.MS-ESS2-6

3.

MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION

45 sec • 1 pt

Media Image

3. The image shows a solar system with one star (on the left) and 5 planets that orbit around the star. Which planets would be cool enough to have liquid water?

Planets A and B.

Planets B and C.

Planets C and D.

Planets D and E.

4.

MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION

45 sec • 1 pt

4. What do we call planets that are outside our own solar system?

outer planets

exoplanets

outside planets

endoplanets

5.

MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION

45 sec • 1 pt

Media Image

5. Which of these stars do you think has a habitable zone that is the farthest away?

Star A

Star B

Star C

6.

MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION

45 sec • 1 pt

Media Image

  1. 6. Astronomers have discovered two different stars, Star A and Star B. They have figured out that both stars give off light that is equally bright. This means Star A and Star B are the exact same brightness level. But when you look at them from Earth, they look like the drawings above. Star A appears much dimmer than Star B. What could explain this?

Light appears brighter the closer you are to it, so Star A must be closer to Earth than Star B.

Light appears brighter the closer you are to it, so Star B must be closer to Earth than Star A.

Distance has no effect on how bright stars appear. So there must be another explanation for why Star B appears brighter than Star A.

7.

MULTIPLE SELECT QUESTION

45 sec • 1 pt

Media Image

  1. 7. Star A looks like a dim tiny star in the night sky when viewed from the surface of Earth. But astronomers have discovered that Star A is actually much, much bigger than planet Earth! Then why does Star A look so tiny in the night sky? What could explain this?

Star A is being blocked by the Moon so we can’t see how big it actually is.

Star A is very, very far away from Earth so it looks small and dim even though it is large and bright.

Star A must actually be very small and the scientists didn’t measure it correctly.

Tags

NGSS.MS-ESS1-3

Access all questions and much more by creating a free account

Create resources

Host any resource

Get auto-graded reports

Google

Continue with Google

Email

Continue with Email

Classlink

Continue with Classlink

Clever

Continue with Clever

or continue with

Microsoft

Microsoft

Apple

Apple

Others

Others

Already have an account?