Astro Trivia Quiz for May
- Raymondhow
- Moon Ambassador
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 81
- Joined: Sun May 12, 2019 11:01 pm
- 3
- Location: Oakland, California
- Status:
Offline
-
TSS Awards Badges
Astro Trivia Quiz for May
Greetings excellent TSSers, another trivia quiz for you. Here’s the link:
https://forms.gle/tsFCy1843RkAaMkJ7
For the short answer questions, spelling does not matter. Misspelled answers will have scores adjusted.
Remember:
1. No online research allowed, your own pure brain only!
2. On multiple choice questions, feel free to guess. You may get lucky.
3. If you have a comment about a question, please do NOT give away the correct answer!
4. Please do not repeat the quiz, at least not until after I announce the Champs sometime next week.
Enjoy!
https://forms.gle/tsFCy1843RkAaMkJ7
For the short answer questions, spelling does not matter. Misspelled answers will have scores adjusted.
Remember:
1. No online research allowed, your own pure brain only!
2. On multiple choice questions, feel free to guess. You may get lucky.
3. If you have a comment about a question, please do NOT give away the correct answer!
4. Please do not repeat the quiz, at least not until after I announce the Champs sometime next week.
Enjoy!
Ray
Outreach Coordinator, Eastbay Astronomical Society
Master Observer #204, Astronomical League
12.5" f/6 Dobsonian by New Moon Telescopes, Orion XT8 f/6 "ruby-red" Dob. Finders 13x80 Stellarvue RACI, 9x50 Orion RACI. Eyepieces 34mm Explore Scientific 68°, 24mm ES 68°, 20mm ES 68°, 16mm ES 68°, 13mm TeleVue DeLite 62°, 9mm TV DeLite 62°, 7mm TV DeLite 62°. Binoculars 12x63 Orion Mini-Giants
Outreach Coordinator, Eastbay Astronomical Society
Master Observer #204, Astronomical League
12.5" f/6 Dobsonian by New Moon Telescopes, Orion XT8 f/6 "ruby-red" Dob. Finders 13x80 Stellarvue RACI, 9x50 Orion RACI. Eyepieces 34mm Explore Scientific 68°, 24mm ES 68°, 20mm ES 68°, 16mm ES 68°, 13mm TeleVue DeLite 62°, 9mm TV DeLite 62°, 7mm TV DeLite 62°. Binoculars 12x63 Orion Mini-Giants
-
helicon
- Co-Administrator
- Articles: 459
- Posts: 10830
- Joined: Mon May 06, 2019 1:35 pm
- 3
- Location: Washington
- Status:
Online
-
TSS Awards Badges
Re: Astro Trivia Quiz for May
Thanks Ray for the quiz. Got 17/20! Two I lucked out on.
-Michael
Dobsonian: 10" Zhumell f/4.9
Refractors: ES AR152 f/6.5 Achromat on Twilight II, Celestron 102mm XLT f/9.8, KOWA 90mm spotting scope
Grab-n-go: AWB 5.1" Onesky Newtonian
Binoculars: Oberwerk 25x100, Celestron SkyMaster 15x70, Bushnell 10x50
Eyepieces: Explore Scientific line, GSO Superview, 9mm Plossl, Edmund 28mm RKE, Celestron 25mm Plossl
Camera: ZWO ASI 120
Naked Eye: Two Eyeballs
Latitude: 48.7229° N
Dobsonian: 10" Zhumell f/4.9
Refractors: ES AR152 f/6.5 Achromat on Twilight II, Celestron 102mm XLT f/9.8, KOWA 90mm spotting scope
Grab-n-go: AWB 5.1" Onesky Newtonian
Binoculars: Oberwerk 25x100, Celestron SkyMaster 15x70, Bushnell 10x50
Eyepieces: Explore Scientific line, GSO Superview, 9mm Plossl, Edmund 28mm RKE, Celestron 25mm Plossl
Camera: ZWO ASI 120
Naked Eye: Two Eyeballs
Latitude: 48.7229° N
-
sdbodin
- Orion Spur Ambassador
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 992
- Joined: Sat May 11, 2019 11:00 pm
- 3
- Location: Mattawa, WA, USA
- Status:
Offline
-
TSS Awards Badges
TSS Photo of the Day
Re: Astro Trivia Quiz for May
Yuk, flunked out, back to summer school!! 9/20!!!
Steve
Steve
Scopes; Meade 16 LX200, AT80LE, plus bunch just sitting around gathering dust
Cameras; Atik 460ex mono, Zwo ASI1600MC-cool, QHY5L-II color and mono
Cameras; Atik 460ex mono, Zwo ASI1600MC-cool, QHY5L-II color and mono
-
Gfamily
- Jupiter Ambassador
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 273
- Joined: Sat May 11, 2019 12:47 pm
- 3
- Location: North Cheshire, UK
- Status:
Offline
Re: Astro Trivia Quiz for May
Good Quiz - 10/20 is about fair.
LS8 Meade SCT, SW 127 Mak, 72mm Lightwave Refractor
Star Adventurer
AZ Gti mount
www.midcheshireastro.co.uk for astro company
Star Adventurer
AZ Gti mount
www.midcheshireastro.co.uk for astro company
-
AntennaGuy
- Milky Way Ambassador
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 1286
- Joined: Sun May 19, 2019 1:20 am
- 3
- Location: Tyler, TX USA
- Status:
Offline
Re: Astro Trivia Quiz for May
Once again, I am proud to have performed better than chance (but only a little).


* Meade 323 refractor on a manual equatorial mount.
* Celestron C6 SCT on a Twilight 1 Alt-Az mount
* Losmandy GM8G mount.
* Vixen VMC260L.
* Celestron C6 SCT on a Twilight 1 Alt-Az mount
* Losmandy GM8G mount.
* Vixen VMC260L.
-
Graeme1858
- Universal Ambassador
- Articles: 1
- Posts: 5031
- Joined: Mon Jun 24, 2019 7:16 pm
- 3
- Location: North Kent, UK
- Status:
Offline
-
TSS Awards Badges
TSS Photo of the Day
I Broke The Forum.
- bobharmony
- Milky Way Ambassador
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 1966
- Joined: Sun May 12, 2019 1:11 pm
- 3
- Location: Connecticut, US
- Status:
Online
-
TSS Photo of the Day
Re: Astro Trivia Quiz for May
I knew I was in trouble when I saw the questions. I was pleasantly surprised to walk away at 9/20.
Bob
Bob
Hardware: Celestron C6-N w/ Advanced GTmount, Baader MK iii CC, Orion ST-80, Canon 60D (unmodded), Nikon D5300 (modded), Orion SSAG
Software: BYE, APT, PHD2, DSS, PhotoShop CC 2020, StarTools, Cartes du Ciel, AstroTortilla

Software: BYE, APT, PHD2, DSS, PhotoShop CC 2020, StarTools, Cartes du Ciel, AstroTortilla

-
Unitron48
- Local Group Ambassador
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 2331
- Joined: Sun May 12, 2019 12:48 am
- 3
- Location: Culpeper, VA (USA)
- Status:
Online
-
TSS Awards Badges
Re: Astro Trivia Quiz for May
Always an education! Thanks Ray.
Dave
Dave
Unitron (60mm, 102mm, 127mm), Brandon 94
Stellarvue SVX127D
http://www.unitronhistory.com
"Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better." Albert Einstein
Stellarvue SVX127D
http://www.unitronhistory.com
"Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better." Albert Einstein
-
kt4hx
- Moderator
- Articles: 4
- Posts: 2830
- Joined: Sun May 12, 2019 12:18 am
- 3
- Location: Virginia, USA
- Status:
Offline
-
TSS Awards Badges
Re: Astro Trivia Quiz for May
Okay, got 16/20, I'm good with that!
Alan
Astro Sky 17.5 f/4.5 Dob || Apertura AD12 f/5 Dob || Zhumell Z10 f/4.9 Dob
ES AR127 f/6.5 & ED80 f/6 on Twilight-II || Apertura 6" f/5 Newtonian on Twilight-I
TV Ethos 100° 21mm, 13mm || ES 82° 24mm, 18mm || Vixen LVW 65° 22mm
Pentax XW 70° 10mm, 7mm, 5mm || barlows
DGM NPB Filter || Orion Ultra Block, O-III and Sky Glow Filters || Baader HaB Filter
Primary Field Atlases: Interstellarum and Uranometria All-Sky Edition
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
"Astronomers, we look into the past to see our future." (me)
"Seeing is in some respect an art, which must be learnt." (William Herschel)
"What we know is a drop, what we don't know is an ocean." (Sir Isaac Newton)
"No good deed goes unpunished." (various)
"I have become comfortably numb." (Roger Waters)
“Some people without brains do an awful lot of talking, don't you think?” (Scarecrow, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz)
Astro Sky 17.5 f/4.5 Dob || Apertura AD12 f/5 Dob || Zhumell Z10 f/4.9 Dob
ES AR127 f/6.5 & ED80 f/6 on Twilight-II || Apertura 6" f/5 Newtonian on Twilight-I
TV Ethos 100° 21mm, 13mm || ES 82° 24mm, 18mm || Vixen LVW 65° 22mm
Pentax XW 70° 10mm, 7mm, 5mm || barlows
DGM NPB Filter || Orion Ultra Block, O-III and Sky Glow Filters || Baader HaB Filter
Primary Field Atlases: Interstellarum and Uranometria All-Sky Edition
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
"Astronomers, we look into the past to see our future." (me)
"Seeing is in some respect an art, which must be learnt." (William Herschel)
"What we know is a drop, what we don't know is an ocean." (Sir Isaac Newton)
"No good deed goes unpunished." (various)
"I have become comfortably numb." (Roger Waters)
“Some people without brains do an awful lot of talking, don't you think?” (Scarecrow, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz)
-
OzEclipse
- Milky Way Ambassador
- Articles: 2
- Posts: 1754
- Joined: Sat May 11, 2019 8:11 am
- 3
- Location: Young, NSW, Australia, 34S, 148E
- Status:
Offline
-
TSS Awards Badges
TSS Photo of the Day
Re: Astro Trivia Quiz for May
I forgot to post just after i did it but I think I got - 9/20. Glad to see others struggled. It was a real challenge.
Don't feel quite so bad now.
Joe
Don't feel quite so bad now.
Joe

Amateur astronomer since 1978...................Web site : http://joe-cali.com/
Scopes: ATM 18" Dob, Vixen VC200L, ATM 6"f7, Saxon ED80, WO M70 ED, Orion 102 Maksutov, ST80.
Mounts: Takahashi EM-200, iOptron iEQ45, Push dobsonian with Nexus DSC, three homemade EQ's.
Eyepieces: TV Naglers 31, 17, 12, 7; Denkmeier D21 & D14; Pentax XW10, XW5, Unitron 40mm Kellner, Meade Or 25,12
Cameras : Pentax K1, K5, K01, K10D / VIDEO CAMS : TacosBD, Lihmsec.
Cam/guider/controllers: Lacerta MGEN 3, SW Synguider, Simulation Curriculum SkyFi 3+Sky safari
- Raymondhow
- Moon Ambassador
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 81
- Joined: Sun May 12, 2019 11:01 pm
- 3
- Location: Oakland, California
- Status:
Offline
-
TSS Awards Badges
Re: Astro Trivia Quiz for May
Thanks all for participating! Total of 13 responses this month.
As usual, the 12 questions scored 20 points.
Overall average score: 10.92 points = 54.6%.
The honorable mentions:
One scored 16 points = 80%: KT4HX
Bravo!
One scored 17 points = 85%: helicon
Bravo! Bravo!
And now.. (drum roll please) here is your Champion!
One scored 20 points = 100%: Gabrielle (Lady Fraktor)
Huzzah! Huzzah!
===
Answers, stats, comments…
1. In the image above, the yellow arrow points to which of the Lunar Maria? (1)
Mare Serenitatis, 8/13 correct.
2. The well-known comet that returns to the inner Solar System every 76 years is named for which 18th century astronomer? (last name only) (1)
Halley, 13/13 correct. One spelled it Haley, no problem.
3. From the star Sirius, the Sun would appear about as bright as which star does from Earth? (1)
Polaris, 6/13 correct.
4. Total eclipses of the Sun occur more often than annular eclipses. (1)
False, 7/13 correct. “Of all solar eclipses, about 28 percent are total; 35 percent are partial; 32 percent annular; and just 5 percent are hybrids.”
5. Which planet is named for the Roman deity who was messenger of the Gods? (1)
Mercury, 12/13 correct.
6. Name the constellation for which there is a corresponding constellation named with “Minor” suffix, yet itself does not have a “Major” suffix. (1)
Leo, 8/13 correct. Perhaps not named Leo Major because Leo Minor wasn’t invented until much later?
7. Theasterism known as “Three Leaps of the Gazelle” is composed of six stars, all from which constellation? (2)
Ursa Major, 8/13 correct. The gazelle leaps are formed by the pairs of stars that make up the bear's toes, fun to pick out with binos even from the city.
8. What is the name of the crash-test dummy used by SpaceX to test their Crew Dragon vehicle in actual launches into orbit? (2)
Ripley, 2/13 correct. Thought more people would know this one, I saw it mentioned in the news a lot.
9. When using a German equatorial mount in Australia, towards which constellation should the right ascension axis be pointed? (2)
Octans, 13/13 correct. The constellation that contains the South Celestial Pole.
10. In the early 19th century, this Englishman published works on pure and applied mathematics, and invented a common telescope accessory that still bears his name (last name only). (2)
Barlow, 3/13 correct.
11. The Greek letter Σ (sigma) is used to designate objects of whose double star catalog? (3)
Friedrich Von Struve, 8/13 correct.
12. Which was the first asteroid from where samples were collected and returned to Earth? (3)
25143 Itokawa, 4/13.
See you next time!
As usual, the 12 questions scored 20 points.
Overall average score: 10.92 points = 54.6%.
The honorable mentions:
One scored 16 points = 80%: KT4HX
Bravo!
One scored 17 points = 85%: helicon
Bravo! Bravo!
And now.. (drum roll please) here is your Champion!
One scored 20 points = 100%: Gabrielle (Lady Fraktor)
Huzzah! Huzzah!
===
Answers, stats, comments…
1. In the image above, the yellow arrow points to which of the Lunar Maria? (1)
Mare Serenitatis, 8/13 correct.
2. The well-known comet that returns to the inner Solar System every 76 years is named for which 18th century astronomer? (last name only) (1)
Halley, 13/13 correct. One spelled it Haley, no problem.
3. From the star Sirius, the Sun would appear about as bright as which star does from Earth? (1)
Polaris, 6/13 correct.
4. Total eclipses of the Sun occur more often than annular eclipses. (1)
False, 7/13 correct. “Of all solar eclipses, about 28 percent are total; 35 percent are partial; 32 percent annular; and just 5 percent are hybrids.”
5. Which planet is named for the Roman deity who was messenger of the Gods? (1)
Mercury, 12/13 correct.
6. Name the constellation for which there is a corresponding constellation named with “Minor” suffix, yet itself does not have a “Major” suffix. (1)
Leo, 8/13 correct. Perhaps not named Leo Major because Leo Minor wasn’t invented until much later?
7. The
Ursa Major, 8/13 correct. The gazelle leaps are formed by the pairs of stars that make up the bear's toes, fun to pick out with binos even from the city.
8. What is the name of the crash-test dummy used by SpaceX to test their Crew Dragon vehicle in actual launches into orbit? (2)
Ripley, 2/13 correct. Thought more people would know this one, I saw it mentioned in the news a lot.
9. When using a German equatorial mount in Australia, towards which constellation should the right ascension axis be pointed? (2)
Octans, 13/13 correct. The constellation that contains the South Celestial Pole.
10. In the early 19th century, this Englishman published works on pure and applied mathematics, and invented a common telescope accessory that still bears his name (last name only). (2)
Barlow, 3/13 correct.
11. The Greek letter Σ (sigma) is used to designate objects of whose double star catalog? (3)
Friedrich Von Struve, 8/13 correct.
12. Which was the first asteroid from where samples were collected and returned to Earth? (3)
25143 Itokawa, 4/13.
See you next time!
Ray
Outreach Coordinator, Eastbay Astronomical Society
Master Observer #204, Astronomical League
12.5" f/6 Dobsonian by New Moon Telescopes, Orion XT8 f/6 "ruby-red" Dob. Finders 13x80 Stellarvue RACI, 9x50 Orion RACI. Eyepieces 34mm Explore Scientific 68°, 24mm ES 68°, 20mm ES 68°, 16mm ES 68°, 13mm TeleVue DeLite 62°, 9mm TV DeLite 62°, 7mm TV DeLite 62°. Binoculars 12x63 Orion Mini-Giants
Outreach Coordinator, Eastbay Astronomical Society
Master Observer #204, Astronomical League
12.5" f/6 Dobsonian by New Moon Telescopes, Orion XT8 f/6 "ruby-red" Dob. Finders 13x80 Stellarvue RACI, 9x50 Orion RACI. Eyepieces 34mm Explore Scientific 68°, 24mm ES 68°, 20mm ES 68°, 16mm ES 68°, 13mm TeleVue DeLite 62°, 9mm TV DeLite 62°, 7mm TV DeLite 62°. Binoculars 12x63 Orion Mini-Giants
-
Graeme1858
- Universal Ambassador
- Articles: 1
- Posts: 5031
- Joined: Mon Jun 24, 2019 7:16 pm
- 3
- Location: North Kent, UK
- Status:
Offline
-
TSS Awards Badges
TSS Photo of the Day
I Broke The Forum.
Re: Astro Trivia Quiz for May
Very well done Gabrielle. Are you getting the beers in?
Regards
Graeme
Regards
Graeme
-
helicon
- Co-Administrator
- Articles: 459
- Posts: 10830
- Joined: Mon May 06, 2019 1:35 pm
- 3
- Location: Washington
- Status:
Online
-
TSS Awards Badges
Re: Astro Trivia Quiz for May
How did you get all 20 points Gabrielle? I felt very fortunate (and lucky) to get 17 points.
-Michael
Dobsonian: 10" Zhumell f/4.9
Refractors: ES AR152 f/6.5 Achromat on Twilight II, Celestron 102mm XLT f/9.8, KOWA 90mm spotting scope
Grab-n-go: AWB 5.1" Onesky Newtonian
Binoculars: Oberwerk 25x100, Celestron SkyMaster 15x70, Bushnell 10x50
Eyepieces: Explore Scientific line, GSO Superview, 9mm Plossl, Edmund 28mm RKE, Celestron 25mm Plossl
Camera: ZWO ASI 120
Naked Eye: Two Eyeballs
Latitude: 48.7229° N
Dobsonian: 10" Zhumell f/4.9
Refractors: ES AR152 f/6.5 Achromat on Twilight II, Celestron 102mm XLT f/9.8, KOWA 90mm spotting scope
Grab-n-go: AWB 5.1" Onesky Newtonian
Binoculars: Oberwerk 25x100, Celestron SkyMaster 15x70, Bushnell 10x50
Eyepieces: Explore Scientific line, GSO Superview, 9mm Plossl, Edmund 28mm RKE, Celestron 25mm Plossl
Camera: ZWO ASI 120
Naked Eye: Two Eyeballs
Latitude: 48.7229° N
-
Lady Fraktor
- Co-Administrator
- Articles: 0
- Posts: 8429
- Joined: Mon Apr 29, 2019 9:14 pm
- 3
- Location: Slovakia
- Status:
Offline
Re: Astro Trivia Quiz for May
I guessed at the gazelle question, when in doubt answer C 
Other than that my brain is a sponge for trivia.

Other than that my brain is a sponge for trivia.
See Far Sticks: Antares 105mm f/15 (modified), AOM 105mm f/9.5, Celestron 150mm f/8 (modified), Stellarvue NHNG DX 80mm f/6.9, TAL 100RS f/10, Vixen SD115s f/7.7
HD Pointy Things: EQ-5, TAL MT-1, Vixen SXP, Vixen AXJ
LD Pointy Things: Celestron SLT, Manfrotto 055B/ RC128, Manfrotto 028B/ Stellarvue M2C/ Argo Navis
Light Benders: 2” Astro-Physics MaxBright, 2" iStar dielectric, 2” Stellarvue Deluxe, 2” TAL/ NPZ dielectric, 2” Baader Amici prism, 2” Long Perng Amici prism, 2” Baader Herschel wedge, Vixen 1.25" flip mirror
Jewellery: Antares to Zeiss, now only slightly more than 1 person requires!
The only culture I have is from yogurt

HD Pointy Things: EQ-5, TAL MT-1, Vixen SXP, Vixen AXJ
LD Pointy Things: Celestron SLT, Manfrotto 055B/ RC128, Manfrotto 028B/ Stellarvue M2C/ Argo Navis
Light Benders: 2” Astro-Physics MaxBright, 2" iStar dielectric, 2” Stellarvue Deluxe, 2” TAL/ NPZ dielectric, 2” Baader Amici prism, 2” Long Perng Amici prism, 2” Baader Herschel wedge, Vixen 1.25" flip mirror
Jewellery: Antares to Zeiss, now only slightly more than 1 person requires!
The only culture I have is from yogurt
Create an account or sign in to join the discussion
You need to be a member in order to post a reply
Create an account
Not a member? register to join our community
Members can start their own topics & subscribe to topics
It’s free and only takes a minute