Regents Earth Science Test Preparation Practice

    Variations Of Insolation

    Base your answers to questions 1 on the diagram below and on your knowledge of Earth science. The diagram represents Earth’s orbit around the Sun. Positions A, B, C, and D represent Earth’s location on the fi rst day of each season. Letter N indicates the North Pole.

    seasons-and-astronomy, earth-revolution, seasons-and-astronomy, the-solar-system, standard-1-math-and-science-inquery, geocentric-model-heliocentric-model fig: esci12019-examw_g25.png

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    Base your answers to questions 2 on the passage below and on your knowledge of Earth science.

    Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation

    In the 1920s, Edwin Hubble’s discovery of a pattern in the red shift of light from galaxies moving away from Earth led to the theory of an expanding universe. This expansion implies that the universe was smaller, denser, and hotter in the past. In the 1940s, scientists predicted that heat (identified as cosmic microwave background radiation) left over from the Big Bang would fill the universe. In the 1960s, satellite probes found that cosmic microwave background radiation fills the universe uniformly in every direction, and indicated a temperature of about 3 kelvins (K). This radiation has been cooling as the universe has been expanding.

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    Base your answers to questions 3 on the diagram below and on your knowledge of Earth science. The diagram represents Earth’s position in its orbit on the first day of each of the four seasons, one of which is labeled A. The North Pole is labeled N. Earth’s closest distance to the Sun and Earth’s farthest distance from the Sun are labeled in kilometers.

    insolation-and-the-seasons, variations-of-insolation, standard-6-interconnectedness, models, standard-6-interconnectedness, patterns-of-change fig: esci62017-exampwr_g20.png

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    Base your answers to questions 4 on the diagrams below and on your knowledge of Earth science. The diagrams, labeled A, B, and C, represent equal-sized portions of the Sun’s rays striking Earth’s surface at 23.5° N latitude at noon at three different times of the year. The angle at which the Sun’s rays hit Earth’s surface and the relative areas of Earth’s surface receiving the rays at the three different angles of insolation are shown.

    insolation-and-the-seasons, variations-of-insolation, standard-1-math-and-science-inquery, geocentric-model-heliocentric-model, standard-6-interconnectedness, models fig: esci82015-exam_g40.png

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    Base your answers to questions 7 on the diagram below and on your knowledge of Earth science. The diagram represents a simplified model of the incoming (solar) and outgoing (terrestrial) electromagnetic radiation of Earth’s energy budget.

    insolation-and-the-seasons, variations-of-insolation, standard-1-math-and-science-inquery, geocentric-model-heliocentric-model fig: esci-v202-exam_g31.png

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    Base your answers to questions 11 on the data table below and on your knowledge of Earth science. The data table lists four constellations in which star clusters are seen from Earth. A star cluster is a group of stars near each other in space. Stars in the same cluster move at the same velocity. The length of the arrows in the table represents the amount of redshift of two wavelengths of visible light emitted by these star clusters.

    seasons-and-astronomy, big-bang, standard-6-interconnectedness, models fig: esci62016-examw_g43.png

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    Base your answers to questions 12 on the graph below and on your knowledge of Earth science. The graph shows changes in hours of daylight during the year at the latitudes of 0°, 30° N, 50° N and 60° N.

    insolation-and-the-seasons, variations-of-insolation, standard-1-math-and-science-inquery, velocity-slope-sediment-size-channel-shape-stream-valume-distance-from-the-sun-gravitational-force-period-of-revolution-speed-of-revolution fig: esci62016-examw_g47.png

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    Base your answers to questions 13 on the diagram below and on your knowledge of Earth science. The diagram represents the apparent path of the Sun across the sky as seen by an observer on Earth’s surface on June 21. Points A, B, C, and D represent positions of the Sun at different times of the day. The angle of Polaris above the horizon as seen in the nighttime sky is indicated.

    insolation-and-the-seasons, the-sun-apparent-path, seasons-and-astronomy, earth-rotation, standard-1-math-and-science-inquery, geocentric-model-heliocentric-model, standard-6-interconnectedness, models, standard-6-interconnectedness, patterns-of-change fig: esci62019-examw_g40.png

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    Base your answers to questions 14 on the data table below and on the graph in image provided and on your knowledge of Earth science. The data table lists the number of daylight hours for a location at 50° N on the 21st day of each month for 1 year. The graph shows the number of daylight hours on the 21st day of each month for a location at 70° N and for the equator, 0°.

    insolation-and-the-seasons, variations-of-insolation, standard-1-math-and-science-inquery, velocity-slope-sediment-size-channel-shape-stream-valume-distance-from-the-sun-gravitational-force-period-of-revolution-speed-of-revolution fig: esci82014-examw_g44.png

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    Base your answers to questions 15 on the diagram below and on your knowledge of Earth science. In the diagram, letters A, B, C, and D represent Earth’s location on the first day of the four seasons as it orbits the Sun. Aphelion (Earth’s farthest distance from the Sun) and perihelion (Earth’s closest distance to the Sun) are labeled to show the approximate positions where they occur in Earth’s orbit. The dashed lines represent Earth’s axis, and the North Pole is labeled N.

    seasons-and-astronomy, earth-revolution, standard-6-interconnectedness, models fig: esci82018-examw_g46.png

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