2012 solar system

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Our Solar System consists of: • __________ • __________ • __________ • __________ • __________ • __________ 1 Star 8 Planets Many Moons Asteroi ds Comets 5+Dwarf Planets

Transcript of 2012 solar system

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Our Solar System consists of:

• __________

• __________

• __________

• __________

• __________

• __________

1 Star

8 Planets

Many Moons

Asteroids

Comets

5+Dwarf Planets

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•The _____ is our nearest star and the

center of our solar system.

•It is a big ball of _________. (92% H / 8% He)

•It is the source for all of the

_________________ in the solar system.

•It has 99.85% mass of the Solar System

sun

gases

light and energy

The SunThe Sun

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•The sun has a lot of _______ which pulls on the planets and keeps them in orbit.

•The planets ______________ (travel) around the sun in an elliptical or oval path.

•The amount of time that each planet takes to travel around the sun is known as a ___________ and is the length of a year on that planet.

gravity

orbit or revolve

revolution

RevolutionsRevolutions

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Each planet also _______, or spins on its axis, as it revolves around the sun.

The amount of time that each planet takes to turn all the way around its axis is known as a __________ and equals the length of one day on that planet.

rotates

rotation

RotationRotation

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In order for an object in the solar system to be considered a planet, it must do 3 things.• It must ______ the sun.• It must have a _______ shape.• It must have cleared its neighborhood.

The planets listed in their order based on how far they are from the sun are:

_________,_________, ______, ________, ________, ________, ________, and _________.

orbitround

Mercury Venus Earth MarsJupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune

PlanetsPlanets

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Inner Planets “Terrestrial Planets”

• Rocky

• Dense

• Small

Images: Lunar and Planetary Laboratory: http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=178

• Few or no moons• Metal cores (iron)

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AsteroidsAsteroids

Asteroids are small objects that orbit the sun. Many are found in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Others are found in the Kuiper belt past Pluto.

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Outer Planets

• Large!

• Gas Giants

• No solid surface (land masses)

• May have a small solid core

• Tumultuous atmospheres - rapid winds, large storms

• Rotate relatively quickly

• Many moonsImage: Lunar and Planetary Laboratory: http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=178

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Kuiper Belt

• Disk of debris at the edge of our Solar System

• Pluto is a KB Object (sorry!)

• Source of short-period comets

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Comets and the Oort CloudComets and the Oort Cloud

Outside the Kupier Belt is the Oort cloud, a cloud of dust and other objects that orbit our sun. Most comets travel in this cloud in irregular orbits that pass close to the planets.

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Inner Planets!

Image: Lunar and Planetary Laboratory: http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=178

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Mercury – The Hidden PlanetMercury – The Hidden PlanetPlanet Fast facts:

• Diameter – 3031 miles• Distance from Sun -

~36 million miles

• Gravity -1/3 of Earth’s• Rotation (day) -

59 Earth Days

• Revolution (year) - 88 Earth Days

• Atmosphere – almost none• Moons – none• Rings - none

• Named after the Roman messenger God because of how fast it orbits the sun.

• Temperature ranges from 800o F to hundreds of degrees below zero.

• Surface is covered by craters caused by objects smashing into it.

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Venus- The Bright PlanetVenus- The Bright PlanetPlanet Fast Facts

• Diameter – 7521 miles• Distance from Sun –

67 million miles

• Gravity -9/10 of Earth’s• Rotation (day) -

243 Earth Days

• Revolution (year) - 225 Earth Days

• Atmosphere – – 96% carbon dioxide

• Moons – none• Rings - none

• Named after the Roman Goddess of Love and beauty.

• It is the brightest object in the sky besides the sun and moon.

• Called Morning or Evening Star depending on its location.

• Atmosphere causes a greenhouse effect so temperatures reach 900oF.

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Earth- The Blue PlanetEarth- The Blue PlanetPlanet Fast Facts

• Diameter – 8000 miles• Distance from Sun –

– 93 million miles• Gravity – 1g• Rotation (day) -

1 Earth Day• Revolution (year)

365 Earth Days• Atmosphere –

– 78% nitrogen – 21 % oxygen

• Moons – one : Luna• Rings - none

• Named after the Roman Goddess Ea, which means earth

• It is called the blue planet because of the water that covers 75 % of the surface.

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Mars- the Red PlanetMars- the Red PlanetPlanet Fast Facts

• Diameter – 4000 miles• Distance from Sun –

142 million miles

• Gravity – 1/3 of Earth’s

• Rotation (day)– 25 Earth Hours

• Revolution (year)687 Earth Days

• Atmosphere – – 95% Carbon Dioxide

• Moons – two: Phobos & Deimos

• Rings - none

• Temperature ranges from 75F to -190F.

• It has the largest known mountain (volcano) in our solar system called Olympus Mons. It is 3 times taller than Mt. Everest.

• It has a canyon 10 times longer and 3 times deeper than the Grand Canyon.

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Deimos

Phobos

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•Scientists’ currently think yes there is..

•Possibly lots of water…• •~about 3.5 – 4 billion years ago there may have been an acidic, salty ocean

Image: LPI http://www.lpi.usra.edu/education/timeline/gallery/slide_19.html

Is there Water on Mars?

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• Water ice and dust• CO2 layer – winter• Caps expand and

contract during seasonal changes

MGS image of ice cap:http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/polaricecaps/PIA02393.html

Viking image at http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/imgcat/html/object_page/vl2_p21873.html

Viking Image at http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA00407

Martian Water Now

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Jupiter – The GiantJupiter – The GiantPlanet Fast Facts

• Diameter – 89,000 miles• Distance from Sun –

– 484 million miles

• Gravity – 2 ½ times Earth’s• Rotation (day) –

10 Earth Hours

• Revolution (year) - 12 Earth Years

• Atmosphere – – Hydrogen and Helium

• Rings – 3 made of fine dust particles

• Moons – 62 with 50 them being named

• The most famous moons are the 4 Galilean moons; Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto.

• Ganymede is the largest moon in the solar system and is larger than Mercury.

• The big Red Spot is believed to be a 340 year old storm.

• It is 3 times the size of Earth

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Io

Callista

Ganymede

Europa

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Saturn – The Ringed PlanetSaturn – The Ringed PlanetPlanet Fast Facts

• Diameter – 75,000 miles• Distance from Sun –

890 million miles

• Gravity – slightly more than Earth’s

• Rotation (day)– 10 ½ Earth Hours

• Revolution (year)29 ½ Earth Years

• Atmosphere – – Hydrogen, – Helium – Methane

• Moons:has 62

53 named

• Titan is largest & has atmosphere.

• Rings – 7 rings, made of smaller ice ringlets

• Saturn’s average density is less than water, so it would float.

• Like Jupiter, Saturn gives off more heat than it receives from the sun

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Saturn

Titan and smaller moon looking across Saturn’s rings.

Titan’s Cloudy suface

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Uranus – the Tilted PlanetUranus – the Tilted Planet

Planet Fast Facts

• Diameter – 32,000 miles• Distance from Sun –

– 1,800 million miles

• Gravity – 9/10 of Earth’s

• Rotation (day) – 18 Earth Hours

• Revolution (year)84 Earth Years

• Atmosphere – – 72 %Hydrogen

– 26% helium

– 2% methane

• Moons – 27 known natural satellites

• Rings -11made of ice boulders and fine dust

• Its axis is tilted 98o, which means it lays on its side. It rotates like a ball rolling across the floor rather than like a top.

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The moons of Uranus are not named after Roman mythological characters. They are named after characters from the writings of Shakespeare and Alexander Pope.

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Neptune – The Twin PlanetNeptune – The Twin PlanetPlanet Fast Facts

• Diameter – 31,000 miles• Distance from Sun –

– 2,800 million miles

• Gravity – slightly larger than Earth’s

• Rotation (day)– 19 Earth Hours

• Revolution (year)168 Earth Years

• Atmosphere – – Hydrogen – Helium – Methane

• Moons- 13 known satellites The largest is the moon, Triton. Triton orbits Neptune in the opposite direction from the planet’s rotation.

• Rings- 3 obvious rings and one faint ring made of dust

• Scientists knew Neptune existed before they saw it because of its effect on Uranus’ orbit

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Neptune

Triton

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Dwarf PlanetsDwarf Planets• These are small bodies that orbit the sun and

have nearly round shapes as a result of their own gravity and are not satellites.

• There are 6 known dwarf planets, Pluto, Ceres, Makemake, Haumea, Quaoar and Eris.

• Scientists are studying about 200 more objects in the solar system that may be classified as dwarf planets.

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Pluto

Charon

PlutoPluto• Pluto was once

known as the 9th planet.

• Its orbit passes into the Kupier belt which means the orbit is not clear of other objects. That is why it is a dwarf planet.

Its three moons are Charon, Nix and Hydra.

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CeresCeres

• Ceres is located in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. It was discovered in 1801 and has a diameter of 950 km.

• It orbits the sun every 4.6 years. It has water and an atmosphere.

• It has 1/3 of all the mass in the asteroid belt.

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ErisEris

• Discovered in 2005.

• Larger than Pluto

• 3 times as far from the sun as Pluto

• Has a moon named Dysnomia

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Haumea

• Just farther from the sun than Pluto

• Icy world

• Elliptical in shape

• Revolution 285 years

• Rotation 4 hours

• Two moons – – Hi’iaka & Namaka

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Makemake

• Orbits past Pluto

• Revolution – 310years

• Red in color

• Diameter = 1300 km

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Comparing the PlanetsComparing the Planets

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The Milky WayThe Milky WayOur solar system is in the Orion arm of a

spiral galaxy known as the Milky Way.

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GalaxyGalaxy

• A galaxy is a collection of stars, interstellar gases, dust and dark matter.

• Galaxies are classified based on their shapes. There are three main types.– Elliptical– Spiral – Irregular

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Spiral GalaxySpiral Galaxy

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Irregular GalaxiesIrregular Galaxies

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Colliding GalaxiesColliding Galaxies

It is believed that the universe is expanding and galaxies are moving. Scientist have taken pictures of colliding galaxies to prove this.

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StarsStars• Inside galaxies are 100’s, 1000’s or

1,000,000’s of stars.

• Not all stars are the same.

• Stars are classified by their colors. They are red, orange, yellow, white and blue. The color indicates how hot a star is with red being the least hot and blue being the hottest.

• Our sun is a medium sized yellow star.

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Star comparisonsStar comparisons

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Is Pluto a Planet?

• is in orbit around the Sun,

• has sufficient mass for its self-gravity so that it assumes

a spherical shape

• has cleared the neighborhood around its orbit.

What Makes a Planet a Planet?

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Is Pluto a Planet?

• is in orbit around the Sun,• has sufficient mass for its self-gravity so that it assumes a spherical shape• has NOT cleared the neighborhood around its orbit• is not a satellite (MOON)

• a dwarf planet is not a planet!

What is a Dwarf Planet?

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Is Pluto a Planet?

Image based on NASA images, from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:EightTNOs.png

Pluto is not a planet because it is way too small, and it doesn't meet the necessary requirement needed to be a planet.

The requirements are:

It needs to be in orbit around the sun-- YES! Pluto does orbit the sun.

It needs to have enough gravity to pull itself into a spherical shape -- Pluto has sufficient gravity to have become a shpere. (This is called hydrostatic equilibrium, by the way.)

It needs to have ”cleared the neighborhood_" of its orbit -- Uh oh. Here's the "problem" with Pluto. According to this IAU rule, Pluto is not a planet.

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