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Published byDelilah McCormick Modified over 9 years ago
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STARS
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What is a star? A star is a enormous ball of glowing gas. There are approximately 70,000,000,000,000,000,000,000(70 sextillion). On a dark clear night we can only see about 3,000 stars with our eyes. The closest star to us is the Sun.
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This is what we see when we look up at night.
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Constellations Are a group of stars that are connected together to make a picture (like connect the dots) They were used but early explorers to navigate the sea at night All together there are 88 constellations in the night sky.
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Big Dipper – not one
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Big Bear – Ursa what?
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Leo
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Dragon
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Where do stars come from? About 15 billion years ago there was a huge explosion. This huge explosion was known as The Big Bang. Scientist believe that this huge explosion gave birth to the stars and planets
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THE BIG BANG
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The Sun Closest star to our planet Earth. Our sun is a medium-sized star. It is about 333,000 times the mass of the Earth. The Sun will burn fuel for about 5 billion more years (middle-aged star) It’s surface temperature is 11,000°F
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The Sun from Earth
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Life Cycle of Stars Stars are born in nebulas also know as star nurseries. These are clouds of hot gases. Stars then go into a main sequence stage where it starts to burn fuel and glow. The star burns out it’s fuel it glows less and begins to expand. This star is called a Red Giant. The star will eventually collapse and explode this is know as the Supernova stage.(only the ones much bigger than our sun – 8 x or more) Depending on it’s size it then will become either a dwarf star, neutron star, or black hole.
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Shiloh NEWS : Mr. C’s Class Travels to SPACE to visit far way stars
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What the sun really looks like!
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Nebula- Star Nursery
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Nebula
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Star Colors Red stars are the coolest stars (below 2,500-5,000°F) Orange Stars (getting hotter) Yellow stars - (getting hotter) (6,000-12,000°F) White Stars (getting hotter) Blue Stars are the hottest ( 32,000-1,600,000°F or higher)
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Red Giant The star burns out it’s fuel it glows less and begins to expand. This star is called a Red Giant.
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Orange Star
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Yellow Star
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White Dwarf (small stars become this, don’t Supernova)
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Sirius, the brightest star
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Orion, my favorite constellation
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North Star, used to navigate, also called Polaris (always visible)
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Hubble Space Telescope
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Space Probes: Pioneer Venus
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Pioneer 10 – off to Jupiter
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Voyager 1 and 2 Sent off to check out the 4 gas giants in 1977 and is still going beyond…
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Blue Star
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Black Dwarf
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Before Supernova
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Supernova This BIG star will eventually collapse and explode this is know as the Supernova stage (small stars don’t explode).
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Energy released in Supernova explosion
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Neutron Star- leftover from Supernova
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Neutron Star
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Neutron star pulls other stars into them.
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Black Hole- depending on the stars size it then will become either a black dwarf, neutron star, or black hole.
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Shiloh News Mr. C’s Class land back on Earth safely
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