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Published byAron Stafford Modified over 9 years ago
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Objects in the Solar System
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Comets Composed of dust and rock particles mixed with frozen water, methane, and ammonia Halley’s comet appears every 76 years; last seen in 1986 Many times referred to as “dirty snowballs”
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Parts of a Comet Nucleus – mass of frozen ice and rock Coma – bright cloud of vaporized gases and dust around the nucleus Dust tail – tail of dust from the solar winds pushing on the gas in the coma (points away from the Sun) Ion tail – tail of ions formed from the vaporization of particles
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Asteroids Asteroids – rocky and metallic objects that orbit the Sun but are too small to be considered planets. They are known as minor planets Asteroid Belt is located between Mars and Jupiter
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Meteoroid Pieces of rock left over from comets that are floating in space. Beginning of the cycle Baby stage
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Meteors (Shooting or Falling Stars) Meteoroids that enter Earth’s atmosphere and start burning turns into a meteor Usually burn up before striking the ground Lots of meteors that burn at one time are called a “meteor shower” Teenage stage
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Meteorite (Hits Right here on Earth) A meteor that doesn’t burn up and hits the surface of Earth or any other object becomes a meteorite Craters are left on the surface after the impact Adult stage
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Dr. Dre D = MeteoroiD R = MeteoR E = MeteoritE
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Stars A large, spherical mass of gas that gives off light and other types of radiation Constellations – observed patterns of stars in the night sky (Orion, Ursa Major) 88 constellations Color of a star indicates its temperature - Hot = Blue-White - Middle = Yellow - Cool = Orange or Red
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Classifying Stars About 90% of all stars are main sequence stars White dwarfs – hot but not bright Giants – bright but not hot; also called red giants Larger ones are called supergiants
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Evolution of Stars The life of a star depends on its mass All stars begin as a large cloud of gas and dust called a nebula High mass star→ main sequence→ red supergiant→ supernova →black hole or neutron star Low mass star → main sequence → red giant → white dwarf
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Galaxies A large group of stars, gas, and dust held together by gravity We live in the Milky Way galaxy
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Types of Galaxies 1. Spiral – have spiral arms that wind outward from center Ex. Milky Way galaxy
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Types of Galaxies 2. Elliptical – shaped like a large, 3-D ellipse Many are football shaped, but others are round
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Types of Galaxies 3. Irregular – those that don’t fit in the other categories
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The Sun Center of the solar system and closest star to the Earth Light from the sun reaches Earth in about 8 minutes
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Sun’s Layers Core – center of the sun; ball of gas that produces energy by fusing hydrogen into helium Radiation Zone – layer on the outside of the core Convection Zone – layer outside the radiation zone where gases circulate in giant swirls Atmosphere – outer layer of the sun
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The Sun’s Atmosphere Photosphere – lowest layer of sun’s atmosphere; where light is given off Corona – largest layer of the sun’s atmosphere; extends millions of kilometers into space
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Surface Features of the Sun Sunspots – areas that appear dark because they are cooler
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Surface Features of the Sun Prominences – huge, arching columns of gas
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Surface Features of the Sun Flares – violent eruption of bright gases shooting outward at high speeds near a sunspot
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Surface Features of the Sun CME – coronal mass ejection; large amounts of electrically charged gas are ejected suddenly from the suns corona They help produce the auroras that cause the northern lights
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