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Published byJoshua Cannon Modified over 8 years ago
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THE SOLAR SYSTEM
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THE NINE PLANETS
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THE INNER PLANETS The solar system is divided into two groups of planets - inner and outer. Inner planets are called terrestrial planets because they are like Earth - small, dense, and rocky.
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MERCURY Mercury is the closest planet to the sun Mercury has very drastic temperature differences (-173 to 427ºC ).
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VENUS Venus rotates in the opposite direction than Earth does. On Venus, a day is longer than a year.
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EARTH Earth can support life because it has liquid water. A revolution around the sun is 365 ¼ days so every 4 years there is a “leap day” to catch us up..
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MARS Mars is known as the “red planet.” Mars has a very thin atmosphere and low pressure.
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THE OUTER PLANETS All of the outer planets are gas giants. Gas giants are very large planets that don’t have any known solid surfaces.
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JUPITER Jupiter is mostly made of H and He and is the largest planet. The Great Red Spot is a giant storm about 1½ times the size of Earth.
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SATURN The 2nd largest planet in the solar system Saturn has the largest rings of all of the planets that consist of icy particles.
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URANUS An unusual quality of Uranus is that it is tipped over on its side (it is thought to have been hit by a massive object that tipped it over).
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NEPTUNE Neptune’s atmosphere contains belts of clouds. Neptune has a set of very narrow rings.
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THE SUN The sun is a large ball of gas made mostly of hydrogen and helium held together by gravity.
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COMETS A comet is a small body of ice, rock, and cosmic dust loosely packed together.
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ASTEROIDS & METEOROIDS Asteroids and meteoroids are small, rocky bodies in orbit around the sun, but meteoroids are much smaller.
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THE END
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