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Published byDorthy Sharp Modified over 9 years ago
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Introductory questions for Detecting Extrasolar Planets from Space Science Sequence Unit 4 Great Explorations in Math and Science (GEMS) http://www.lhsgems.org
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Do you think there are planets orbiting other stars?... How many?
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Are all stars the same size and temperature as the Sun?
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How might the type of star affect whether it has habitable planets?
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If there is a certain zone around a star where life might exist, what must be critical qualities of that zone?
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What things would you want to know about a newly discovered planet? ooo
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Why would exoplanets be hard to detect? What methods do astronomers use to find planets?
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What’s this?
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What happens when a planet transits a star? Make a model that you can use to demonstrate a planet transit.
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For each team of 4–6 students: 1 snake book light 1 prepared Ping-Pong ball (see Getting Ready) several round, opaque plastic beads (ranging in size from 8 mm to 16 mm in diameter) 2 or more pipe cleaners 1 or 2 chopsticks or thin wooden dowels black thread 4" x 6” index cards tape paper or plastic bag to hold the materials Book lights: create a model “star” by setting up a light bulb and socket in the middle of the classroom for teams to demonstrate their transits.
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What kind of orbit would allow us to see a transit? Ball-on-stick demo
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What’s wrong with this statement: “If a star has an orbiting planet, astronomers can usually detect it by transit observations”
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Kepler is designed to monitor brightness of 100,000 stars simultaneously for over 3 years.
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Scale of the model? Return to questions about planets (slide 6) Are there more questions? Do transit observations help us answer the questions? More about Kepler mission...
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