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Name of Planet You and Your Partner’s Names Period Provide a caption for each image. Ex: This is a compilation image showing the seasons on Saturn. The images were taken by the Hubble Space Telescope from Earth’s years 1996-2000.
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History Who discovered your planet? When? How? Where? Describe how the planet got its name. Place a photo (with a caption) of the planet symbol and if possible, the discoverer as well.
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Solar System Order from the sun. Distance from the sun in AU and in km. Orbital period (how long is one trip around the sun?) Rotation (length of one day). Place an photo on this slide that shows where your planet is located in relative to other planets.
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Planet Measurements Include all measurements from your data worksheet. Insert a photo (with a caption) of your planet.
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Composition and Atmosphere Describe the core and surface composition of your planet. Describe the composition of the atmosphere if any. If your planet does not have an atmosphere, simply state your planet does not have one. Include a photo (with a caption) of the inside of your planet (found on the enchantedlearning.com website).
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Surface Conditions List surface temperatures – coldest, hottest, average. Describe the details about weather found on your planet. If you are doing Jupiter or Neptune, this is where you should show and tell about the large spot.
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Moons How many moons does your planet have? List moon names. If your planet has no moons, add more pictures and captions instead.
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Put the name of the most interesting moon here Tell us about this interesting moon. Provide several facts. Include a photo (with a caption). Again, if your planet does not have moons, add more photos and captions.
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Rings Provide information about the rings surrounding your planet. Include a photo (with a caption) of the rings. If your planet does not have rings, add more photos and descriptive captions. Pluto: This is page should be about Dwarf Planets. Include a definition of a dwarf planet, examples of other dwarf planets, and a picture with a descriptive caption.
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Did you finish early? Make your presentation “Over the Top” –Add more facts –Add more photos with descriptive captions –Add animations –Add an audio narration –Add supportive graphics
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Saving Your Work Save the PowerPoint (ppt) in your documents. Save your PPT file and any images Save often
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Turning in Your Presentation When finished, alert Mr. Wojcik.He will copy your presentation to a flash drive for grading. If you have your own flash drive or a recordable CD, you can take home your presentation files. WARNING – No points are awarded if your presentation gets “accidentally” deleted, does not save, gets lost, is at home, etc. YOU are responsible for your files. Delete THIS slide before turning in.
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