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Published byAnnabel Jenkins Modified over 9 years ago
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OUR SOLAR SYSTEM
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The Sun For each of the elliptical orbits of the planets, the Sun is found at one (or the other!) of the foci 99.85% mass of Solar System Source of solar wind and space weather
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Inner Planets “Terrestrial Planets” Rocky Dense Metal cores (iron) Thin, or NO atmosphere
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Asteroid Belt “Minor planets” or “planetoids” less than 1000 km across Asteroid Belt between Mars and Jupiter Occasionally run into Earth and other planets (oops) Ida
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Outer Planets Large! “Gas Giants” No solid surface May have a small solid core Tumultuous atmospheres - rapid winds, large storms Rotate relatively quickly
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Kuiper Belt Disk of debris at the edge of our Solar System Pluto is a KB Object (sorry!) Source of short- period comets Kuiper Belt is found 30-100AU from Sun
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Oort Cloud Sphere consisting of billions of comets, &dust 50,000 AU from Sun Long-period comets (random time and direction)
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Comets Dirty snowballs - small objects of ice, gas, dust, tiny traces of organic material
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Comet Parts As a comet approaches the Sun, their ice SUBLIMATES This gas and dust forms the COMA As the comet orbits, the gasses and dust stream behind, forming the TAIL(s)
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Inner Planets! “My Very Excellent Mother…..”
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Smallest planet Closest to Sun Fastest orbital velocity Large temperature changes: -173 to 427 ºC (-300 to 800 ºF) No atmosphere-lots of craters! Mercury
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Venus Nearly the same size as Earth Slowest rotation of any planet (243 days) Spins backwards Extreme greenhouse effect Very thick atmosphere, mostly CO 2 ! Surface pressure is 100 times higher than Earth’s Hotter than Mercury: 377 to 487 C/ 710 to 908 F
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Where Do Atmospheres Come From? Volcanism!!!
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Venera Images - 1982
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Pancake Domes on Venus - What formed these features?
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Earth 7900 mile (12756 km) diameter 23 degree axis tilt (seasons!) Surface temps –73 to 48 C (-100 to 120F) Thick atmosphere, mild greenhouse effect Liquid water – lots! - at surface
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Very cold: -117 to -27 F Thin atmosphere: 95% CO2, & 3% N No liquid water at surface, but features indicate that there once was! Two small moons: Phobos & Deimos Mars
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The Gas Giants
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11x Earth diameter Methane, water, ammonia, rock Rocky core – liquid metallic hydrogen – electrical conductor, generates magnetic field Jupiter
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Giant Red Spot: at least 300 years old 3 x size of Earth Winds up to 400 km / hr
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9x the size of Earth Water, methane, ammonia and "rock“ -290 F Rings – 185,00 miles wide /2 mi thick Water ice in rings 56 moons and counting Saturn
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Rather chilly in the rings Red: -261 F Blue -333 F Green -298 F Dirty Snow Turquoise= water ice Red = “dirty”
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Uranus
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4x the size of Earth Blue from methane absorption of red light (atmosphere) atmosphere has mostly hydrogen and helium -350 F at surface Spins on an axis inclined almost 90 degrees
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Keplar’s 3rd Law: The further out a planet is from the Sun, the longer its period of REVOLUTION. Uranus is pretty far out there!
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Neptune
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Ices and rock - 15% H and little He Methane atmosphere (blue!) Uniform through out; small rocky core? Had storm “Great Dark Spot” MIA since Voyager 2 Pretty Good White Spot (Scooter) zipped around every 16 hours…. 4 Rings – unknown composition 13 moons
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Pluto
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Is Pluto a Planet? YesNo It has always been considered a planet Very small Very elliptical orbit Out of plane of ecliptic Same material as Kuiper belt objects Found other “non-planets” that were larger
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