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Chapter 10 Earth’s Place in the Solar System
Lesson 1: What Causes Earth’s Seasons? Lesson 2: How do earth and the moon interact? Lesson 3: what is the solar system?
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Lesson 1: What Causes Earth’s Seasons?
Vocabulary Axis: a line - that you cannot see – from the top of the Earth, through the center of the Earth, to the bottom of the Earth. Rotation: the spinning of Earth on its axis. Revolution: the movement of the Earth one time around the Sun.
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Lesson 1: What Causes Earth’s Seasons?
How Earth Moves Earth is always travelling and spinning. Earth’s axis is titled. Earth moves in two ways: rotation and revolution. The spinning of Earth on its axis is called rotation. One rotation takes one day - 24 hours. Earth also revolves around the Sun. One revolution is one year days.
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Lesson 1: What Causes Earth’s Seasons?
Some parts of Earth have four seasons. Because Earth is tilted on its axis, some parts are titled toward the Sun while others are titled away. Places where the sun’s rays strike directly are warmer than where the rays strike at a slant.
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Lesson 1: What Causes Earth’s Seasons?
Day and Night As it rotates: Half of Earth faces the Sun and has daytime. Half of Earth faces away from the Sun and had nighttime. It can’t be the same time everywhere, so time zones were created.
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Lesson 2: How Do Earth and the Moon Interact?
Vocabulary Moon Phases: the different shapes that the Moon seems to have in the sky when it is observed from Earth. Lunar Cycle: the pattern of phases of the Moon. Lunar Eclipse: an event in which Earth blocks sunlight from reaching the Moon. Solar Eclipse: an event that occurs when the Moon blocks the sunlight from reaching Earth and the Moon’s shadow falls on Earth.
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Lesson 2: How Do Earth and the Moon Interact?
Phases of the Moon Different shapes of the moon that we see are called moon phases. The Moon does not really change, just how we see it. The amount of sunlight reflecting off of it cause the different shapes. The Moon revolves around the Earth. Lunar Cycle lasts 29 days.
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Lesson 2: How Do Earth and the Moon Interact?
Eclipses of the Moon Sometimes the Moon moves into Earth’s shadow. This is called a lunar eclipse. During a total lunar eclipse, the Moon can appear to be red. Lunar eclipses can only happen during the full moon phase. A partial lunar eclipse is when the Moon passes through only part of Earth’s shadow.
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Lesson 2: How Do Earth and the Moon Interact?
Eclipses of the Sun The Moon can block sunlight from Earth. This is called a solar eclipse. When the Moon moves between the Sun and the Earth, the sky gets dark for a few minutes. Since the Moon is small, a solar eclipse can be viewed from only a few places on Earth each time.
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Lesson 3: What Is the Solar System?
Vocabulary Planet: a large body of rock or gas in space. Orbit: the path a planet takes as it revolves around the Sun. Solar System: the Sun, the planets and their moons, and the small objects that orbit the Sun. Star: a hot ball of glowing gases that gives off energy. Constellation: a group of stars that appear to form the shape of an animal, a person, or an object.
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Lesson 3: What Is the Solar System?
Our solar system includes: Sun Objects orbiting the Sun: Eight planets and their moons Dwarf planets Comets Asteroids
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Lesson 3: What Is the Solar System?
The Sun Center of our solar system Biggest object in our solar system One of many, many stars in the universe Closest star to Earth Light energy from the Sun is very important to Earth Helps plants grow Keeps Earth warm
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Lesson 3: What Is the Solar System?
The Inner Planets Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars They look like stars, but their light is steady. Rocky surfaces Smaller than the outer planets Warmer than the outer planets
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Lesson 3: What Is the Solar System?
The Outer Planets… and Pluto Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune Mostly made of gases Very large Have many moons …and Pluto Small Made of rock and ice 2006: removed from the planet list “dwarf planet”
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Lesson 3: What Is the Solar System?
Patterns of Stars Constellations are groups of stars that appear to form patterns Animals People Objects Looking for constellations helps people find stars
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