Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDelilah Houston Modified over 9 years ago
1
Comets, Asteroids, and Meteors Section 14.5
2
Standard 6.e. Students know the appearance, general composition, relative position and size, and motion of objects in the solar system.
3
Introduction The sun, planets, and moons are the only objects in the solar system. There are other smaller objects moving through the solar system as well.
4
Comets Comet: a “dirty snowball” about the size of a mountain. Comets are loose collections of ice and dust, and small rocky particles whose orbits are usually very long, narrow ellipses.
5
Comets A Comet’s Head Clouds of gas and dust form a fuzzy outer layer called the coma. Nucleus: the inner core of a comet The brightest part is the nucleus and the coma
6
Comets A Comet’s Tail Comet means “long-haired star” Has a gas and a dust tail. Gas tail is always away from the sun.
7
Comets Origin of Comets Kuiper Belt: doughnut shaped region that extends beyond Neptune’s orbit Oort Cloud: spherical region of comets that surrounds the solar system
8
Asteroids Asteroids are too small and too numerous to be considered planets or dwarf planets. Most asteroids revolve around the sun in circular orbits between Mars and Jupiter. Called the asteroid belt
9
Asteroids Astronomer have found more than 100,000 asteroids. They hypothesize these asteroids were leftover pieces of the early solar system that never came together to form a planet
10
Asteroids Some asteroids have extremely elliptical orbits that cross paths with other planets. This is what happened with the dinosaurs. An asteroid in orbit hit earth, causing a mass extinction.
11
Meteors When there is a meteor shower, you often see a meteor at least once every 10 minutes Meteoroid is a chunk of rock or dust in space
12
Meteoroids Meteoroids come from comets or asteroids When a meteoroid enters Earth’s atmosphere, it is called a meteor. It burns up and creates a streak in the sky (SHOOTING STAR.
13
Meteors When meteoroids enter the atmosphere and strikes Earth’s surface, it is called a meteorite.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.