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The Solar System
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According to Aug 24, 06 Resolution the Solar System is composed of: – Eight planets with their moons – Three dwarf planets with their moons – Small Solar System bodies
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The major features of the Solar System are: – The Sun – Terrestrial (inner) Planets – Inner Belt of Asteroids – Gas Giant (outer) Planets – Outer Belt of Small Bodies (Kuiper Belt)
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Heliocentric System Nicolaus Copernicus developed a sun-centered system called a heliocentric system. The Earth and the other planets revolve around the sun.
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Galileo was the first scientist to use a telescope to look at objects in the sky, which supported Copernicus’s theory.
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Johannes Kepler, a German mathematician, discovered that the orbit of each planet is an ellipse.
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Isaac Newton concluded that two factors- inertia and gravity - combine to keep the planets in orbit.
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The Sun (Sol) contains 99.8% of the Solar System’s known mass. The Sun
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The Sun dominates the Solar System gravitationally.
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The Sun consists of 70% hydrogen, 28% helium, and 2% metals. It’s energy is sustained by nuclear fusion reactions, converting hydrogen into helium and energy.
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The Sun releases enormous amounts of energy. Most is sent into space as radiation, including visible light.
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The Sun radiates a plasma known as solar wind.
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A “planet” is a celestial body that: – is in orbit around the Sun; – has sufficient mass for self- gravity so it assumes a nearly round shape; and – has cleared the neighborhood around its orbit. Final International Astronomical Union Resolution, Aug 24 06 Definition of Planet
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The four inner or terrestrial planets are dense, rocky, have few or no moons, and lack ring systems. The Inner Planets
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Closest planet to the Sun and least massive of the planets. It has a very thin atmosphere and has no natural satellite. Mercury
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It’s atmosphere is 90 times as dense as Earth’s and composed of carbon dioxide. It has no natural satellite and is the hottest planet. Venus
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Largest and densest of the inner planets. Only inner planet with evidence of geological activity and liquid hydrosphere. Has one satellite, the Moon. Earth
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Less massive than Earth or Venus. Has a carbon dioxide atmosphere. It’s surface contains volcanoes and rift valleys. Has two satellites: Deimos and Phobos. Mars
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Made of mostly small solar system bodies of rocky minerals. Occupies the orbit between Mars and Jupiter. The Inner Belt
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Small solar system bodies found mainly in the Asteroid Belt with elliptical orbits between Mars and Jupiter. Asteroids
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Smaller than asteroids. A meteor is a meteoroid that has entered the Earth’s atmosphere. A meteor that survives impact is called a meteorite. Meteors can produce impact craters. Meteoroid
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Largest body in the asteroid belt and only known dwarf planet in this region. It is spherical and contains a third of the belt’s total mass. Ceres
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The four outer planets or gas giants together make up 99% of the mass known to orbit the Sun. The Outer Planets
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All four of the gas giants have orbital debris rings. Only Saturn’s rings are observable from Earth. The Outer Planets
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Is at 318 Earth masses. Composed of hydrogen and helium. Has large cloud bands and the Great Red Spot. It has 63 satellites, the largest is Ganymede. Jupiter
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Has an extensive ring system. Also composed of hydrogen and helium. Has 56 satellites and largely made of ice. Titan is larger than Mercury. Saturn
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The lightest of the outer planets. It orbits the Sun on its side (axis is 97 o to the ecliptic). Radiates very little heat. Has 27 satellites. Uranus
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Smaller than Uranus but is denser and more massive. Radiates more heat than Uranus. Has 13 moons; the largest Triton revolves clockwise around Neptune. Neptune
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A great ring of debris, similar to the asteroid belt. Composed mainly of icy small solar system bodies. Often called the outer solar system or “trans-Neptunian region.” The Kuiper Belt
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The Kuiper Belt is possibly the place of origin for short term comets, such as Halley’s comet. Some objects are affected by Neptune’s orbit.
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Small solar system bodies composed largely of ice. When a comet approaches the Sun the surface boils away creating a coma (tail of gas and dust). Comets
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The largest known object in Kuiper Belt. Reclassified as a dwarf planet. Charon orbits Pluto more like a binary system. Nix and Hydra orbit Pluto and Charon. Pluto
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Largest known scattered disk object (overlaps the Kuiper Belt). 5% larger than Pluto. The largest known dwarf planet. Has one moon, Dysnomia. Eris
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The Solar System
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