A Closer Look at the Objects of our Solar System

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A Closer Look at the Objects of our Solar

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A Closer Look at the Objects of our Solar System. S1-4-08a Compare and contrast properties of the planets of our solar system. KEY WORDS M V E Mo J S U N P TerrestrialGas giants Asteroid BeltKuiper Belt. Formation of our Solar System Matter recycled from past supernova explosions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of A Closer Look at the Objects of our Solar System

Page 1: A Closer Look at the Objects of our Solar System

A Closer Look at the Objects of our Solar System

Page 2: A Closer Look at the Objects of our Solar System

S1-4-08a Compare and contrast properties of the planets of our solar system.

KEY WORDSM V E Mo J S U N P Terrestrial Gas giantsAsteroid Belt Kuiper Belt

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Page 4: A Closer Look at the Objects of our Solar System

Outer region of nebula:• Gases (far from new Sun) begin to cool • Cluster together and condense• Forming the Gas Giants:

Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune

Formation of our Solar SystemMatter recycled from past supernova explosions• Nebula made mostly of hydrogen and helium• Iron, rock and ice made up about 1%

Gas Giants appear to lack solid surfaces, but the gases may become liquid or solid deeper towards their dense core

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Inner region of nebula:• Gases in the inner region too hot to condense• Chunks of iron and rock collide and stick together• Forming Terrestrial planets:

Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars

Terrestrial planets are composed of rock, iron and hard elements through to the molten core

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Nebula

Attracted by gravity, clustered together

• hydrogen and helium• Iron, rock and ice

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Terrestrial planets(inner planets)

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Closest to the Sun• Receives sunlight 10x brighter than Earth• Day temperatures over 400°C No atmosphere - so night temp fall to -180°C• Day (rotation) – 59 Earth days • Year (revolution) – 88 Earth days

Mercury

It rotates so slowly that its “year” is less than 2 “days” long

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3rd brightest object in the sky • CO2 atmosphere traps heat (+ 465°C)• Many volcanoes eject tonnes of sulphur Clouds of sulphuric acid – makes acid rain• Day (rotation) – 243 Earth days • Year (revolution) – 225 Earth days

Venus Sun and Moon are brightest objects

Its “year” is shorter than its “day”

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Page 13: A Closer Look at the Objects of our Solar System

Atmosphere (N2, O2, H2O) stabilizes temperature• Ranges from -85°C to +65°C Liquid water covers about 70% of surface• Generally stable – some volcanoes, earthquakes• Day (rotation) – 1 Earth days • Year (revolution) – 365 1/4 Earth days

Earth

Distance from the Sun is most responsible for the factors that contribute

to Earth’s ability to sustain life

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Page 15: A Closer Look at the Objects of our Solar System

Bright red - iron oxide dirt makes it reddish• Most studied planet (no signs of life… yet ) Of all planets, Mars is most like Earth• Surface temp ranges from -120°C to +30°C • Day (rotation) – 1 Earth day • Year (revolution) – 687 Earth days

Mars

Although it is dry and barren now, scientists have evidence that may

point to past glaciers and liquid water

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An Asteroid Belt separates the Terrestrial planets from the Gas Giants – maybe

remains of a totally smashed older planet

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The Gas Giants(outer planets)

Look at the shadow of a moon on the picture of Jupiter

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Largest of the planets (11x bigger than Earth).• Has 63 moons (2006) Great Red Spot is a continuous hurricane• Temp around -160°C• Day (rotation) – 10 Earth hours • Year (revolution) – 11.9 Earth years

Jupiter

The coloured bands are gas clouds being streaked over

the surface as it rotates quickly

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3 moons and a shadow in this picture

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• 2nd largest of the planets Least dense – may not have a solid core Rings stretch from Earth to Moon• 60 moons and 1000 rings (could be crushed moon)• Day (rotation) – 11 Earth hours • Year (revolution) – 29.5 Earth years

Saturn

Notice the coloured bands on the surface here too

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Some kids on Earth didn’t know this photo

was being taken when they were

playing with laser pointers….

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Rotates on its side• Extremely cold -210°C Has several narrow, dark rings• Has 27 moons• Day (rotation) – 17 Earth hours • Year (revolution) – 84 Earth years

Uranus

It is now pronounced “ur-an-is” not “ur-anus”

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• Only discovered because its gravity “tugs” on Uranus’s orbit causing changes

Blue and white – methane in atmosphere The Great Dark Spot is a gigantic storm• Extremely cold -220°C• Day (rotation) – 16 Earth hours • Year (revolution) – 165 Earth years

Neptune

Neptune has some faint rings too, and 20 moons

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Kuiper Belt • disc-shaped region of thousands of icy objects • Extends from Neptune to about 30 to 55 AU Pluto and Eris are the best known dwarf planets • even further - Oort Cloud (> 5000 AU)

Pluto was reclassified as a dwarf planet in 2006

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• Orbit is squished – it crosses Neptune and is sometimes closer to Sun

No atmosphere – not a Gas giant• Extremely cold -220°C• Has 3 moons!• Day (rotation) – 6 Earth days • Year (revolution) – 248 Earth years

Pluto

Astronomers have found objects bigger than Pluto

orbiting the Sun

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CAN YOU ANSWER THESE QUESTIONS?

S1-4-08a:How are the Gas Giants different from the Terrestrial planets?

What is unique about each planet?

KEY WORDSM V E Mo J S U N P Terrestrial Gas giantsAsteroid Belt Kuiper Belt