Overview of the Solar System. Solar system contents one star, several planets, lots of debris.

Similar documents
Regular Features of the Solar System

Moon Obs #1 Due! Moon visible: early morning through afternoon. 6 more due June 13 th. 15 total due June 25 th. Final Report Due June 28th

Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE

Comparative Planetology I: Our Solar System. Chapter Seven

23.1 The Solar System. Orbits of the Planets. Planetary Data The Solar System. Scale of the Planets The Solar System

1star 1 star 9 8 planets 63 (major) moons asteroids, comets, meteoroids

Ch 23 Touring Our Solar System 23.1 The Solar System 23.2 The Terrestrial Planet 23.3 The Outer Planets 23.4 Minor Members of the Solar System

Lecture Outlines. Chapter 6. Astronomy Today 7th Edition Chaisson/McMillan Pearson Education, Inc.

Comparative Planetology I: Our Solar System. Chapter Seven

Starting from closest to the Sun, name the orbiting planets in order.

Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE

Ag Earth Science Chapter 23

Unit 12 Lesson 1 What Objects Are Part of the Solar System?

What is it like? When did it form? How did it form. The Solar System. Fall, 2005 Astronomy 110 1

Astro 1: Introductory Astronomy

Unit 6 Lesson 4 What Are the Planets in Our Solar System? Copyright Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

9.2 - Our Solar System

BELL WORK. What do you know about the planets in our solar system? Download today s keynote

Joy of Science Experience the evolution of the Universe, Earth and Life

Inner and Outer Planets

Our Planetary System. Chapter 7

Cosmology Vocabulary

Comparative Planetology I: Our Solar System

Our Solar System. Lesson 5. Distances Between the Sun and the Planets

Lecture Outlines. Chapter 15. Astronomy Today 7th Edition Chaisson/McMillan Pearson Education, Inc.

Astronomy Test Review. 3 rd Grade

Chapter 4 The Solar System

Which of the following planets are all made up of gas? When a planets orbit around the Sun looks like an oval, it s called a(n)

LESSON topic: formation of the solar system Solar system formation Star formation Models of the solar system Planets in our solar system

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Chapter 23: Touring Our Solar System

ASTR 200 : Lecture 6 Introduction to the Solar System Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

Earth Science 11 Learning Guide Unit Complete the following table with information about the sun:

HNRS 227 Fall 2006 Chapter 13. What is Pluto? What is a Planet? There are two broad categories of planets: Terrestrial and Jovian

ASTRONOMY SNAP GAME. with interesting facts

Making a Solar System

Galaxies: enormous collections of gases, dust and stars held together by gravity Our galaxy is called the milky way

Outline. Question of Scale. Planets Dance. Homework #2 was due today at 11:50am! It s too late now.

Planetarium observing is over. Nighttime observing starts next week.

The Solar System LEARNING TARGETS. Scientific Language. Name Test Date Hour

The Solar Nebula Theory. This lecture will help you understand: Conceptual Integrated Science. Chapter 28 THE SOLAR SYSTEM

OUR SOLAR SYSTEM. James Martin. Facebook.com/groups/AstroLSSC Twitter.com/AstroLSSC

Introduction to the Solar System

What s in Our Solar System?

Astronomy 241: Foundations of Astrophysics I. The Solar System

see disks around new stars in Orion nebula where planets are probably being formed 3

7. Our Solar System. Planetary Orbits to Scale. The Eight Planetary Orbits

Inner and Outer Planets

Chapter 06 Let s Make a Solar System

CHAPTER 11. We continue to Learn a lot about the Solar System by using Space Exploration

Solar System revised.notebook October 12, 2016 Solar Nebula Theory

How did it come to be this way? Will I stop sounding like the

The Solar System. Name Test Date Hour

Opaque Atmosphere. Astronomy 210. Question. Why would it be useful to place telescopes in. Section 1 MWF Astronomy Building. space?

The History of the Earth

The Solar System consists of

Planetary Interiors. Earth s Interior Structure Hydrostatic Equilibrium Heating Constituent Relations Gravitational Fields Isostasy Magnetism

Which of the following statements best describes the general pattern of composition among the four jovian

The Planets and Scale

Formation of the Solar System. What We Know. What We Know

UNIT 3: Chapter 8: The Solar System (pages )

4. THE SOLAR SYSTEM 1.1. THE SUN. Exercises

The Solar System. Sun. Rotates and revolves around the Milky Way galaxy at such a slow pace that we do not notice any effects.

Origin of the Solar System

Unit 2 Lesson 1 What Objects Are Part of the Solar System? Copyright Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Today. Solar System Formation. a few more bits and pieces. Homework due

Astronomy Unit Notes Name:

Chapter 29. The Solar System. The Solar System. Section 29.1 Models of the Solar System notes Models of the Solar System

26. Introduction to the Solar System page 1

Edmonds Community College Astronomy 100 Winter Quarter 2007 Sample Exam # 2

The History of the Solar System. From cloud to Sun, planets, and smaller bodies

Introduction to Astronomy

Gravity: Motivation An initial theory describing the nature of the gravitational force by Newton is a product of the resolution of the

Solar System Test Review

Class Announcements. Solar System. Objectives for today. Will you read Chap 32 before Wed. class? Chap 32 Beyond the Earth

Chapter 15: The Origin of the Solar System

The Big Bang Theory (page 854)

Chapter 15 The Formation of Planetary Systems

1/13/16. Solar System Formation

Solar System Physics I

Solar System. Sun, 8 planets, hundred moons, thousand.dwarf.planets million asteroids, billion comets etc.

Radioactive Dating. U238>Pb206. Halflife: Oldest earth rocks. Meteors and Moon rocks. 4.5 billion years billion years

Universe Celestial Object Galaxy Solar System

Earth Science. Unit 9: Our Place in the Universe

Exploring Our Solar System

Astronomy A BEGINNER S GUIDE TO THE UNIVERSE EIGHTH EDITION

The Solar System. Tour of the Solar System

9/22/ A Brief Tour of the Solar System. Chapter 6: Formation of the Solar System. What does the solar system look like?

Phys 214. Planets and Life

Earth s Formation Unit [Astronomy] Student Success Sheets (SSS)

Clicker Question: Clicker Question: Clicker Question:

Chapters 7&8. ASTRONOMY 202 Spring 2007: Solar System Exploration. Class 21: Solar System [3/12/07] Announcements.

ASTR 200 : Lecture 6 Introduction to the Solar System Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

Astronomy 3. Earth Movements Seasons The Moon Eclipses Tides Planets Asteroids, Meteors, Comets

Object Type Moons Rings Planet Terrestrial none none. Max Distance from Sun. Min Distance from Sun. Avg. Distance from Sun 57,910,000 km 0.

The origin of the Solar System

Developed in Consultation with Georgia Educators

Brooks Observatory telescope observing this week

Chapter 7 Our Planetary System

Origins and Formation of the Solar System

Transcription:

Overview of the Solar System Solar system contents one star, several planets, lots of debris.

Most of it is the Sun! 99.8% of the mass of the Solar System resides in the Sun. A hot ball of mostly hydrogen and helium held together by gravity. In bulk composition it resembles an unbiased scoop of galactic material.

Most of it is the Sun! 99.8% of the mass of the Solar System resides in the Sun. A hot ball of mostly hydrogen and helium gas held together by gravity. In bulk composition it resembles an unbiased scoop of galactic material. 3/4 Hydrogen 1/4 Helium 1% other elements

Eight Major Planets Maybe one or two more depending on semantics and future discoveries.

Four Jovian Worlds Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune Gasballs constituting 99.9% of the planetary mass

Four Jovian Worlds Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune Hydrogen and helium, under high pressure, become dense liquids more appropriately these are spinning liquid droplets.

Four Terrestrial Worlds Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars Small rocky/metallic worlds hugging the Sun with thin or non-existent atmospheres.

Jovian vs. Terrestrial Characteristics Terrestrial: Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars Small relatively speaking Solid rocky cratered surfaces with significant iron cores Three satellites between them all

Jovian vs. Terrestrial Characteristics Jovian: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune The Gas Giants about 10 times bigger than the terrestrial worlds Gaseous with no solid surface, resembling the Sun in composition (mainly Hydrogen and Helium). Clouds of Methane, Water, Ammonia, and other molecules provide an apparent surface More than one hundred satellites most made mainly of water/ice.

Jovian vs. Terrestrial Characteristics Jovian: Interiors of compressed liquified gas

Jovian vs. Terrestrial Characteristics Jovian: Cloudtop surfaces

Jovian vs. Terrestrial Characteristics Jovian: Many satellites

Jovian vs. Terrestrial Characteristics Jovian: Icy satellites

Jovian vs. Terrestrial Characteristics Jovian: Satellites as big as planets, some with atmospheres.

Minor Constituents: Asteroids, Comets, and Dust Asteroids: Millions of small rocky objects mostly between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter

Minor Constituents: Asteroids, Comets, and Dust Asteroids: Millions of small rocky objects mostly between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/a/asteroid.html

Minor Constituents: Asteroids, Comets, and Dust Asteroids: Millions of small rocky objects mostly between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter

An Outer Icy Asteroid Belt Another group of asteroid-sized bodies orbit beyond Neptune in the Kuiper Belt Pluto is one of the largest of these.

A Cloud of Cometary Nuclei Trillions of small iceballs, most only a kilometer in size, orbit as far out as ½ way to the nearest star. only a small fraction make it into the inner solar system to be heated by the Sun to become a comet.

A Cloud of Cometary Nuclei Trillions of small iceballs, most only a kilometer in size, orbit as far out as ½ way to the nearest star. only a small fraction make it into the inner solar system to be heated by the Sun to become a comet.

Interplanetary Dust The grinding of asteroids and evaporation of comets populates the inner solar system with fine dust. http://www.astrophoto.com/images.htm

Interplanetary Dust The grinding of asteroids and evaporation of comets populates the inner solar system with fine dust.

Interplanetary Dust The grinding of asteroids and evaporation of comets populates the inner solar system with fine dust.

Regular Features of the Solar System All of the planets orbit the Sun in the same plane All planetary orbits are nearly circular All planets orbit the Sun in the same direction Most planets rotate in the same sense as the orbit. See orbits

Regular Features of the Solar System The Jovian and Terrestrial planets are well sorted in terms of distance from the Sun. rocky worlds close gaseous/icy worlds far away

Regular Features of the Solar System All of the planets orbit the Sun in the same plane All planetary orbits are nearly circular All planets orbit the Sun in the same direction Most planets rotate in the same sense as the orbit. See orbits

Regular Features of the Solar System The Giant Planet satellite systems resemble the Solar System

Regular Features of the Solar System Exposed solid surfaces are heavily cratered throughout the Solar System. The process was messy and produced lots of leftovers.

Regular Features of the Solar System Exposed solid surfaces are heavily cratered throughout the Solar System. The process was messy and produced lots of leftovers.

Building a Solar System through Accretion These regular features are fossilized memory of the conditions that gave rise to the Solar System. In sum, they suggest the planets grew within a rotating flattened disk and, today, their orbits reflect the structure of that disk.