Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and...

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Transcript of Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and...

Page 1: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 2: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 3: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 4: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.

Definition:A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets.

Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest atoms- hydrogen and helium. The dust is extremely small particles too small to be seen with the eye. Gravity pulls the gas and dust together.

Example: The eagle nebula.

Non-example:

The Milky Way galaxy which already has gone beyond a cloud of gas and dust to form a galaxy.

Nebula

Page 5: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.

Definition:An explanation that is supported by a lot of evidence and which is widely accepted by scientists and other people. A theory can sum up a lot of observations and is used to make predictions.

Facts:A theory is accepted as the way things are until new evidence comes along.

Examples:Theory of EvolutionTheory of Plate TectonicsString Theory of Gravity

Non-example:Explanations for phenomena that are based on religious beliefs, myths, mysticism, folklore, hunches, etc….

Theory

Page 6: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.

Definition:A pulling force that draws things with mass together.

Facts:Gravity acts over extremely large distances.Gravity acts on the smallest of particles (a molecule or bit of dust or atom) to the largest of objects (a star, a galaxy and the universe).

Example: Gravity pulls the Earth and Moon towards each other and keeps the moon in orbit around the Earth. Gravity pulls the Earth and Sun together and keeps the Earth in orbit around the Sun.

Non-Example: Gravity is not friction or a pushing force.

Gravity

Page 7: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 8: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 9: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 10: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 11: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 12: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 13: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 14: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 15: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 16: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 17: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 18: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 19: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 20: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 21: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 22: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 23: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.

First: The fusion rate increases. This means,

hydrogen atoms fuse together to become

helium until all of the hydrogen is used up.

Some very low mass stars never go beyond

this stage. They use up their hydrogen and cool

and become like a planet. They are called

Brown Dwarfs.

Second: In big enough stars: the temperature

increases and more energy is released.

Some low mass stars use up all of their hydrogen , cool, and shrink. They become White Dwarfs.

Third: Some moderate mass stars

get brighter when they run out of

hydrogen. The outer shell expands and

cools. They become Red Giants. Their

outer shell gets blown away and

becomes a nebula while the core

becomes a White Dwarf.

Really massive stars end their lives by exploding as a Supernovae. The core will then collapse and become

a black hole.

Page 24: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.

5 billion years ago:75% hydrogen

25% helium

Today:35% hydrogen

65% helium

5 billion years in the future:0% hydrogen100% helium

Earth’s temperature will be about 40 0F hotter. The oceans will be gone. The Sun’s outer core will expand and the Sun will become a Red Giant.

Theory #1: The Earth will get engulfed by the Sun and exist no more.Theory #2: When the Sun first begins to shrink, gravitational attraction between the Earth and Sun will become less. Some scientists think the Earth may move away from the Sun as gravity no longer holds them together. If this happens, the Earth will be a cold, desolate, barren rock in space.

Page 25: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 26: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 27: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 28: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.
Page 29: Definition: A gigantic cloud of dust and gas in the universe that clumps together to form stars and planets. Facts: The gas is mostly the smallest.

• Title Page: Solar Nebula Theory• Page 1: Explain what a scientific theory is and is not.

Use examples.• Page 2: Describe a nebula. • Page 3: Step 1: Draw a cloud of gas and dust (nebula).

Describe how this cloud begins to contract due to gravity.

• Page 3: Draw a disk with a bulge at the middle. Describe how this forms from the nebula.

• Page 4: Draw a star with matter surrounding it. Describe how a star begins.

• Page 5: Draw a planetary system around the star. Describe how the matter forms into planets.

• Page 6: Describe the life cycle of an ordinary star.