Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the...

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Our Solar System Our Solar System

Transcript of Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the...

Page 1: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

Our Solar SystemOur Solar System

Page 2: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

BIGBIG Idea: Idea:

• Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other objects in the solar system.

Page 3: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

I. Models of the Solar System

A. Geocentric: the Sun, stars, and planets revolved around the

Earth.

– Aristotle promoted

this Earth-centered model

Page 5: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

Kepler’s Laws• Explained planetary

motion mathematically

Page 6: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

1. Law of Ellipses: explains a planet’s path around the Sun

►Ellipse: an oval whose shape is determined by two points (foci)

►The Sun is at one focus of the orbit of a planet

Page 7: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

• Because the planets’ orbits are elliptical, they are not always the same distances from the sun…

– Do you remember the word to describe the point in our orbit when we are closest to the Sun?

– Farthest away?

Page 8: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.
Page 9: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.
Page 10: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

• There are TWOTWO types of planets in our solar system…

• How were you taught to remember them?

Page 11: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

Planet AcronymsPlanet Acronyms

• MMy y VVery ery EExcellent xcellent MMother other JJust ust SServed erved UUs s NNachosachos

• MMy y VVery ery EExcellent xcellent MMother other JJust ust SServed erved UUs s NNoodlesoodles

• MMy y VVery ery EEducated ducated MMother other JJust ust SServed erved UUs s NNachosachos

Page 12: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

II. The Inner Planets (4 planets closest to the Sun)

• Terrestrial Planets: Earth-like (rocky)

Page 13: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

A. Mercury

• Closest to the Sun• Shortest orbit of 88

days

Mariner 10 – visited the planet in 1974 and 1979

•Heavily cratered

•Huge temperature range 427ºC in day, -173ºC at night

Page 14: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

B. Venus• Earth’s twin (size,

mass, density)• Rotation direction is

opposite that of other planets

• Pressure is 90x Earth’s

Magellan Probe

Hot surface

(464ºC)

Dense atmosphere (mostly CO2)

Page 15: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

C. Earth• Third planet from Sun• Orbital period of 365.24 days• Completes one full rotation in 23 hours 56

minutes• Fifth largest planet• Located between the Sun

and the asteroid belt• One natural satellite, the

moon

Page 16: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

Life on EarthEarth is possible because…

• …of the Earth’s distance from the Sun

Temperature is warm enough for water to exist as a liquid

Water occurs on Earth as a solid (ice), a liquid, or a gas (water vapor)

The only known planet with the proper combination of water, temperature, and oxygen to support plant and animal life

Page 17: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.
Page 18: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

Earth’s Atmosphere

Page 19: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

What causes the seasons on Earth?

• Earth’s revolution around the Sun, TILTED ON ITS AXIS !

Page 20: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.
Page 21: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

D. Mars• Axis is tilted like Earth’s• Very thin atmosphere (mostly

CO2)

• Olympus Mons – shield volcano Largest known volcano in

our solar system 3X higher than Mt. Everest

Viking 1 – found evidence of water erosion

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III. The Outer Planets

• Jovian Planets: Jupiter-like gas giants

Page 23: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

A. Jupiter• Largest planet• Fastest rotation - every 10 hours• Orbital period is 12 years• More than 60 moons• Mostly hydrogen and helium• Great Red Spot – giant

rotating storm (over 300 years long)

Galileo

Page 24: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

B. Saturn • Average temp: -176ºC• Least dense planet• Orbital period is 29.5 years• Complex system of rings

Cassini Spacecraft

Page 25: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

C. Uranus

• Rotates horizontally• The ‘tipped’ planet • Orbital period is 84

years• Greenish color• Methane atmosphere

Voyager 2

Page 26: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

D. Neptune

• Orbital period is 164 years• 8 moons and possibly 4 rings• Upper atmosphere composed of white

clouds of frozen methane (appear as bands moving between equator and poles)

• Great Dark Spot – huge storm• Solar system’s strongest winds – exceeding

1,000 km/hr

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IV. Other Solar System Objects

Page 28: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

A. Dwarf PlanetsA. Dwarf Planets

• An object that, due to its own An object that, due to its own gravitygravity, is , is sphericalspherical in shape, orbits in shape, orbits the Sun, is not a satellite, and has not the Sun, is not a satellite, and has not cleared the area of its orbit of cleared the area of its orbit of smaller debris.smaller debris.

Page 29: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

1. PlutoPluto(now ‘asteroid #134340’)

• Late to be discovered (1930)Late to be discovered (1930)• Mostly frozen methane, rock, Mostly frozen methane, rock,

and iceand ice• Demoted from planet Demoted from planet

status to “dwarf planet” in status to “dwarf planet” in August 2006August 2006

Not always the furthest planet from the sun

Page 30: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

2.2. CeresCeres: largest body in : largest body in the Asteroid Beltthe Asteroid Belt

3.3. ErisEris: :

• largest known dwarf largest known dwarf planetplanet

• 27% more massive 27% more massive than Plutothan Pluto

Page 31: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.
Page 32: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

B. Small Solar System BodiesB. Small Solar System Bodies

Page 33: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

1. Asteroids1. Asteroids

• thousands orbiting the Sun between Mars and Jupiter

• rocky bodies

• vary in diameter

• pitted, irregular surfaces

Page 34: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

Asteroid BeltAsteroid Belt

• between Mars and Jupiter

• remains of unformed planets (planetesimals)

Page 35: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

meteoroidmeteoroid:: small bits of rocks and metal left by a comet or asteroid collision

meteormeteor:: bright streak of lightlight produced by meteoroids burning up as they enter our atmosphere

meteoritemeteorite:: meteoroid (or part of one) that is left after it hits the Earth

Page 36: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

• Meteor Shower Meteor Shower

• Meteorite: meteoroid that makes it to Earth

“shooting stars”

Page 37: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.
Page 38: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

• When large meteorites strike Earth, they produce impact craters:

Page 39: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

Page 40: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

2. Comets2. Comets

• small, icy bodies of rock, dust, methane and ammonia

• orbit the Sun in long ellipses

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In relation to the Sun, what do you notice about the tails of the

comets?

Page 43: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.

• The tails always point AWAYAWAY from the Sun!

• Their tails of gas and dust are pushed away by radiation from the Sun.

Page 44: Our Solar System BIG Idea: Using the laws of motion and gravitation, astronomers can understand the orbits and the properties of the planets and other.