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Big Bang
Big Bang

... A planet of the red dwarf star Gliese 581, appeared to be the best known example of a possibly terrestrial exoplanet orbiting within the habitable zone that surrounds its star. The number of Earth-like planets increase all the time. ...
Chapter 27 Stars and Galaxies
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... •  Place moon in position for first quarter, shade night side •  What time of day does this phase rise? •  Draw person watching moonrise ...
Inner and Outer Planets of the Solar System
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... irregular shaped and believed to be captured asteroids. Phobos is the larger inner moon that’s in a doomed course. In the next 50 million years it is expected to either collide with Mars or break up and form a planetary ring. ...
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... in a cold zone for away from the sun, and rocky planets formed in a hot zone close to the sun. ...
PPT File - Brandywine School District
PPT File - Brandywine School District

... the intriguing features of Saturn's system of rings and moons. It also delivered the European Space Agency's Huygens Probe into the atmosphere of Saturn's moon Titan. The spacecraft reached speeds of 70,700 mph on its way to the ringed planet after being launched in 1997. Just hours after it arrived ...
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... the intriguing features of Saturn's system of rings and moons. It also delivered the European Space Agency's Huygens Probe into the atmosphere of Saturn's moon Titan. The spacecraft reached speeds of 70,700 mph on its way to the ringed planet after being launched in 1997. Just hours after it arrived ...
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A Tour of our Solar System

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... largest of the Solar System's four terrestrial planets, and the only astronomical object known to harbor life. The earliest life on Earth arose at least 3.5 billion years ago. Earlier physical evidences of life include graphite, a biogenic substance, in 3.7 billion-year-old metasedimentary rocks dis ...
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... A star like our sun has a lifetime of about 10 billion years and is just middle-aged, with another five billion years or so left. Margaret M. Hanson, an assistant physics professor at the University of Cincinnati, gives this response: Stars form from the gravitational collapse of large clouds of int ...
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Coordinate System Notes 3 - School District of La Crosse
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... 1, No meaning to the arrangement except through imagaination 2. Many are associated with Greek mythology because we related to the greek culure more, other cultures had their own intepertation of the stars. C. 1603 John Bayer assigned greek letters to the brightest of the stars in order of magnitude ...
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... European astronomers have discovered a planet with about the mass of the Earth orbiting a star in the Alpha Centauri system — the nearest to Earth. It is also the lightest exoplanet ever discovered around a star like the Sun. The planet was detected using the HARPS instrument on the 3.6-metre telesc ...
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... The king of the January evening sky is Orion. You can’t miss the three stars in a straight line that make up the Hunter’s belt. The red star that marks his shoulder is Betelgeuse. Betelgeuse is red because it is cooling down and about to go supernova - explode. Of course “soon” in astronomical terms ...
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Galaxies and the Universe - Grandview Independent School
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... • stars of a constellation are often far apart from each other, but they appear grouped together when viewed from Earth • one of 88 sectors into which astronomers divide the sphere of the sky – named after a traditional constellation in that sector • patterns of constellations are dynamic; therefore ...
CBA # 2 Earth and Space and Sound Energy
CBA # 2 Earth and Space and Sound Energy

... a. The sun is flying by Earth as Earth stands still. b. As Earth rotates, the sun rises in the east and then will set in the west. c. As Earth rotates, it is never facing the sun. d. The sun rotates and revolves around the Earth. ...
Answers - ddns.net
Answers - ddns.net

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Document
Document

... In this section we we will focus on Greek thoughts since they are well documented (see footnote on page 1). The Greeks discovered that the Earth is round, and estimated the radius of the Earth fairly accurately. They also attempted to measure the Earth–Moon and Earth–Sun distances. They came up with ...
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Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems



The Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems (Dialogo sopra i due massimi sistemi del mondo) was a 1632 Italian-language book by Galileo Galilei comparing the Copernican system with the traditional Ptolemaic system. It was translated into Latin as Systema cosmicum (English: Cosmic System) in 1635 by Matthias Bernegger. The book was dedicated to Galileo's patron, Ferdinando II de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, who received the first printed copy on February 22, 1632.In the Copernican system the Earth and other planets orbit the Sun, while in the Ptolemaic system everything in the Universe circles around the Earth. The Dialogue was published in Florence under a formal license from the Inquisition. In 1633, Galileo was found to be ""vehemently suspect of heresy"" based on the book, which was then placed on the Index of Forbidden Books, from which it was not removed until 1835 (after the theories it discussed had been permitted in print in 1822). In an action that was not announced at the time, the publication of anything else he had written or ever might write was also banned.
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