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The Death of a Low Mass Star
The Death of a Low Mass Star

Introduction to cosmology I
Introduction to cosmology I

... Muslims: carried fragments of Euclid , Archimedes and Aristotle to Europe Improved Calendric astronomy and planetary tables Important Indian numerals (including zero) and algebra Christianity and Aristotelianism (Thomas Aquinas) ...
Extreme Tidal Waves in Binary Star Systems
Extreme Tidal Waves in Binary Star Systems

... created as the stars are stretched back and forth, as described above. The second way that tides can affect stars is by exciting large scale waves that move within the stars. These waves are periodic global deformations of the star, similar to the ringing of a bell. As the stars orbit one another, t ...
The Sun http://stardate.org/images/gallery/sun5.jpg
The Sun http://stardate.org/images/gallery/sun5.jpg

... (www.windows.ucar.edu/.../ seasons_orbit.5x7.jpg) ...
wk9 (part 1)
wk9 (part 1)

... radiation continued to interact strongly B. The Universe was matter dominated at this epoch C. Protons and electrons formed stable hydrogen atoms for the first time at this epoch, and the matter in the Universe became mostly transparent to radiation D. This epoch was immediately followed by Inflatio ...
timeline
timeline

... 1546-1601 AD - Tycho Brahe measures positions of stars and planets. Supports heliocentric theory 1564-1642 AD - Galileo Galilei first uses the telescope to observe the skies. Discovers sunspots, four major satellites on Jupiter (1610), and Venus' phases. Defends Copernican theory in Dialogo sopra i ...
2.1.1 Study: The Big Bang Theory
2.1.1 Study: The Big Bang Theory

... 3.  Describe the orbits of planets and other objects. 4.  Differentiate the competing theories of planet formation. 5.  Evaluate the attempts to find extrasolar planets. Comets and Asteroid Belts 1.  Classify the types of objects orbiting the sun. 2.  Describe the behavior of comets, asteroids and m ...
Planetary Configurations
Planetary Configurations

... circular and that they move in the same direction and at constant speeds along their respective paths. Each object has an orbital period , P, which is the time required to make one circuit of its path so that after some period of time T an object will have completed N = T/P circuits of its orbit. Th ...
WORD - hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca
WORD - hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca

... 35. What are the four Terrestrial Planets? (a) Charon, Earth, Uranus, Mars (b) Mars, Venus, Mercury, Earth (c) Venus, Pluto, Mercury, Jupiter (d) Neptune, Uranus, Sol, Jupiter 35. What are the four Jovian Planets? (a) Saturn, Neptune, Jupiter, Uranus (b) Mars, Ceres, Mercury, Saturn (c) Uranus, Merc ...
Astronomy 110 Announcements:
Astronomy 110 Announcements:

... • Kepler first tried to match Tycho’s observations with circular orbits • But an 8 arcminute discrepancy led him eventually to elliptical orbits… “If I had believed that we could ignore these eight minutes [of arc], I would have patched up my hypothesis accordingly. But, since it was not permissible ...
this brochure - Houston Museum Of Natural Science
this brochure - Houston Museum Of Natural Science

... surrounds students with roaring dinosaurs, soaring spaceships, raging rivers and monster storms— all immersive, engaging and realistic. Developed by the Museum and Rice University, this new dome theater offers a state-of-the-art visual learning experience. Teachers can choose any of the shows in thi ...
Copernican Revolution
Copernican Revolution

... Considering Kepler's three laws of planetary motion (you do not have to memorize them): What shape orbit does a planet have? When a satellite orbits the Earth, does it move faster at perigee or at apogee? When a comet orbits the Sun, does it orbit faster at perihelion or at aphelion? What is meant b ...
The Solar System - Thomas County Schools
The Solar System - Thomas County Schools

... around the sun in elliptical (oval) orbits. http://lasp.colorado.edu/education/outerplanet s/orbit_simulator/ http://www.solarsystemscope.com/ The planets in our solar system differ in size, composition (rock or gas), surface and atmospheric conditions, and distance from the sun. ...
Lecture #4 - History of Astronomy - Ptolemy to Kepler
Lecture #4 - History of Astronomy - Ptolemy to Kepler

... – His father was a mercenary – His mother was raised by an aunt who was burnt as a witch – Went to college at Tubingen were he was recognized as a mathematical genius and went to teach math at a Protestant School in Graz – While in Graz he felt that the 5 perfect Platonic solids could explain the mo ...
Astronomy Fall 2013 Final Exam History of Astronomy Know: speed
Astronomy Fall 2013 Final Exam History of Astronomy Know: speed

... 28. The structure of the Milky Way Galaxy is similar to what other galaxy? Andromeda Galaxy 29.The first RR Lyrae variable star was found in the constellation __Lyra (HARP)_________. 30.What variable star does the graph below represent? ____RR Lyrae__________________ ...
43 Astronomy 43.1 Recall that Earth is one of the many planets in
43 Astronomy 43.1 Recall that Earth is one of the many planets in

... o Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, (Pluto­  ...
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... • Due to gravity, that region started to attract more and more hydrogen • Eventually, in a specific region of the cloud the density of hydrogen became high enough to start thermonuclear reactions – Sun. ...
Scaling the SEM reading
Scaling the SEM reading

... 4.5 billion years. There are many theories about how the Moon was formed. Some astronomers think the Moon may have been formed when a Mars-sized asteroid collided with Earth about 100 million to 200 million years after Earth was formed approximately 4.5 billion years ago. The debris from that collis ...
Earth-sized planet found just outside solar system
Earth-sized planet found just outside solar system

... The European team detected the planet by picking up the tiny wobbles in the motion of the star Alpha Centauri B created by the gravitational pull of the orbiting planet. The effect is minute—it causes the star to move back and forth by no more than 51 centimetres per second (1.8 km/hour), about the ...
Lecture 4 (pdf from the powerpoint)
Lecture 4 (pdf from the powerpoint)

... • The four fundamental forces are all important in making the Universe, but gravitation is most important. This is because of two of its basic properties that set it apart from the other forces: 1) it is long-ranged and thus can act over cosmological ...
Final Exam, Dec. 19, 2015 - Physics@Brock
Final Exam, Dec. 19, 2015 - Physics@Brock

... 5. The spectroscopic parallax is a method of determining (a) a star’s chemical composition. (b) a star’s temperature. (c) a star’s distance from parallax angle. (d) a star’s distance using H-R diagram. 6. Which of these main sequence stars will have the shortest lifetime? (a) 10 solar mass star. (b) ...
Opposition of Saturn - Hong Kong Observatory
Opposition of Saturn - Hong Kong Observatory

... Figure 1      Relative positions of a superior planet, the Earth and the Sun during opposition and conjunction of the superior planet.  Opposition of Saturn  Saturn is the second largest planet in the Solar System and the sixth planet away from the Sun. Saturn is characterized by the Saturn ring, wh ...
Quentin Parker Lecture 1b - PowerPoint file.
Quentin Parker Lecture 1b - PowerPoint file.

... This planet was the first of over a dozen jovian planets found around other stars whose orbits turned out smaller than the orbit of Mercury in our own system. The planet around 51 Pegasi is at a distance of ~7million Km from its star, taking a mere 4.2 days to complete its orbit. The artist has show ...
ACE-OSS-1998
ACE-OSS-1998

... Although the long-term average of 22Ne/20Ne in SEPs is not yet known, this evidence that the isotopic composition of SEPs can differ from that of the solar wind may shed light on the unknown origin of a component of Ne (with 22Ne/20Ne ≈ 0.09) that is found implanted in Lunar rocks. ...
STAAR Science Tutorial 35 TEK 8.8B: The Sun
STAAR Science Tutorial 35 TEK 8.8B: The Sun

... The surface temperature of our Sun, 5,500°C, is about average when compared with other stars. About half of the stars in our galaxy are cooler, and about half are hotter. The surface temperature of stars ranges from 3000°C to 30,000°C, though very few stars are over 10,000 C. The color of our Sun, y ...
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Formation and evolution of the Solar System



The formation of the Solar System began 4.6 billion years ago with the gravitational collapse of a small part of a giant molecular cloud. Most of the collapsing mass collected in the center, forming the Sun, while the rest flattened into a protoplanetary disk out of which the planets, moons, asteroids, and other small Solar System bodies formed.This widely accepted model, known as the nebular hypothesis, was first developed in the 18th century by Emanuel Swedenborg, Immanuel Kant, and Pierre-Simon Laplace. Its subsequent development has interwoven a variety of scientific disciplines including astronomy, physics, geology, and planetary science. Since the dawn of the space age in the 1950s and the discovery of extrasolar planets in the 1990s, the model has been both challenged and refined to account for new observations.The Solar System has evolved considerably since its initial formation. Many moons have formed from circling discs of gas and dust around their parent planets, while other moons are thought to have formed independently and later been captured by their planets. Still others, such as the Moon, may be the result of giant collisions. Collisions between bodies have occurred continually up to the present day and have been central to the evolution of the Solar System. The positions of the planets often shifted due to gravitational interactions. This planetary migration is now thought to have been responsible for much of the Solar System's early evolution.In roughly 5 billion years, the Sun will cool and expand outward many times its current diameter (becoming a red giant), before casting off its outer layers as a planetary nebula and leaving behind a stellar remnant known as a white dwarf. In the far distant future, the gravity of passing stars will gradually reduce the Sun's retinue of planets. Some planets will be destroyed, others ejected into interstellar space. Ultimately, over the course of tens of billions of years, it is likely that the Sun will be left with none of the original bodies in orbit around it.
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