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Jupiter
Jupiter

...  Jupiter is the biggest planet in the solar system.  Jupiter is 240 lbs in size.  The volume of Jupiter is 1.43128×1015 km³ . ...
Pluto
Pluto

... • Most comets are NOT periodic. They visit the Sun once then zoom away (or hit Sun) • They come from the Kuiper belt and the “Oort cloud” (a sphere of perhaps 1012 comets, about 50,000 AU from the Sun) • Sometimes perturbed by a passing star and deflected into the Solar System • Made of primitive ma ...
V1003.HW5.2014 - Earth and Environmental Sciences
V1003.HW5.2014 - Earth and Environmental Sciences

... a) Use the model to calculate the ground temperature (in K) for 280 ppm CO2 and 0.6 ppm CH4 – these are the "pre-Industrial" concentrations. Now calculate the ground temperatures for any three other CO2 levels up to about 500 ppm, leaving CH4 fixed. Plot up your results on the graph paper below, lab ...
Urbanization and the..
Urbanization and the..

... • The water absorbs energy as it evaporates, cooling the air in the process. • A single mature, properly watered tree with a crown of 30 feet can "evapotranspire" up to 40 gallons of water in a day, which is like removing all the heat produced in four hours by a small electric space heater. ...
problems associated with the urban environment in
problems associated with the urban environment in

... • The water absorbs energy as it evaporates, cooling the air in the process. • A single mature, properly watered tree with a crown of 30 feet can "evapotranspire" up to 40 gallons of water in a day, which is like removing all the heat produced in four hours by a small electric space heater. ...
Unit 1 Review - EDHSGreenSea.net
Unit 1 Review - EDHSGreenSea.net

... A. The amount of heat trapped in the troposphere depends on concentrations of greenhouse gases. B. The greenhouse effect is a new theory that explains the warming of the atmosphere. C. The two predominant greenhouse gases are water vapor and carbon dioxide. D. It has been confirmed by numerous lab e ...
ch16 b - Manasquan Public Schools
ch16 b - Manasquan Public Schools

... give Earth perfect conditions to support life as we know it. ...
Planetary Geology and Atmospheres - Cornell
Planetary Geology and Atmospheres - Cornell

... meter. For comparison, ice is about 1 g/cm3 = 1000 kg/m3, rock is about 3000 kg/m3, and metal is about 8000 kg/m3. (Hint: You can assume that all of these are objects spheres. Note that you will first need to express each radius in meters.) In addition, for each object, compare the calculated densit ...
Nitrogen and Water Cycle Notes File
Nitrogen and Water Cycle Notes File

... • Evaporation: Water moves from the ground into the atmosphere, changing from liquid to a gas (water vapor) • Condensation: Water Vapor joins the clouds and depending on the temperature will either turn to rain, snow, sleet, or hail. ...
Troposphere
Troposphere

... The outer part of the thermosphere The last layer of the atmosphere Difficult to tell where it stops and space begins Very few molecules in this layer of the atmosphere Temperature gets higher with higher altitude (e.g. 17,000 degrees C) But if we could visit, it would not feel hot. Why is that? ...
Space - FIVES R US
Space - FIVES R US

... mythology. Because of the strange way it spins, nights on some parts of Uranus can last for more than 40 years. Even though Neptune is further from the sun, Uranus is the coldest planet in the solar system. Uranus and Neptune are both known as Ice Giants. ...
Layers of the Atmosphere
Layers of the Atmosphere

... lies next to the Earth’s surface, is called the troposphere. The Stratosphere: Home of the Ozone Layer The atmospheric layer above the troposphere is called the ...
Planet Finding
Planet Finding

... transits using the imaging spectrograph on NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope. They compared these data with spectra taken at other times. The result: traces of sodium in the spectra of the transits that could only have come from an atmosphere around HD 209458 b. The discovery itself didn’t come as a maj ...
ATOMSPHERE: ON THE AIR
ATOMSPHERE: ON THE AIR

... harmful ultraviolet radiation. ...
Survey of the Solar System - USU Department of Physics
Survey of the Solar System - USU Department of Physics

... – So, most easily-detected “wobbles” come from high-mass exoplanets very close to their stars What we see depends on how we look for it. ...
CHAPTER 2. ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE
CHAPTER 2. ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE

... behaves as a homogeneous gas of molecular weight Ma = 29 g mol-1. Dalton’s law stipulates that each component of the air mixture must behave as if it were alone in the atmosphere. One might then expect different components to have different scale heights determined by their molecular weight. In part ...
Name: Notes – #51 Our Suns Brilliant Future 1. In the core of our
Name: Notes – #51 Our Suns Brilliant Future 1. In the core of our

... helium nuclei can come together (i.e. fuse) to form a ________________ nucleus. 11. Carbon can fuse to a helium nucleus to form ________________. 12. The helium fusion stage lasts only about ________________ years. 13. At this stage, there is a carbon and oxygen core surrounded by a ______________ f ...
Air Pollution - Fort Thomas Independent Schools
Air Pollution - Fort Thomas Independent Schools

... Carbon dioxide is produced when any form of carbon or almost any carbon compound is burned in an excess of oxygen. For example, it is released into the atmosphere during natural forest fires and the man-made combustion of fossil fuels. Other natural sources of carbon dioxide include volcanic eruptio ...
Uniqueness of the Earth, Lebo, 7-30
Uniqueness of the Earth, Lebo, 7-30

... Must be one and only one star – Gravity from two or more stars would make stable planetary orbits impossible. If no star (planet was thrown out of planetary system) there would be no energy source. Must be a G-type star: If hotter, UV would extinguish life: If cooler, would have to be so close that ...
Planet Jupiter - Rocky View Schools
Planet Jupiter - Rocky View Schools

... Earth. Had Jupiter been more massive during its formation, the internal pressure would have generated a high enough temperature to ignite nuclear reactions within the core, creating a sister star to the Sun. Instead, Jupiter’s core never ignited, but has been steadily cooling since the planet’s form ...
Name: Date: Block
Name: Date: Block

... 11. Biological systems do not use up matter, they transform it. Explain what this statement means. What law does it satisfy? 12. How are the three types of rocks classified? Based on what? 13. What do coal, oil and natural gas have in common? 14. What are some processes that decrease the amount of c ...
Sample Exam 1
Sample Exam 1

... c. They have orbits that do not coincide with the equatorial planes of the parent planets. d. They are present around Saturn and Jupiter, but not around Uranus and Neptune. 22. The smallest PLANET in the solar system is __________. a. Venus b. Pluto c. Mars ...
The Universe, Solar System, and Planets I
The Universe, Solar System, and Planets I

... the sun. One reason why Pluto is declassified as a planet is because asteroids has been detected in our solar system that are as large or larger than Pluto. Stricter rules are now in place as to what can be called a planet. Pluto did not meet all the new requirements to be labeled as one. Some astro ...
The Solar System 2015
The Solar System 2015

... Apart from the eight planets in the Solar System, there is also known a few hundreds of extrasolar planets, which orbit foreign stars. Contemporary astronomical instruments do not allow to observe these distant planets directly, but their properties are calculated from photometric and astrometric m ...
The Water Cycle at Work - Pi Beta Phi Elementary School
The Water Cycle at Work - Pi Beta Phi Elementary School

... in different colors that show the different temperatures found on the ocean's surface. Water near the equator is warm (light blues). Water near the poles are cold (dark purples). ...
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Extraterrestrial atmosphere

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