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The Greenhouse Effect
The Greenhouse Effect

... surface. This is known as the greenhouse effect. The “greenhouse gases” that absorb heat energy include H2O, CO2, methane, and a number of other less important ones. Together they make up about 1% of the atmosphere. Without these gases, Earth’s average temperature would be around -18˚C, the same as ...
Space and Mythology
Space and Mythology

... • Every knows that Mercury is the closest planet to the sun…right? • In the 1700s, in an attempt to find out why Mercury has a screwed up orbit, one astronomer predicted a planet between Mercury and the sun. • Since this guy already successfully predicted Neptune, people listened to what he had to s ...
Neptune
Neptune

... Composed mostly of ice, hydrogen, and helium Mantle is made of water, ammonia and methane ices ...
1 Characteristics of the Atmosphere
1 Characteristics of the Atmosphere

... we live in. It is where most of the water vapor, carbon dioxide, pollution, and living things on Earth exist. Weather conditions such as wind and rain all take place in the troposphere. The troposphere is also the densest layer of the atmosphere. This is because the troposphere is at the bottom with ...
8th Grade 2nd Semester Test Chapters 13, 16, 18
8th Grade 2nd Semester Test Chapters 13, 16, 18

... 22. Circle the letter of each sentence that is true about thunder (2 answers) a. It causes lighting to occur b. You hear it after you see the lightning that caused it c. It occurs because lightning hear the air d. It occurs because light travels faster than sound 23. Circle the letter of each sente ...
Lecture17 - UCSB Physics
Lecture17 - UCSB Physics

... •Uranus and Neptune are about the same size, yet Neptune shows spots and bands in its atmosphere while Uranus is almost featureless. Why this difference? •A) Uranus and Neptune are at vastly different distances from the Sun and the resulting difference in temperature causes the atmospheres to behave ...
Astronomy 1 – Winter 2011
Astronomy 1 – Winter 2011

... • Uranus and Neptune are about the same size, yet Neptune shows spots and bands in its atmosphere while Uranus is almost featureless. Why this difference? • A) Uranus and Neptune are at vastly different distances from the Sun and the resulting difference in temperature causes the atmospheres to beha ...
IN THE CENTRE OF THE SUN IT ABOUT 15 MILLION DEGREES
IN THE CENTRE OF THE SUN IT ABOUT 15 MILLION DEGREES

... Neptune is the smallest of our four gas giants in our solar system. Much like Saturn and Uranus, Neptune’s atmosphere contains hydrogen, helium and methane. Neptune has 18 moons that we know of because Neptune is so far away, it is difficult to see any of these worlds. There are probably many more m ...
What Makes Up the Solar System?
What Makes Up the Solar System?

... There is a huge storm on Jupiter that has lasted for 400 years. This storm has been named the Great Red Spot. ...
Comets, Asteroids, and Meteors
Comets, Asteroids, and Meteors

... can be more than 100 million kilometers long. Most comets are found in one of two distant regions of the solar system beyond Pluto: the Kuiper belt and the Oort cloud. The Kuiper belt is a doughnut-shaped region that extends from beyond Neptune’s orbit to about 100 times Earth’s distance from the su ...
Ch. 16 Notes
Ch. 16 Notes

... – 120,536 km (least dense planet, less dense than water) • Saturn bulges at the equator because of its fast rotation and low density. ...
Conditions for Life
Conditions for Life

... The Sun is a star located in the center of our Solar System. The Sun is a huge sphere composed of super-heated gases (plasma). The Sun’s gravitational pull holds the Earth and the other planets in orbit. Without the Sun, the Earth and other planets in our solar system would float off into space as a ...
Water Stewardship in a Changing Climate
Water Stewardship in a Changing Climate

... ratio) and oxygen (20.9% volume mixing ratio), together with a number of trace gases, such as argon (0.93% volume mixing ratio), helium, radiatively active greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide (0.035% volume mixing ratio), and ozone. In addition the atmosphere contains water vapor, whose amount i ...
Yes, we are all star dust. Even Gary!
Yes, we are all star dust. Even Gary!

... Stars) = more Helium … plus Beryllium, Boron and Carbon … As carbon life-forms, we are indeed star dust! • Massive Stellar Nuc. (fusion in massive stars) = Oxygen to Iron • Supernovae (exploding massive stars) = all other naturally occurring elements heavier than Iron (ie the metals and rare earths) ...
ANAMORPHIC ARCHITECTURE - RECONCILING TENSIONS BETWEEN LIVED AND FICTIONAL SPACE
ANAMORPHIC ARCHITECTURE - RECONCILING TENSIONS BETWEEN LIVED AND FICTIONAL SPACE

... performers and the audience. How does the performance of the stage reach out into the audience beyond? And how does the edge of the stage and the performance become blurred? Additionally, atmosphere both influences and is influenced by these relationships. Peter Zumthor asserts that atmospheres exer ...
Detection and Properties of Planetary Systems
Detection and Properties of Planetary Systems

... • How do planetary systems form? • Is this a common or an infrequent event? • How unique are the properties of our own solar system? • Are these qualities important for life to form? Up until now we have had only one laboratory to test planet formation theories. We need more! ...
Jupiter
Jupiter

... atmosphere, particularly noble gases, enriched with respect to the sun. The study of the internal structure of Jupiter, and in particular the presence or absence of an inner core would distinguish both. The properties of the interior of the planet can be scanned remotely from gravitational perturbat ...
The Sun*s
The Sun*s

... Appears pink because the gas here only emits certain wavelengths of light, mostly red “spiky” surface due to jets of gas that surge upward ...
Heating the Atmosphere
Heating the Atmosphere

... • The Earth reradiates some of the absorbed solar energy skyward, but at lower temperatures (and longer wavelengths like infrared). • The atmosphere (especially water vapor and carbon dioxide) absorbs this energy and in turn radiates it both earthward and skyward. • The skyward energy can be absorbe ...
astro20 chap27 - Las Positas College
astro20 chap27 - Las Positas College

... – greenhouse effect and lack of water preclude formation of building blocks ...
Oceanography Chapter 1 – “Origins”
Oceanography Chapter 1 – “Origins”

... – Outer 4 are gas giants (gas/ice) ...
What is Kelvin? A Sample Problem Solution * Flux on an angled
What is Kelvin? A Sample Problem Solution * Flux on an angled

... Radiation – emission and absorption Contact – we call this sensible heat (“sense” as in“touch”)  -- results in warm air near surface Evaporation – we call this latent heat (“latent” since air heats later, when condensation occurs) ...
Cycles in the Earth System
Cycles in the Earth System

... 1. Name the two sources of external energy. The sun and the moon 2. How is the energy from the sun used on Earth? Warms Earth’s atmosphere and surface Creates wind and ocean currents Plants use the energy to make food ...
Basic considerations - The Outdoor Leader Online
Basic considerations - The Outdoor Leader Online

... rising air expands, cools, and sheds moisture as cloud droplets, rain, hail or snow sinking air is compressed, warms and can carry more moisture – clouds dissipate as water droplets evaporate into invisible water vapour in the warming air. ...
File
File

... become new stars! They last between a few weeks and a couple of months! ...
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Extraterrestrial atmosphere

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