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October 2011 - Newbury Astronomical Society
October 2011 - Newbury Astronomical Society

... Jupiter has many moons and more are being discovered all the time, more than 60 so far. Many are small and may be captured asteroids but four are large and easy to see in a small telescope. Galileo was the first person to have been credited with observing Jupiter using a telescope and discovered the ...
Astronomy - Surfin` Through the Solar System
Astronomy - Surfin` Through the Solar System

... they are located in the solar system. 4. The students will label the gas giants on their planet model to show where they are located in the solar system. Reference should be noted that Pluto is not one of the two types of planets. 5. If time allows, The Magic School Bus: Lost in the Solar System may ...
Earth, moon and sun
Earth, moon and sun

... o Based on examining rocks of the lunar surface, scientists have determined the age of the moon to be 3.84.5 billion years old, same as the Earth. o According to the Impact Theory, the Moon formed as the result of a collision between Earth and a Marssized object about 4.5 billions years ago. o The i ...
Sirius Astronomer - Orange County Astronomers
Sirius Astronomer - Orange County Astronomers

... NASA about 1/10 of what a new mission to a comet would cost. Hartley 2 is a tiny comet, only about 1.2 miles long. This is ¼ the length of Tempel 1, resulting in 1/100 the volume. Just before the flyby, the comet was observed to expel a surge of cyanogen radical, commonly called cyanide. This has be ...
StarWalkKiDS manual en
StarWalkKiDS manual en

... occurs when it first becomes visible above the eastern horizon after a period of time when it had not been visible. ...
Objects in the Sky STair
Objects in the Sky STair

... As Earth rotates, it gives the appearance that the sun “rises in the sky” every morning and “sets or goes down in the sky” every night When it rises here, it is setting on the other side of Earth and when it is setting here, it is rising on the other side of Earth You use sunrise and sunset times fo ...
Fulltext
Fulltext

... The prevailing theory concerning the creation of planets starts by an agglomeration of dust particles into grains, grains into larger grains, etc. until big enough bodies are created that their gravity takes over the process, and carries it up to the bodies of planetary size. Large bodies are also c ...
Pitt County Schools
Pitt County Schools

... that distinguishes one type of em radiation from another. 1.03 Analyze the electromagnetic radiation given off by a heated object (blackbody) in terms of the graph of intensity (brightness) vs. wavelength for various temperatures and describe their similarities and differences.  Analyze Wien’s law ...
Assessment
Assessment

... 2. One half of the moon is light and bright, the other half is shadowed and dark ,but not always invisible. 3. the large circle 4. the line extending from Earth 5. In between Earth and sun 6. A 7. Something like this: ...
Earth, Sun, Moon System
Earth, Sun, Moon System

... Something Special: Is there anything special about your planet? This can often be the best part of the report, taking you off on interesting topics. For example, are there 100-year-long storms on your planet? Are there giant volcanoes? Does your planet have a very tilted axis (giving it extreme seas ...
Hifz schooling scienc summer vacation task 5th
Hifz schooling scienc summer vacation task 5th

... Q.1 Fill in the blanks. 1. Stars are the burning ball of ____________________. 2. The sun is_____________________ times bigger than the earth. 3. The distance between the sun and earth is ________________________. 4. One would have to run around the earth ______________ times to cover the distance. ...
ReadingsAst
ReadingsAst

... seasons, but the Earth's elliptical orbit is in fact almost perfectly circular. (For some other planets the ellipticity of the orbit is an issue, but not for the Earth.) The Celestial Sphere When discussing observations of the sky, it is often useful to think of the sky as being a great crystal sphe ...
Duncan Wright
Duncan Wright

... To be capable of detecting the <10 m s-1 Doppler amplitudes expected from habitable zone planets around M Dwarfs we need to be able to calibrate the UCLES spectrograph to < 2 m s-1. This is possible with CYCLOPS due to the tremendous amount of position information available when we take a calibratio ...
So What All Is Out There, Anyway?
So What All Is Out There, Anyway?

... You continue to grow and you start to notice other galaxies nearby. Many of these galaxies have hundreds of billions of stars just like our Milky Way, and others have even more. It is likely that many of these stars have orbiting planets and moons. One or 2 galaxies seem close enough to touch, but m ...
Shattering geocentric, anthrocentric worldviews since 1543
Shattering geocentric, anthrocentric worldviews since 1543

... the heavenly bodies, they just observed them. This is a good thing- precise astronomical observations can’t be reconciled with their flat-Earth model! After about 2000 years they could make pretty good predictions of eclipses. ...
by Kendrick Frazier Pluto turns out not to be responsible for
by Kendrick Frazier Pluto turns out not to be responsible for

... W h a t e v e r tugged this planet out of place (perhaps, Van Flandern suggests, a star passing within 800 astronomical units of our solar system—some 80 billion miles) could have sent it off into a highly inclined orbit beyond Pluto. He and Harrington have done numerical experiments showing that su ...
May - Hawaiian Astronomical Society
May - Hawaiian Astronomical Society

... believed that volcanic processes were responsible for at least some of the craters seen on the Moon through telescopes. Meteor (or Barringer) Crater in Arizona was at first thought to be volcanic. Although many people suspected that it was an impact crater, it was not until Eugene Shoemaker carefull ...
review1
review1

... Q3.31 (a) The Moon moves noticeably on the celestial sphere over the space of a single night. To show this, calculate how long it takes the Moon to move through an angle equal to its own angular diameter (½°) against the background of stars. Give your answer in hours. (b) Through what angle (in degr ...
here
here

... • Pluto’s diameter is 2300 km. This is smaller than Jupiter’s large moons, and also Earth’s moon. ...
Space and Technology
Space and Technology

... Climate and Seasons continued • Summer – sun’s rays point almost directly toward Earth at _____ warm - days are very warm • As each day passes the sun’s rays strike at a angle - the sun looks greater and greater _____ lower in the sky • As the months pass, the rays of the sun are not as direct beca ...
Astro 27 Solar System Formation and ExoPlanets Slide Show
Astro 27 Solar System Formation and ExoPlanets Slide Show

... active area of research • Inner planets – formed by rocky material inside “frost line” • Outer planets – formed by hydrogen compound ices as “seeds”, and since H is most of the proto-solar system, these planets are large • Beyond, is Kuiper Belt of 10’s of thousands of giant ice cores • 100x further ...
The Stars of Namaqualand
The Stars of Namaqualand

... your eyes. To deal with the distances in the sky you have to take a new unit, because kilometers are to small for explanations. The typical unit is the light year. Romans had discovered the speed of light in 1675. The light year is the distance which light travels in a vacuum in one year. The sun is ...
Constellations appear to move across the sky at night because
Constellations appear to move across the sky at night because

... showed Earth could orbit the Sun and not lose its moon, too. ...
Astronomer Notes PowerPoint
Astronomer Notes PowerPoint

... Another way to say them • The path of the planets about the sun is elliptical in shape, with the center of the sun being located at one focus. (The Law of _________________________) • An imaginary line drawn from the center of the sun to the center of the planet will sweep out equal areas in equal ...
Click Here To
Click Here To

... (b) According to this theory, should all planets be roughly the same age? (c) According to this theory should they all rotate in the same direction? (d) According to this theory should all the planets orbit in the same direction? On the same plane? 8) What is FUSION? At what temperature does fusion ...
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Satellite system (astronomy)



A satellite system is a set of gravitationally bound objects in orbit around a planetary mass object or minor planet. Generally speaking, it is a set of natural satellites (moons), although such systems may also consist of bodies such as circumplanetary disks, ring systems, moonlets, minor-planet moons and artificial satellites any of which may themselves have satellite systems of their own. Some satellite systems have complex interactions with both their parent and other moons, including magnetic, tidal, atmospheric and orbital interactions such as orbital resonances and libration. Individually major satellite objects are designated in Roman numerals. Satellite systems are referred to either by the possessive adjectives of their primary (e.g. ""Jovian system""), or less commonly by the name of their primary (e.g. ""Jupiter system""). Where only one satellite is known, or it is a binary orbiting a common centre of gravity, it may be referred to using the hyphenated names of the primary and major satellite (e.g. the ""Earth-Moon system"").Many Solar System objects are known to possess satellite systems, though their origin is still unclear. Notable examples include the largest satellite system, the Jovian system, with 67 known moons (including the large Galilean moons) and the Saturnian System with 62 known moons (and the most visible ring system in the Solar System). Both satellite systems are large and diverse. In fact all of the giant planets of the Solar System possess large satellite systems as well as planetary rings, and it is inferred that this is a general pattern. Several objects farther from the Sun also have satellite systems consisting of multiple moons, including the complex Plutonian system where multiple objects orbit a common center of mass, as well as many asteroids and plutinos. Apart from the Earth-Moon system and Mars' system of two tiny natural satellites, the other terrestrial planets are generally not considered satellite systems, although some have been orbited by artificial satellites originating from Earth.Little is known of satellite systems beyond the Solar System, although it is inferred that natural satellites are common. J1407b is an example of an extrasolar satellite system. It is also theorised that Rogue planets ejected from their planetary system could retain a system of satellites.
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