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The Planet Walk Brochure - Take it on the walk for fun on the go
The Planet Walk Brochure - Take it on the walk for fun on the go

... To begin, visit the Sun station on the corner of 5th Avenue and “G” Street. The map will guide you. Then proceed down 5th Avenue, following the signs to each of the four inner planet stations: Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars. If you’re up for more, you can continue the Planet Walk along the Tony Kno ...
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... system. This includes the planets and their moons, as well as comets, asteroids, meteoroids, and any other bits of rock or dust. The main parts of our solar system are eight planets, an asteroi d belt, and three dwarf planets. ...
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Acquaintance with solar system. By Edgaras Montvila 6D

... Uranus is named after the ancient Greek deity of the sky Uranus, the father of Cronus (Saturn ) and grandfather of Zeus( Jupiter). Surface temperature varies from –197.2 °C to ? °C. Uranus has a ring system. The planet system has a unique configuration among those of the planets because its axis of ...
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The Planet Hike - City of Dripping Springs

... Home! We are the only planet in our solar system that has 1 moon, liquid oceans and an abundance of life! That’s because we live in the “habitable zone”, where water can exist as a liquid on its surface. The Kepler Space Telescope is currently looking for earth-like planets in other solar systems. S ...
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Lesson Power Point

...  Pluto is no longer an official planet.  They have renamed it a “dwarf planet” because it is so much smaller than all the other planets. ...
PH109 Exploring the Universe, Test #2 Fall 04
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Our Solar System!!! - Natural History Museum of Los Angeles

... Cassini-Huygens was able to map out the surface of Titan through the haze. Some features on Titan appear similar to Earth, but in fact are very different. The surface (bottom left) resembles a rocky desert, but the average temperature is a bitterly cold -290 ° F. It has volcanoes like Sotra Facula ( ...
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A journey through the solar system - Natural History Museum of Los
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Section 26.3 - CPO Science

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Our solar System
Our solar System

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Solar System research questions Group 1 River, Mark, Tommy

... mission which is going on right now. For Saturn, check out the Cassini mission.) What drives weather on the gas giant planets and how is that different from the weather on planets such as Earth or Mars? What is the Great Red Spot on Jupiter (give some details, don’t just say “it’s like a hurricane”) ...
Sky Science Review Questions
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... 1. Are stars made mostly of solids, liquids, or gases? __________________ 2. What is the name of the galaxy in which our Solar System is located? ___________________ 3. Which star is closest to the Earth? _______________________ 4. List the things that EMIT light: ___________________________________ ...
powerpoint version
powerpoint version

... at poles, giving violent weather. Atmospheric composition 82% hydrogen, 18% helium, traces of other elements; similar to Sun’s. Atmosphere ~1000 km thick, clouds of ammonia crystals visible, liquid ammonia and water ice lower down. Pressure and temperature increase inwards so hydrogen becomes liquid ...
The Solar System
The Solar System

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\j \-rno dnne. Pn \n\e. ftircexft wr\ñer cOScTh
\j \-rno dnne. Pn \n\e. ftircexft wr\ñer cOScTh

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The Solar System
The Solar System

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Naming of moons

The naming of moons has been the responsibility of the International Astronomical Union's committee for Planetary System Nomenclature since 1973. That committee is known today as the Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN).Prior to its formation, the names of satellites have had varying histories. The choice of names is often determined by a satellite's discoverer; however, historically some satellites were not given names for many years after their discovery; for instance, Titan was discovered by Huygens in 1655, but was not named until 1847, almost two centuries later.Before the IAU assumed responsibility for astronomical nomenclature, only twenty-five satellites had been given names that were in wide use and are still used. Since then, names have been given to 129 additional satellites: 45 satellites of Jupiter, 43 of Saturn, 22 of Uranus, 11 of Neptune, 5 of Pluto, 1 of Eris, and 2 of Haumea. The number will continue to rise as current satellite discoveries are documented and new satellites are discovered.At the IAU General Assembly in July 2004, the WGPSN suggested it may become advisable to not name small satellites, as CCD technology makes it possible to discover satellites as small as 1 km in diameter. To date, however, names have been applied to all moons discovered, regardless of size.
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