Solar System Powerpoint by Katonya Beaubouef
... How are the outer planets the same? • Made mostly of frozen gas • Larger and colder • Have more than 2 moons ...
... How are the outer planets the same? • Made mostly of frozen gas • Larger and colder • Have more than 2 moons ...
the solar system
... Work in teams of 3 or 4. Decide who is going to work on each task. You will get credit for neatness and accuracy. Materials and sources of information will be provided. ...
... Work in teams of 3 or 4. Decide who is going to work on each task. You will get credit for neatness and accuracy. Materials and sources of information will be provided. ...
Solar System - U
... refractory minerals, such as the silicates, which form their crusts and mantles, and metals, such as iron and nickel, which form their cores. Three of the four inner planets (Venus, Earth and Mars) have atmospheres substantial enough to generate weather; all have impact craters and tectonic surface ...
... refractory minerals, such as the silicates, which form their crusts and mantles, and metals, such as iron and nickel, which form their cores. Three of the four inner planets (Venus, Earth and Mars) have atmospheres substantial enough to generate weather; all have impact craters and tectonic surface ...
Science Chapter 7 Study Guide
... Saturn and Jupiter are the largest planets in the Solar System. The New Moon is the phase of the Moon between the Sun and Earth. Earth’s trip around the Sun takes one year. The cycle of day and night is caused by Earth’s rotation. Earth revolves around the Sun and has a tilted axis. This causes seas ...
... Saturn and Jupiter are the largest planets in the Solar System. The New Moon is the phase of the Moon between the Sun and Earth. Earth’s trip around the Sun takes one year. The cycle of day and night is caused by Earth’s rotation. Earth revolves around the Sun and has a tilted axis. This causes seas ...
Fill in the blanks below with words from this box: Neptune solar
... Fill in the blanks below with words from this box: Neptune gas giants Pluto solar Mars nine asteroids Jupiter temperature water Saturn orbit dinosaurs Earth Venus Mercury ...
... Fill in the blanks below with words from this box: Neptune gas giants Pluto solar Mars nine asteroids Jupiter temperature water Saturn orbit dinosaurs Earth Venus Mercury ...
Monday Sept 14
... A planetary system is a star and all of the planets, moons, and other objects and materials that orbit that star. Until very recently, there was only one known planetary system Even though many People suspected that most stars had planets orbiting them, we had no scientific evidence to support th ...
... A planetary system is a star and all of the planets, moons, and other objects and materials that orbit that star. Until very recently, there was only one known planetary system Even though many People suspected that most stars had planets orbiting them, we had no scientific evidence to support th ...
Video review
... Birth of the Solar System 1. The first modern theory of the formation of planets and solar systems from a nebular cloud was proposed by philosopher Immanuel _________ in the 1700s. 2. A collapsing gas cloud (nebula) that form a star system increases its rotation rate because of the conservation of _ ...
... Birth of the Solar System 1. The first modern theory of the formation of planets and solar systems from a nebular cloud was proposed by philosopher Immanuel _________ in the 1700s. 2. A collapsing gas cloud (nebula) that form a star system increases its rotation rate because of the conservation of _ ...
Guided Notes on Our Solar System
... Stars and planets form from clouds of gas and dust, called interstellar clouds, which exist in space between the stars. ...
... Stars and planets form from clouds of gas and dust, called interstellar clouds, which exist in space between the stars. ...
5th Grade Solar System - Mrs. Kellogg`s 5th Grade Class
... L.O. I will describe what is in our solar system. ...
... L.O. I will describe what is in our solar system. ...
The solar system: The sun and the planets
... The Solar System: The Sun and the Planets Section 8.3 Pages 313-317 In orbit around the Sun, there are ________ planets and their __________, and billions of other smaller celestial objects. Name the planets from closest to farthest from the Sun. ...
... The Solar System: The Sun and the Planets Section 8.3 Pages 313-317 In orbit around the Sun, there are ________ planets and their __________, and billions of other smaller celestial objects. Name the planets from closest to farthest from the Sun. ...
A Solar System is Born 4/29/11
... • Hubble image of protoplanetary discs in the Orion Nebula, a light-years-wide "stellar nursery" probably very similar to the primordial nebula from which our Sun formed. ...
... • Hubble image of protoplanetary discs in the Orion Nebula, a light-years-wide "stellar nursery" probably very similar to the primordial nebula from which our Sun formed. ...
Solar System Unit Study Guide
... massive star that has collapsed and pulls everything in, even light the largest planet the smallest planet, now known as a dwarf planet Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto ...
... massive star that has collapsed and pulls everything in, even light the largest planet the smallest planet, now known as a dwarf planet Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto ...
Formation of the solar system
... This creates a tendency for particles to be drawn by gravity to the midplane. The disk is a turbulent region so that angular momentum can be easily transferred away from the protosun. In the disk, material starts to clump into PLANETISMALS, which grow through gravitational attraction and collisions ...
... This creates a tendency for particles to be drawn by gravity to the midplane. The disk is a turbulent region so that angular momentum can be easily transferred away from the protosun. In the disk, material starts to clump into PLANETISMALS, which grow through gravitational attraction and collisions ...
Chapter 16: Our Solar System
... _____ 10. Which of the following planets is located one astronomical unit from the sun? a. Mercury b. Earth c. Mars d. Jupiter _____ 11. Which of the following terrestrial planets has retrograde rotation? a. Mercury b. Venus c. Earth d. Mars _____ 12. Which of the following planets in the outer sola ...
... _____ 10. Which of the following planets is located one astronomical unit from the sun? a. Mercury b. Earth c. Mars d. Jupiter _____ 11. Which of the following terrestrial planets has retrograde rotation? a. Mercury b. Venus c. Earth d. Mars _____ 12. Which of the following planets in the outer sola ...
14.1 History of the Solar System
... Heliocentric – The sun in the center, planets revolve around it. This is correct ...
... Heliocentric – The sun in the center, planets revolve around it. This is correct ...
14-1 History of Solar System Study
... Heliocentric – The sun in the center, planets revolve around it. This is correct ...
... Heliocentric – The sun in the center, planets revolve around it. This is correct ...
FORMATION OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
... get larger by their gravitational pull attracting more matter creating PLANETS accreation ...
... get larger by their gravitational pull attracting more matter creating PLANETS accreation ...
Ch 15 – The Formation of the Solar System
... •The asteroids are very old and exhibit a range of properties not characteristic of either the inner or outer planets(except Pluto) or their moons ...
... •The asteroids are very old and exhibit a range of properties not characteristic of either the inner or outer planets(except Pluto) or their moons ...
Unit 4 5 vocabulary terms to define: Vocabulary Term Definition
... 2. Draw and label a picture of a comet. Include: the sun, nucleus, coma and tails. ...
... 2. Draw and label a picture of a comet. Include: the sun, nucleus, coma and tails. ...
History of Solar System formation and evolution hypotheses
Ideas concerning the origin and fate of the world date from the earliest known writings; however, for almost all of that time, there was no attempt to link such theories to the existence of a ""Solar System"", simply because almost no one knew or believed that the Solar System, in the sense we now understand it, existed. The first step towards a theory of Solar System formation was the general acceptance of heliocentrism, the model which placed the Sun at the centre of the system and the Earth in orbit around it. This conception had been gestating for thousands of years, but was only widely accepted by the end of the 17th century. The first recorded use of the term ""Solar System"" dates from 1704.