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Lab_Solar system scale inside_afw
Lab_Solar system scale inside_afw

... 3. How many Earths would it take to equal the diameter of Jupiter? 4. How many Plutos would it take to equal the diameter of Earth? 5. How many Plutos would it take to equal the diameter of Jupiter? 6. How many times larger is Saturn compared to Earth? 7. Which 2 sets of planets are almost the same ...
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...  Features of Saturn • Saturn’s atmosphere is very active, with winds roaring at up to 1500 kilometers per hour. • Large cyclonic “storms” similar to Jupiter’s Great Red Spot, although smaller, occur in Saturn’s atmosphere. ...
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...  Features of Saturn • Saturn’s atmosphere is very active, with winds roaring at up to 1500 kilometers per hour. • Large cyclonic “storms” similar to Jupiter’s Great Red Spot, although smaller, occur in Saturn’s atmosphere. ...
The Solar System
The Solar System

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Ch 21 Directed Reading Pg 644 – 673
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... 9. In the 17th century, which new bodies were discovered after the telescope was invented? a. Uranus and Pluto ...
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The Moon

... Differences between Jupiter and Saturn are due to Jupiter’s higher mass. All Jovian planets have rings. ...
GEOL3025, Section 030 Lecture #11 31 August 2007
GEOL3025, Section 030 Lecture #11 31 August 2007

... AKA Terrestrial Planets (like Earth) AKA Rocky Planets ...
ASTRONOMY 161
ASTRONOMY 161

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... Aristotle & Ptolemy said the Moon is a perfect, smooth sphere. In fact, the Moon is no more “perfect” than the Earth. ...
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The Outer Planets

...  29.5 Earth years to orbit the Sun  Rotates on its axis in 10 hours, 39 minutes  Saturn’s rings are in the plane of its equator  Tilts 27 degrees with respect to its orbital plane Chapter 3, Lesson 3 ...
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Neptune - Peterborough Astronomical Association

... retrograde motion, this peculiarity is one of the reasons astronomers think that it is a member of the Kuiper Belt which was gravitationally captured by Neptune. Like Earth’s Moon, Triton is tidally locked to Neptune. What that means is that the gravitational pull of Neptune has gradually slowed Tr ...
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... sun – a huge sphere of hot gases that gives off heat and light; the nearest star to Earth planets – large bodies of rock or gas in space that move around a star o ...
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... 8. What is Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation and how does it help explain why moons stay in orbit around their planets? Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation states that if the net force acting on an object is zero, the motion of the object does not change. Newton’s first law of motion sometime ...
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... • Triton has a young, icy surface indicative of tectonic activity • The energy for this activity may have been provided by tidal heating that occurred when Triton was captured by Neptune’s gravity into a retrograde orbit ...
Jupiter and Saturn
Jupiter and Saturn

... • Triton has a young, icy surface indicative of tectonic activity • The energy for this activity may have been provided by tidal heating that occurred when Triton was captured by Neptune’s gravity into a retrograde orbit ...
Jupiter and Saturn
Jupiter and Saturn

... • Triton has a young, icy surface indicative of tectonic activity • The energy for this activity may have been provided by tidal heating that occurred when Triton was captured by Neptune’s gravity into a retrograde orbit ...
Jupiter`s and Saturn`s Moons
Jupiter`s and Saturn`s Moons

... • Triton has a young, icy surface indicative of tectonic activity • The energy for this activity may have been provided by tidal heating that occurred when Triton was captured by Neptune’s gravity into a retrograde orbit ...
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Kuiper Mission Team Presentation

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solutions - SwRI Boulder

... 10. Our next stop is the beautiful ringed planet Saturn, the most distant planet that can be seen from Earth without a telescope (i.e. with the naked eye). (a) When Jupiter and Saturn are aligned on the same side of the Sun, what is the distance in AU between these two planets? Jupiter is at 5.2026 ...
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Earth years

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Exploration of Jupiter



The exploration of Jupiter has been conducted via close observations by automated spacecraft. It began with the arrival of Pioneer 10 into the Jovian system in 1973, and, as of 2014, has continued with seven further spacecraft missions. All of these missions were undertaken by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), and all but one have been flybys that take detailed observations without the probe landing or entering orbit. These probes make Jupiter the most visited of the Solar System's outer planets as all missions to the outer Solar System have used Jupiter flybys to reduce fuel requirements and travel time. Plans for more missions to the Jovian system are under development, none of which are scheduled to arrive at the planet before 2016. Sending a craft to Jupiter entails many technical difficulties, especially due to the probes' large fuel requirements and the effects of the planet's harsh radiation environment.The first spacecraft to visit Jupiter was Pioneer 10 in 1973, followed a year later by Pioneer 11. Aside from taking the first close-up pictures of the planet, the probes discovered its magnetosphere and its largely fluid interior. The Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 probes visited the planet in 1979, and studied its moons and the ring system, discovering the volcanic activity of Io and the presence of water ice on the surface of Europa. Ulysses further studied Jupiter's magnetosphere in 1992 and then again in 2000. The Cassini probe approached the planet in 2000 and took very detailed images of its atmosphere. The New Horizons spacecraft passed by Jupiter in 2007 and made improved measurements of its and its satellites' parameters.The Galileo spacecraft is the only one to have entered orbit around Jupiter, arriving in 1995 and studying the planet until 2003. During this period Galileo gathered a large amount of information about the Jovian system, making close approaches to all of the four large Galilean moons and finding evidence for thin atmospheres on three of them, as well as the possibility of liquid water beneath their surfaces. It also discovered a magnetic field around Ganymede. As it approached Jupiter, it also witnessed the impact of Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9. In December 1995, it sent an atmospheric probe into the Jovian atmosphere, so far the only craft to do so.Future probes planned by NASA include the Juno spacecraft, launched in 2011, which will enter a polar orbit around Jupiter to determine whether it has a rocky core. The European Space Agency selected the L1-class JUICE mission in 2012 as part of its Cosmic Vision programme to explore three of Jupiter's Galilean moons, with a possible Ganymede lander provided by Roscosmos. JUICE is proposed to be launched in 2022. Some NASA administrators have even speculated as to the possibility of human exploration of Jupiter, but such missions are not considered feasible with current technology; such as radiation protection.
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