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The Revolution of the Moons of Jupiter
The Revolution of the Moons of Jupiter

... the moon should be a sinusoidal curve if you plot it versus time (see Figure 2). By taking enough measurements of the position of a moon, you can fit a sine curve to the data and determine the radius of the orbit (the amplitude of the sine curve) and the period of the orbit (the period of the sine c ...
Our Solar System
Our Solar System

... layer of yellowish clouds. The clouds are formed by poison acid. Venus is the 2nd planet from the Sun. The first spacecraft to visit Venus was Mariner 2 in 1962. Since then it has been visited More then 20 times. Venus has no moons. ...
Planet Rubric
Planet Rubric

... Aurora- strong magnetic field ...
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... low enough that hydrogen exists as a gas. At the height of the visible surface, the pressure is so low that hydrogen can only exist in its gas phase. By contrast, Earth is not able to hold onto atomic hydrogen because its temperature is greater and its gravitational force is weaker. Large magnetic f ...
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Astronomy

... Mars and Jupiter. The Dawn spacecraft has been in orbit around Ceres since March of 2015. Note the heavily cratered surface. The bright spots are not currently understood. It contains ~1/3 of the mass of the entire ...
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... 19. Neptune is the ______________________ planet from the sun and is similar to Uranus in size and mass. 20. Neptune’s existence was ______________________ before it was actually discovered. 21. How was Neptune’s existence predicted before the planet was actually discovered? ________________________ ...
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... atmospheres, fast/slower rotation rates, many/few moons & rings and Space Debris – icy comets, rocky asteroids, meteoroids, Kuiper Belt d)  Earth, Moon, Mars, Meteorites, Sun; all 4.6 billion years old e)  All of the above ...
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... Asteroid and Meteorite Impacts • An asteroid about the size of a mountain struck the Earth 65 million years ago • Resulted in catastrophic changes to Earth’s atmosphere • Widely believed it is responsible for mass extinctions including the dinosaurs • 39 M years ago, 2 km wide object hit Nunavut, 2 ...
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... interacted with a solar system body in any way, and use of the data to deduce information about the body:  spin/orbit state  surface and subsurface properties  atmospheric properties  magnetospheric properties  ring properties Types of radiation:  thermal emission  reflected emission (radar o ...
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... Gaspra, the first asteroid ever to be seen close-up ’ Some reflect light well; others are black as coal ↓ Earth-crossing orbit of Apophis, discovered in 2004 ’ Asteroids tumble as they orbit the Sun ’ Estimate that 100,000 asteroids appear in stellar photographs ...
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... Sun at faster speeds and within a two year period. Temperatures are warmer, being closer to the Sun and there are few moons (only three). All the outer planets have ring systems, are very cold and have large numbers of moons in orbit around them. There is a gap where a planet had been thought to orb ...
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... •  Ices soften and melt at lower temperatures than rock, allowing icy volcanism and tectonics at surprisingly low temperatures in the outer Solar System. ...
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... • Cassini launched in Sept 1997, and, after a 6 month visit to Jupiter at the first of 2001,entered orbit around Saturn in June 2004. • It will end its mission on Sept 15, 2017 by entering the atmosphere. • The Huygens probe was launched from Cassini and landed on the moon Titan in the winter of 200 ...
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... once every 17 hours, 14 minutes. • Uranus makes one trip around the sun every 84 Earth years. • Uranus is often referred to as an “ice giant” planet. • Uranus hits the coldest temperature of any planet. ...
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... called a Gas Giant) • There is no solid crust of land on Jupiter • The Great Red Spot on Jupiter is a hurricane • Jupiter has a small ring system made of dust • There are 16 moons that orbit Jupiter ...
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... Includes 75% of known asteroids. Mostly orbiting sun in same direction of planets, and in plane of solar system. ...
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Kepler`s Laws and Galileo 8/31/2016

... • Venus had definite phases and clearly orbiting Sun • Observed sunspots (patches on Sun). Sun revolved on own axis. Wasn’t “perfect” and changes in unpredictable manner • Observed Saturn’s rings but was confused as to what they were • Wrote book on Copernican vs Ptolemaic models in 1632, nominally ...
Structure & Formation of the Solar System
Structure & Formation of the Solar System

... 3. Must have cleared its orbit A. Pluto fails this last criterion: its mass is only 7% of the total mass of objects in its orbit; B. Compare to Earth, which is 1.7 million times the mass of any debris in its orbit ...
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Planets and Other Space Rocks Notes

... • It has 2 moons: Phobos and Deimos. • There is evidence of dried lakes and rivers on the planet. • Made mostly of rock and metal. • Its has frozen carbon dioxide on the surface, mostly at the poles. • Just like Earth, the orbit and tilt of the planet allows it to have seasons. • The atmosphere is v ...
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Lesson Power Point

... These planets are large and have many moons. ...
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Missions To Planets In Our

... nearly all the planets in our solar system. This first ever "portrait" of the solar system, taken from more than 6.4 billion kilometers away from Earth. Voyager 2 launched on Aug 20, 1977 was privileged the “Grand Tour” of our outer solar system to visit all four gas giants. It primary mission was t ...
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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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