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Part One: Earth’s Place in Space Original PowerPoint Presentation is from the Gaston County Schools Secondary Science Website • Earth rotates and revolves around the Sun, even though it appears as though the Sun is moving! The Sun is the force which keeps our solar system together! • Rotation – spinning of Earth on its axis (23 degrees), which occurs once every 24 hours. • Earth moves around the Sun in a regular, curved path called an orbit • It takes about one year for Earth’s revolution around the Sun • We have leap years because our planet rotates exactly 365.24 times in one revolution. So we have leap years to make up for that extra time! • SEASONS occur due to Earth’s tilted axis and its revolution around the Sun TERMS TO KNOW…. • Rotation: When an object spins on its axis (Think of a basketball spinning on a finger) • Revolution: When an object travels around another object • Orbit: The path that an object takes as it revolves around another A Day on Earth The Seasons • Change of seasons is a result of the tilt of the Earth’s rotation axis (23 degree slant) with respect to the plane of the ecliptic. • Sun, moon, planets run along the ecliptic (their paths) • We experience summer, when we tilt towards the sun. • We experience winter, when we tilt away from the sun. Motion of the Moon • Moon shines not by its own light but by reflected light of Sun • Moon revolves around the Earth • Moon’s period of rotation = 27.3 days • Period of revolution =27.3 days • The Tides of the oceans are caused by the moon’s pull on Earth • The Moon’s changing shapes are known as phases Phases of the Moon (THE LUNAR CYCLE) Caused by the position of the Earth, the Moon, and the Sun new to full = waxing full to new = waning …and the phases…with Oreos! Copy this into your notes Eclipses • One celestial object hidden by other or in the shadow of another • Solar eclipse: sun hidden by the Moon, as Moon is between the Sun and Earth and the Moon’s shadow falls on Earth • Lunar eclipse: Earth is between the Moon and the Sun and Earth’s shadow falls on the Moon • Most spectacular because moon and sun appear to be the same size from earth Solar Eclipses • Umbra – region of total shadow • Penumbra – region of partial shadow • Totality lasts only a few minutes! Solar Lunar Eclipses Moon moves into earth’s shadow… Part One Review 1. What is the gravitational force that keeps our solar system together? Explain. 2. How are rotation, revolution, and orbit different? 3. Explain how the seasons occur. When do we experience summer and winter? 4. Explain why we have leap years. 5. How do we see the moon? List the phases of the moon beginning with a new moon. 6. What causes the tides of the earth? 7. What are eclipses? Identify and describe the differences between the two we discussed. PART TWO: OUR SOLAR SYSTEM THE MILKY WAY Our Solar System • Earth orbits the Sun as the solar system revolves within the Milky Way, which is among billions of galaxies that make up the universe Our Solar System is filled with eight major planets, the Sun, and other objects that orbit the Sun • • • • • • • • • Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Pluto (not classified as a planet any longer!) THE SUN The Sun • The Sun is one of one-hundred billion stars in our galaxy. • It is the brightest object in the sky. • The sun is by far the largest object in our solar system. • It is the sun’s gravitational pull which holds our planets in order. Inner Planets • Solid, with minerals similar to those on Earth • Include Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars MERCURY Mercury • Mercury is the closest planet to the sun and is the smallest planet now that Pluto is deemed a “dwarf planet” • There is little to no atmosphere, resulting in extremes of temperature; can reach 430 degrees Celsius during the day and drop to –180 degrees Celsius at night! VENUS Venus • Venus is the third brightest object in the sky. • It is the second closest planet from the sun and is the sixth largest. • Heavy cloud layer; clouds trap solar energy, making the planet extremely hot ~ 470 degrees Celsius! • Considered to be Earth’s twin because it’s similar in size. EARTH Earth • Earth is the third planet from the sun and is the fifth largest. • This planet is the densest major body in our solar system. • The Earth’s atmosphere protects its life from the harmful rays of the sun. • Life on Earth is possible because of water availability and the stability of temperatures. MARS Mars • Mars is the fourth planet from the sun and is the seventh largest. • The first space craft to visit Mars was the Mariner 4 in 1965. • Has seasons and polar ice caps; may have water shaping its surface • Red due to rocks containing iron oxide • Two small moons Asteroid Belt • Separates the inner (rocky) and outer (gas giants with lots of moons and rings) planets • It is located between the planets of Mars and Jupiter • Pieces of rock made of minerals similar to those that formed the rocky planets and moon • Jupiter’s huge gravitational force might have prevented a small planet from forming in the area of the asteroid belt JUPITER Jupiter • Jupiter is the fifth planet from the sun and is by far the largest planet. • Jupiter is the fourth brightest object in the sky. • 28 moons; Giant Red Spot is a giant storm on the planet’s surface SATURN Saturn • Saturn is the sixth planet from the sun and is the second largest. • Saturn is the least dense of all the planets because it is mostly composed of gases (hydrogen and helium) • Has 30 moons; several broad rings of ice and dust. URANUS Uranus • Uranus is the seventh planet from the sun and the third largest. • Uranus has only been visited one time, by the Voyager 2 in 1986. • Axis makes the planet spin nearly sideways; has rings and 21 moons NEPTUNE Neptune • Neptune is the eighth planet from the sun and is the fourth largest. • Neptune has 8 moons. • Atmosphere is composed of hydrogen, helium, and methane (make planet blue) PLUTO Pluto • Pluto is the farthest object from the sun and is by far the smallest All planets move in same plane except Pluto Is Pluto a planet? • Orbit too weird • Too small • Today Pluto may not be classified as a planet. Comets • Large body of frozen ice and rock that travels toward the center of the solar system • As a comet approaches the Sun, radiation vaporizes some of the material; solar winds blow vaporized gas and dust away from the comet, forming what appears from Earth as a bright, glowing tail Meteorites • Fragments of space material that land on Earth’s surface • Pieces may be iron, rock, or both • Age (4.5 billion years) provides a clue to the Solar System’s age Stars • About 5000 stars visible with naked eye • About 3500 of them from the northern hemisphere • Stars that appear to be close are grouped together into constellations • Officially 88 constellations • Names range from • mythological (Perseus, Cassiopeia) • technical (Air Pump, Compass) Lives of Stars • A star has a life that depends on its size • Stars begin their lives as huge clouds of gas and dust • Force of gravity causes dust and gases to move closer together • Temperatures within the cloud begin to rise • Star is formed when this cloud gets so dense and hot that the atoms within it merge (fusion) Galaxies • Group of stars, gas, and dust held together by gravity • Earth is in a spiral galaxy called the Milky Way • 100 billion galaxies might exist ~ all these galaxies with all their stars make up the UNIVERSE!