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Our Solar System Chapter 14 Astronomy – A historical perspective • Been studied for 1000’s of years • 125 BC Hipparchus, Greek Astronomer, arranged stars according to brightness • 140 AD Geocentrism – believed that the center of our solar system is the Earth. • This lasted 1400 yrs • Early 1500’s Copernicus proved the Heliocentric model – the sun is the center of our system • 1600’s Galileo proved Copernicus’ theory • 1610 Galileo discovers that Venus goes thru phases and that Jupiter has 4 moons. • Kepler-used Tycho Brahe’s data to develop 3 laws for planetary motion – #1 Planets orbit in ellipses – #2 Each planet moves faster when closer to the sun & slower when further away – #3 Planets closer to the sun orbit faster than the planets further away • 1781 Uranus discovered • 1961 Soviet cosmonaut 1st to orbit the Earth • 1981 1st space shuttle launch • 1994 Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 crashes into Jupiter • 1998 Russia & US begin construction of International Space Station • 2006 Pluto “deplanetized” Our Solar System Made of: sun/stars, planets, other bodies that travel around it *It is a mixture of Gas & Dust* How did it begin? Theory Nebula – a HUGE clump of gas/dust which collapses upon itself This forms “planetesimals” which are the building blocks of planets Big Bang Nebula, large mass of gas and dust, swirling counter clockwise forming planets out of planetesimals, creates our galaxy the Milky Way. The Big Bang – A Theory A long time ago, (10 – 15 billion yrs ago) there once was an empty place. This place began filling up with small particles (atoms, gases, etc). They finally created enough energy to break the gravitational hold on them and EXPLODE. The scattered particles cool down over time and form what we know today as our planets, stars, asteroids, etc. = Universe (containing our galaxy the… Milky Way. The Milky Way – 4.6 billion yrs old The Sun –Our Star A large ball of gas (Hydrogen and Helium) held together by gravity The Sun makes its energy thru – Nuclear Fusion. This is where 2 or more nuclei join together, or fuse, to make a larger nucleus (Einstein figured this out) A LOT OF ENERGY IS CREATED It takes approx 8 minutes for the sun’s energy to arrive here on Earth. The Sun’s Structure 6 Layers 1. Corona Only visible during a total solar eclipse and can reach temps up to 2,000,000ºC 2. Chromosphere Very thin region with temps 4,000 – 50,000ºC (sometimes called the dancing layer) 3. Photosphere The yellowish surface of the sun 4. Convective Zone Very thick region; hot and cool gases moving around (hot out and cool in) Prominence’s created from within the Convective Zone 5. Radiative Zone & 6. The Core Very dense gas that it cannot be seen thru; light takes millions of years to get from one side to the other. Center of the sun where energy is created; temp = 15,000,000ºC 1. Core 2. Radiative Zone 3. Convective Zone 4. Photosphere 5. Chromosphere 6. Corona Prominences – huge reddish loops of gas often linking different parts of sunspot regions. Features on the Sun • Sunspots – cool, darker spots on the sun • Prominence-huge reddish loops of gas, a group of sunspots •Solar Flares – giant storms with temps up to 5,000,000ºC (can cause electrical disturbances here on Earth) Measuring the distance from the Sun • One astronomical unit (AU) equals Earth’s average distance from the sun • 1 AU= 150 million Km • Speed of Light = 300,000km/s • A light year = the distance that light can travel in a year (or around the world 7 and a half times in one sec) • Auroras- Particles created by solar flares react with Earth’s atmosphere causing spectacular light Solar wind- A stream of shows electrically charged particles that emanate from the sun’s corona can cause magnetic storms on Earth & disrupt radio, telephone, & TV signals, & can cause electrical power problems The Planets The Terrestrial Planets (Inner Planets) • Mercury • Venus • Earth • Mars • The Outer Planets • Jupiter • Saturn • Uranus • Neptune • Pluto The Earth – Our Home Some facts: • Rotates with a speed of 65,000 mph (105,000 kmph) • The distance from the Earth to the Sun is an avg 91,402,300 miles (147,097,800 km) The Earth 3 Layers of the Earth 1. Crust – 5-100km thick; (a very thin outer layer) 2. The Mantle Extends from about 100km to 2900km; more dense than the crust. 3. Core In the center of the Earth; approx 6400km below the Earth’s surface; it makes up 1/3 of Earth’s mass. Earth’s Atmosphere Composition 1st Atmosphere: Composed of Hydrogen (H), Methane, Ammonia, and Water. This atm was possibly created by crashing comets. They brought water with them from space. The volcanoes that were erupting produced a lot of water vapor. Early oceans acted as the “Primordial (original) Soup” from which came LIFE. Today’s Atmosphere: 21% Oxygen, 76% Nitrogen, 1% Argon, and tiny amounts of many other gases. A curved view of our atmosphere The 9 Planets of our Galaxy (June 2006) Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Pluto Comets • A loose collection of ice, dust, & small rocky particles. They orbit in long, narrow ellipses. • Comet parts – Coma-fuzzy outer layer from the sun turning the ice to gas – Nucleus- the solid inner core of the comet – Tail-2 parts, gas and dust, can be more than 100 million km long Asteroids • Small rocky space objects • Orbit around the sun in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter – most orbit in circular orbits – Some have elliptical orbits and get closer to the sun than earth Meteors • Meteroid- chunks of rock or dust in space – Originate from comets or asteroids • Meteor-a meteroid that burns as it enters the Earth’s atmosphere and creates a streak of light • Meteorite-meteoroids that pass through the earth’s atmosphere and strike the earth’s surface