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The Solar System By: Jade & Marisol Table of Contents • • • • • • • Mercury Venus Earth Mars • • • • Jupiter Saturn Uranus • • Neptune Pluto Astroids Meteors and Meteorites Comets Telescopes • • Probes • • • Dictionary Men and Women in Space The Sun What is the Solar System What is the Solar System • The solar system is a group of planets, satellites, asteroids, meteors, and comets. At the center is the sun. Our Solar System is in a group of many stars called a galaxy. The galaxy we live in is the Milky Way. The Solar System has nine planets and it looks like a wide line of stars. Back to Table of Contents The Sun • The Sun is a medium sized star that is about 865,000 miles wide. Some stars are smaller, but most are much larger. The Sun is mostly hydrogen gas, held together with gravity. The surface is called the photosphere, and above that is the chromosphere. The corona is the top air layer. The Sun is 27,000,000 degrees Fahrenheit at the center. Back to Table of Contents Mercury • Mercury goes around the sun every 88 days. It is the smallest inner planet, named after a wing-footed messenger. During its orbit it is anywhere from 46-70 million miles from the Sun. Mercury has extreme temperatures, from -200-1000 degrees Fahrenheit. The day on Mercury is 58.6 Earth days, which is 2/3 of its year. Back to Table of Contents Venus • Venus is Earth’s sister planet because of their similar sizes. It is the hottest planet in the Solar System. The sulphuric acid clouds trap heat, and the atmosphere is mostly carbon dioxide.Venus rotates the opposite direction of most other planets. A day on Venus is 243 earth days. It is the 3rd densest planet. Back to Table of Contents Earth • Earth is the only planet where plants and animals can live. The ozone blocks radiation and permits life. The atmosphere is 99% nitrogen and the oxygen we breathe. Earth is 93 million miles from sun. Its temperatures are more mild then most planets, from -126-136 degrees Fahrenheit. Unlike other planets the surface is divided into plates. Back to Table of Contents Mars • Mars has polar ice caps made of water and carbon dioxide. It has been nicknamed the “Red Planet” because of its red rocks. It has the highest mountain in the Solar System, Olympus Mons. It was named after the Roman God of War. It is the most Earth-like in the Solar System, with a diameter slightly over half of Earth’s, and a crust similar to Earth’s. Nine Mars’ would fit in Earth. A day on Mars is equal to 1.03 Earth days, and a year is 687 Earth days. Mars averages 142 million miles from the sun, and has the most eccentric orbit in the Solar System. Mars has two moons, Phobos and Deimos. Back to Table of Contents Jupiter • Jupiter is the largest planet in the Solar System. Its diameter is 11 times that of Earth, and its mass is 318 times greater. All other planets in the Solar System could fit inside of it. Jupiter actually has barely visible rings. Its red spot is a giant storm that has been there for thousands of years. It has 39 known moons, more than other planets. This planet has no seasons because its axis is not tilted enough. A year on Jupiter is 12 earth years, and a day is about 10 hours. Back to Table of Contents Saturn • Saturn’s rings are made mostly of ice chunks. They can be up to 185,000 miles wide, but only about .6 miles thick. The rings were first observed by Galileo in the 17th century. This planet’s atmosphere is made of mostly hydrogen and helium gas. Saturn can be seen without a telescope, but a telescope is needed to see its rings. About 764 earths could fit inside if it were hollow. Saturn has a flat shape caused by its fast rotation. It is less dense than water, and so it would float if there was enough water to hold it. Saturn’s day is about 10 hours, a year is about 30 earth years. Back to Table of Contents Uranus • Uranus has 11 rings and 22 known moons. Its blue color is caused by methane gas in the atmosphere. The axis is tilted sideways, causing extreme seasons, as well as 21 days of night followed by 21 days of morning. A day is 17.9 hours and a year is 84.07 earth years. Uranus’ average temperature is -350 degrees fahrenheit, because it radiates little heat. It was named after Ouranous, god of the sky. Back to Table of Contents Neptune • On Neptune, there are frigid, strong winds. Its blue color is caused by methane gas like Uranus. Neptune has faint rings arranged in clumps, as well as eight moons. It was the first planet whose existence was predicted mathematically, it was something blocking Uranus’ orbit. Sixty earths could fit inside if it were hollow. A day is 19 hours, and a year is 165 earth years. Neptune was named after the Roman sea god. Back to Table of Contents • Pluto Pluto is the smallest planet in the Solar System, smaller than even Earth’s moon. Pluto is also the farthest planet from the sun. It is so far away it is hard to see even through a large telescope. It was discovered in 1930 by Clyde Tombaugh, and named after the Roman god of the underworld by 11 year old girl. It has one moon, Charon. Pluto’s day is about six days, and a year is 248 Earth years. Back to Table of Contents Astroids • Astroids are small rocks that orbit the sun, found mostly between Jupiter and Mars’ orbits in the asteroid belt. Ceres is by far the largest asteroid, it is 500 miles wide. Ceres is now classified as a dwarf planet. Asteroids found in Jupiter’s orbit are called Trojan asteroids. An asteroid called Ida is in the Apollo group, and even has a moon. Back to Table of Contents Meteors and Meteorites • A meteor begins as a meteoroid but becomes a meteor when it rubs Earth’s atmosphere. The rubbing creates a streak of light, this is the meteor. Meteors are sometimes called falling stars. Usually meteors burn up because of friction, but sometimes they hit earth’s surface. When this happens then it is a meteorite. Back to Table of Contents Comets • Comets have a nucleus made of icy gas and dust, as well as a coma that is water vapor, carbon dioxide, and other gases. Comets orbit the sun, and a tail develops when they are near the sun. The tail can be up to 250 million miles long, and it is only visible when it is near the sun. Some comets crash into the sun, and these are called sungrazers. Back to Table of Contents Telescopes • Telescopes help scientists to see things in space. Optical telescopes use light to make magnified images. Light is brought in by the objective lens, and it forms an image that you see. Then the eyepiece magnifies the picture. Refracting telescopes use convex lenses which are curved out. The light goes through and is bent, then the eyepiece magnifies the image. Back to Table of Contents Probes • Probes travel into space to take pictures, and send information back to earth for scientists to study. Some probes even orbit planets to take pictures, and some land on planets to get close-ups. A probe called Galileo has orbited Jupiter for more than six years. Back to Table of Contents Men and Women in Space • The Russians won the “Race to space” by putting the first person in space. The Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin was the first. He left on April 12, 1961. But the Americans had the first person on the moon, he was the American astronaut Neil Armstrong. The first American woman in space was Sally Ride in 1983 on the shuttle Challenger. Back to Table of Contents Dictionary • Celestial Object-an object in space • Mass- the amount of matter in something • Distance- the amount of space between things • Satellite- something in space that orbits a larger object • Gravitational Forcethe pull of gravity • • Scale- the size of things Gravity- the force that attracts objects to larger objects such as planets Back to Table of Contents • Stars- large balls of gas in the night sky