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J-L-Unit Guides.qxd 22-Jun-04 4:20 PM Page 1 6 Print current page (1 page) J M W p ? t u ^ _ ET ET TY PC G K Gravity and space Unit guide Where this unit fits in Prior learning To make good progress, pupils starting this unit need to understand: • that the gravitational attraction of the Earth on a mass causes weight • about the planets of the Solar System, how they orbit the Sun, and how gravity causes an attractive force between any two objects with mass; gravitational attraction depends on satellites, e.g. moons, orbit them the mass and the objects and their distance apart; gravitational attraction keeps the Solar System • that forces affect the motion of bodies. together; ideas about the Solar System have changed over time. This unit builds on: unit 7K Forces and their effects and unit 7L The Solar System and beyond. The historical impact of discoveries in astronomy is covered in unit 21 Scientific discoveries in the history scheme of work. The concepts in this unit are: This unit leads onto: further work in key stage 4 on theories about the nature and evolution of the Universe. This unit relates to: unit 9K Speeding up. Framework yearly teaching objectives – Forces • Recognise that gravity is a force of attraction between objects, that this force is greater for large objects like the Earth but gets less the further an object moves away from the Earth’s surface; use these ideas to explain: – how weight is different on different planets; – how stars, planets, and natural and artificial satellites are kept in position in relation to one another. • Be able to give examples of the uses of artificial satellites. Expectations from the QCA Scheme of Work At the end of this unit … … most pupils will … … some pupils will not have made so much progress and will … … some pupils will have progressed further and will … in terms of scientific enquiry NC Programme of Study Sc1 1a, c; 2i, j, m • use a model of gravitational attraction to explain orbiting • describe how ideas of the nature of the Solar System have changed over time and relate these to available evidence • make effective use of secondary sources to find information from recent space exploration about the nature of the Solar System. • describe some early ideas about the Solar System. • explain how experimental evidence has led to changes over time in models of the Solar System • evaluate recent information and ideas about the origin of the Moon. in terms of physical processes NC Programme of Study Sc3 1b; Sc4 2b, 4c, e • recognise that gravitational attraction is a • recognise that weight is less on the Moon universal force of attraction between objects • describe gravitational attraction as a force and that this force depends on their masses which acts throughout the Solar System and distance apart • give examples of the use of artificial • describe how weight is different on different satellites. planets • give examples of the use of artificial satellites. • use data to compare gravity on different planets • describe how the forces on rockets or satellites vary as they travel away from the Earth. Suggested lesson allocation (see individual lesson planning guides) Direct route J1 A massive problem J2 Satellites J3 The Solar System J4 Birth of the Moon – Think about theories and evidence Booster 5 Focus on forces – Forces all around Extra lessons (not in Pupil book) J3 The Solar System Extra lesson for Activity J3a. Review and assess progress (distributed appropriately) Misconceptions That only planets/moons with an atmosphere have gravity, because weight is caused by the atmosphere pushing down. Satellites are in a region of zero gravity. Health and safety (see activity notes to inform risk assessment) Risk assessments are required for any hazardous activity. In this unit pupils use a fast-moving object to explore orbits. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-L-Unit Guides.qxd 22-Jun-04 4:20 PM Page 2 6 Print current page (1 page) A massive problem J1 M W p ? t u ^ _ UG Lesson planning guide Learning objectives i Gravitational attraction depends on the mass of the two objects attracting each other. ii Gravitational attraction depends on the distance apart of the two objects attracting each other. iii Explain how rockets are launched from Earth into space. iv The gravitational attraction on an object decreases as it travels away from Earth. (red only) Scientific enquiry v Select and use appropriate methods for communicating qualitative and quantitative data about gravity. (Framework YTO Sc1 9e) vi Describe patterns in data of gravity on different planets. (Framework YTO Sc1 9f) Suggested alternative starter activities (5–10 minutes) Introduce the unit Share learning objectives Problem solving Brainstorming Capture interest Unit map for Gravity and space. • Recognise that the gravitational attraction between two objects depends on: (i) their masses and (ii) their distance apart. • Explain how rockets are launched from Earth. (Sc1) Show an animation of the Solar System to introduce the idea of gravity keeping the planets in orbit. Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 Imagine taking a trip from the Earth to the Moon. Pupils discuss in groups the problems likely to be encountered and ideas of how they may be overcome. Show a video clip of a rocket launch. Repeat it at a slower speed. Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 Suggested alternative main activities Activity Learning objectives see above Description Approx. timing Textbook J1 i, ii, iii and iv Teacher-led explanation and questioning OR Pupils work individually, in pairs or in small groups through the in-text questions and then onto the end-of-spread questions if time allows. Activity J1a Paper i, v and vi Gravity on the planets Pupils answer some questions about mass and weight on the Earth, Moon and planets. Activity J1b Paper i, ii, v and vi Investigating gravity Pupils reinforce the concept of gravitational attraction using a data interpretation exercise. They use information on the Resource sheet to help them answer some questions. Activity J1c Practical Activity J1d Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 Target group C H E S 20 min R/G G R S 15 min ✔ ✔ 20 min ✔ ✔ iii and vi Rocketing away! Pupils watch some demonstrations of rocket motion 25 min and then answer some questions. ✔ ii and iv Support animation showing the effect of gravity on a mass. (✔) ✔ 10 min Suggested alternative plenary activities (5–10 minutes) Review learning Sharing responses Pupils match the masses of Pupils discuss their various objects to their weight responses to on different planets, given the Activity J1a. surface gravities of the planets. Group feedback Word game Looking ahead Groups of pupils discuss their answers to Activity J1b and report back to the class. Pupils discuss word pairs (e.g. mass/weight, rocket/jet, Earth/Jupiter, Sun/star). Pupils complete diagrams to show the forces on a rocket at various points on its journey from Earth to the Moon. (red only) Learning outcomes Most pupils will ... Some pupils, making less progress will ... Some pupils, making more progress will ... • recognise that gravity is a universal force of attraction between objects and that this force depends on their masses and their distance apart • describe how weight is different on different planets • make effective use of secondary sources to find information about the nature of the Solar System. • recognise that weight is less on the Moon • describe gravity as a force which acts throughout the Solar System • recognise that gravitational attraction depends on mass and distance • use secondary sources for investigations. • use data to compare gravity on different planets • describe how the forces on rockets or satellites vary as they travel away from the Earth. Key words thrust Out-of-lesson learning Homework J1 Textbook J1 end-of-spread questions Activity J1b Use secondary sources to find out more about the nature of the Solar System © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-L-Unit Guides.qxd 22-Jun-04 4:20 PM Page 3 6 Print current page (1 page) Satellites J2 M W p ? t u ^ _ UG Lesson planning guide Learning objectives i Uses of artificial satellites. ii Keeping satellites in orbit. Scientific enquiry iii Use a model of gravitational attraction to explain how satellites stay in orbit. Suggested alternative starter activities (5–10 minutes) Recap last lesson Share learning objectives Problem solving Brainstorming Capture interest Quick questions for pupils to answer as they come in. • Describe some of the uses made of artificial satellites. • Use a model to explain how satellites stay in orbit. (Sc1) Demonstration of circular Group discussion on what a motion – whirling an object satellite needs to have to around on a string. work and to send and collect data. Show photos of artificial satellites (e.g. weather, communications, space stations). Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 Suggested alternative main activities Activity Learning objectives see above Description Approx. timing Target group Textbook J2 i, ii and iii Teacher-led explanation and questioning OR Pupils work individually, in pairs or in small groups through the in-text questions and then onto the end-of-spread questions if time allows. 20 min Activity J2a Paper i, ii and iii Escape from Earth Pupils review several different concepts first covered in Year 7 work on forces such as weight, mass and gravity that relate to the work covered in this unit. 20–30 min ✔ Activity J2b Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 i, ii and iii Animation showing satellite moving tangentially to Earth with force of gravitational attraction towards Earth all the time. 5–10 min C H E S R/G G R S ✔ ✔ ✔ Suggested alternative plenary activities (5–10 minutes) Review learning Sharing responses Group feedback Word game Looking ahead True/false quiz on facts about satellites. Pupils discuss their responses to Activity J2a. Play ‘What am I?’ game. The winning group is the one with the most correct answers in the allotted time. Invite volunteer pupils to list as many things as possible related to the lesson in 30 seconds. Ask the question: ‘How do we know the Earth is round?’ Learning outcomes Most pupils will ... Some pupils, making less progress will ... • give examples of the use of artificial satellites. • give examples of the use of artificial satellites. • also understand that satellites are constantly falling in a curve that keeps them in orbit. Key words artificial satellite, natural satellite, geostationary orbit, polar orbit Some pupils, making more progress will ... Out-of-lesson learning Homework J2 Textbook J2 end-of-spread questions Activity J2a Research uses of artificial satellites © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-L-Unit Guides.qxd 22-Jun-04 4:20 PM Page 4 6 Print current page (1 page) The Solar System J3 Lesson planning guide M W Learning objectives i Learn about the two main models of the Solar System. p ? t u Scientific enquiry ii Use models to understand the Solar System. iii Appreciate that these models have changed over time. (Framework YTO Sc1 9a) iv Select and use appropriate methods for communicating qualitative and quantitative data about gravity. (Framework YTO Sc1 9e) ^ _ UG Suggested alternative starter activities (5–10 minutes) Recap last lesson Share learning objectives Problem solving Brainstorming Capture interest Check progress by playing bingo to reinforce key words. • Describe the two main models of the Solar System. • Explain which model is correct and use it to understand the Solar System. (Sc1) Use a table of data about the planets to decide which ones it might be possible to live on. Show an OHT of planets circling the Sun. Pupils produce a mnemonic to help them remember the order of the planets. Show photos/video clips of the telescopes used through the ages to view the planets, moons etc., from Galileo’s to Hubble. Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 Suggested alternative main activities Learning objectives see above Description Textbook J3 i, ii and iii Teacher-led explanation and questioning OR Pupils work individually, in pairs or in small groups through the in-text questions and then onto the end-of-spread questions if time allows. Activity J3a ICT i, ii, iii and iv Activity J3b Paper Activity J3c Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 Activity Approx. timing Target group C H E S 20 min R/G G R S Famous scientists Pupils develop information handling skills and become familiar with the work of some of the most important astronomers. 30 min ✔ i, ii and iii Earth-centred and Sun-centred models Pupils read about the two models of the Solar System and then answer some questions. 30 min ✔ i, ii and iii Animation of geocentric model with everything else moving around Earth on celestial spheres followed by heliocentric model with the planets orbiting the Sun. 5–10 min ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ Suggested alternative plenary activities (5–10 minutes) Review learning Sharing responses Group feedback Word game Pupils play a ‘millionaire’ quiz. Each group makes a short presentation to summarise their research in Activity J3a. In groups, pupils write an Wordsearch using key words argument for and against from the unit to check each of the two models of the progress. Solar System. Looking back Pupils revise and consolidate knowledge from the unit. Learning outcomes Most pupils will ... Some pupils, making less progress will ... Some pupils, making more progress will ... • describe how ideas of the nature of the Solar System have changed over time and relate these to available evidence. • describe some early ideas about the Solar System. • explain how experimental evidence has led to changes over time in models of the Solar System. Key words geocentric, heliocentric Out-of-lesson learning Textbook J3 end-of-spread questions Homework J3 All or part of Activity J3a could be set © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-L-Unit Guides.qxd 22-Jun-04 4:20 PM Page 5 6 Print current page (1 page) Birth of the Moon – Think about theories and evidence J4 M W p ? t u ^ _ UG Lesson planning guide Learning objectives i Study how scientists have explained the unusual size of the Moon over the last two hundred years. The structure of this lesson is based around the CASE approach. The starter activities give concrete preparation. The main activities move away from the concrete towards a challenging situation, where pupils need to think. The extended plenary gives pupils time to discuss what they have learnt, to negotiate a method to commit to paper and express their ideas verbally to the rest of the class. Scientific enquiry ii Understand that scientific ideas change over time, depending on the evidence available. (Framework YTO Sc1 9a) Suggested alternative starter activities (5–10 minutes) Bridging to the unit Setting the context Concrete preparation (1) Concrete preparation (2) Show a video clip of the first Moon landing in 1969. Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 Show an OHT of scale drawings of Earth, Jupiter and Neptune with their moons. Pupils discuss: (i) What do we mean by a theory? (ii) Why do we need theories? Teacher-led discussion on the need for evidence to support theories and models. Suggested alternative main activities Activity Learning objectives see above Description Approx. timing Target group Textbook J4 i and ii Teacher-led explanation and questioning OR Pupils work 30 min individually, in pairs or in small groups through the in-text questions and then onto the end-of-spread questions if time allows. Activity J4a ICT i and ii Researching Moon birth Pupils use the Internet to find out more about one of the theories on how the Moon was formed. They then prepare a poster/fact sheet/presentation for the rest of the class. 45 min (may ✔ include homework) Activity J4b Discussion i and ii Acting out Moon birth Working as part of a small group, pupils produce a role play to illustrate one of the theories of how the Moon formed. 40 min ✔ Activity J4c Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 i and ii Animations of the main theories of how the Moon was formed. 5 min ✔ C H E S R/G G R S ✔ ✔ Suggested alternative plenary activities (5–10 minutes) Group feedback Bridging to other topics Pupils have 5–10 minutes to discuss, write down or display what they have Ask pupils to think of other areas of science where a model has learned about a model, the need for evidence to support it and how the model been replaced as further methods of obtaining evidence are may need to be modified or abandoned as further evidence is obtained. developed. Learning outcomes Most pupils will ... Some pupils, making less progress will ... Some pupils, making more progress will ... • use the example of ideas about the origin of the Moon to follow how scientific ideas change over time in the light of new evidence. • use the example of ideas about the origin of the Moon to realise that scientific ideas change over time in the light of new evidence. • use the example of ideas about the origin of the Moon to explain how scientific ideas change over time in the light of new evidence • evaluate recent information and ideas about the origin of the Moon. Key words red only: volatile Out-of-lesson learning Textbook J4 end-of-spread questions Find out more about another scientific model and list the important points © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 Unitmaps.qxd 18-Jun-04 11:36 AM Page 10 6 Print current page (1 page) J Gravity and space Unit map M p ? t u ^ _ UG Birth of the Moon Mass and weight Gravity and space The Solar System Satellites Copy the unit map and use these words to help you complete it. You may add words of your own too. artificial satellite communications Earth geocentric geostationary gravitational attraction gravity heliocentric kilogram mass Moon natural satellite newton orbit planet(s) polar © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. rocket Sun telephone television theory thrust weather weight Sheet 1 of 1 J-Starters.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:10 AM Page 1 6 Print current page (1 page) A massive problem J1 M Starters Suggested alternative starter activities (5–10 minutes) p ? t u Introduce the unit Share learning objectives Problem solving Brainstorming Capture interest Unit map for Gravity and space. • Recognise the gravitational attraction between two objects depends on (i) their masses and (ii) their distance apart. • Explain how rockets are launched from Earth. (Sc1) Show an animation of the Solar System to introduce the idea of gravity keeping the planets in orbit. Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 Imagine taking a trip from the Earth to the Moon. Pupils discuss in groups the problems likely to be encountered and ideas of how they may be overcome. Show a video clip of a rocket launch. Repeat it at a slower speed. Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 ^ _ UG LP Introduce the unit ● Either draw the outline of the unit map on the board then ask pupils to give you words to add, saying where to add them. Suggest some words yourself when necessary to keep pupils on the right track. ● Or give out the unit map and ask pupils to work in groups deciding how to add the listed words to the diagram. Then go through it on the board as each group gives suggestions. ➔ Unit map Share learning objectives ● Ask pupils to write a list of FAQs they would put on a website telling people about gravity and space. Collect suggestions as a whole-class activity, steering pupils towards those related to the objectives. Conclude by highlighting the questions you want them to be able to answer at the end of the lesson. Problem solving ● Pupils watch an animation of the Solar System. Ask the class to suggest why the planets orbit the Sun, thus introducing the idea of the attractive force of gravity. ➔ Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 Questions 1 What shape is the orbit of a planet? 2 Why do the planets stay close to the Sun instead of travelling into deep space? Brainstorming ● Ask pupils to imagine taking a trip from the Earth to the Moon. ● Working in small groups, they discuss the problems likely to be encountered and suggest how these problems may be overcome. ● One person from each group acts as spokesperson and reports back to the class. 3 (Extension) Suggest why the planets orbit the Sun rather than the Sun orbiting a planet. Answers 1 (almost) circular; 2 gravitational attraction; 3 the mass of the Sun is much greater than the masses of the planets. Capture interest ● Pupils watch a video clip of a rocket launch and watch it again in slow motion. ● Ask pupils to comment on what they have seen and suggest how the rocket is able to travel into space. If necessary, lead pupils towards the idea that the hot gases ejected backwards provide an equal and opposite force to propel the rocket forwards. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. ➔ Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 Sheet 1 of 1 J-Starters.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:10 AM Page 2 6 Print current page (1 page) Satellites J2 M Starters Suggested alternative starter activities (5–10 minutes) p ? Recap last lesson Share learning objectives Problem solving t u Quick questions for pupils to answer as they come in. • Describe some uses of artificial satellites. • Use a model to explain how satellites stay in orbit. (Sc1) Demonstration of circular Group discussion on what a motion – whirling an object satellite needs to have to around on a string. work and to send and collect data. ^ _ UG LP Brainstorming Capture interest Show photos of artificial satellites (e.g. weather, communications, space stations). Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 Recap last lesson ● Pupils answer quick questions on the last lesson shown as an OHT as they come in. ● Discussion of answers once everyone has completed the exercise. ➔ Pupil sheet Answers 1 600 N; 2 240 N; 3 60 kg; 4 Neptune; 5 Mercury, Mars or Pluto Share learning objectives ● Write the learning objectives on the board and show why it is important that we know about these ideas. ● Tell pupils about some of the uses of artificial satellites – communications, weather forecasting, spying, etc. ● Tell pupils how important a development it was when humans discovered how to put a satellite into orbit. Problem solving ● Pupils watch a demonstration of circular motion. Whirl an object attached to a length of string in a horizontal circle round your head. ● Pupils observe the effect of increasing the speed of rotation. Equipment length of string (about 1 m); squash ball or tennis ball (the ball should be firmly attached to the end of the string preferably by threading the string through the ball then knotting it) Brainstorming ● Pupils work in small groups to discuss what a satellite needs in order to work and to send and collect data. ● A spokesperson from each group reports back to the class. ● Write the ideas on the board to summarise the discussion. Capture interest ● Show pupils some photos of artificial satellites (e.g. weather, communications, space stations). ● Ask pupils to suggest what they think they might be used for. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. ➔ Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 Sheet 1 of 1 J-Starters.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:10 AM Page 3 6 Print current page (1 page) Satellites J2 M Recap last lesson p ? t u Planet ^ _ UG LP TN Starters Surface gravity in newtons per kilogram (N/kg) Mercury 4 Venus 9 Earth 10 Mars 4 Jupiter 26 Saturn 11 Uranus 11 Neptune 12 Pluto 4 Use the table above to help you answer the questions below. 1 2 3 4 5 Amy has a mass of 60 kg. What does she weigh on Earth? What would she weigh on Mars? What would her mass be on Jupiter? A sled has a mass of 25 kg and weighs 300 N. Where is it? Where could it be if it weighed 100 N? © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Starters.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:10 AM Page 4 6 Print current page (1 page) The Solar System J3 M Starters Suggested alternative starter activities (5–10 minutes) p ? Recap last lesson Share learning objectives Problem solving Brainstorming Capture interest t u Check progress by playing bingo to reinforce key words. • Find out about the two main models of the Solar System. • Be able to explain which model is correct and use it to understand the Solar System. (Sc1) Pupils use a table of data about the planets to decide which ones it might be possible to live on. Show an OHT of planets circling the Sun. Pupils produce a mnemonic to help them remember the order of the planets. Show photos/video clips of the telescopes used through the ages to view the planets, moons etc., from Galileo’s to Hubble. Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 ^ _ UG LP Recap last lesson ● Pupils select nine words from the list to write into their bingo grid. ➔ Pupil sheet ● Read out definitions from the teacher sheet in any order. Pupils match these to their chosen words. The game is over when a pupil can strike out a line. ➔ Teacher sheet ● The ‘winning’ pupil has to recall the definitions of the words as they read each one in the winning line to the class. Share learning objectives ● Write the learning objectives on the board and show why it is important that we know about these ideas. ● Tell pupils that there are two main models of the Solar System – the geocentric model and the heliocentric model. ● Tell pupils that they are going to find out about the two models, and learn which one is thought to be correct. ● Talk about day and night, the seasons, a year, etc., and how they can be explained by this model of the Solar System. Problem solving ● Pupils use a table of data about the planets to decide which ones it might be possible to live on. (This recaps a similar activity from Year 7.) ● Ask pupils to justify their choices in a class discussion. ➔ Pupil sheet Brainstorming ● Pupils look at an OHT of planets circling the Sun with their names clearly marked. ● Pupils produce a mnemonic to help them remember the order of the planets. ● Now ask pupils questions to test the effectiveness of the mnemonic. ➔ Pupil sheet Capture interest ● Pupils look at photos or video clips of the telescopes used through the ages to view the planets, moons, etc., from Galileo’s telescope to the Hubble telescope. ● Now ask pupils to comment on the differences between the telescopes and explain the advantages of more recent ones, such as Hubble. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. ➔ Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 Sheet 1 of 1 J-Starters.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:10 AM Page 5 6 Print current page (1 page) J3 M The Solar System Starters Recap last lesson p ? Bingo! t u Choose nine words from the ones below and write them in the empty grid. ^ _ UG LP Earth Mars n Moo planet satellite thrust orbit rocke t Sun weight TN TS gravity mass Cross out each word when you hear the teacher read out its definition. Shout BINGO! when you have crossed out a line of three words on the card. The line can be across, down or diagonally. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Starters.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:10 AM Page 6 Print current page (1 page) XX J3 M 6 The Solar System Starters Recap last lesson p ? Teacher sheet t u Read out the definitions below in any order. ^ _ 1 The planet we live on. [Earth] UG LP 2 This keeps the planets in orbit around the Sun. TN PS 3 The nearest planet to us. [Mars] 4 The amount of material in an object. [mass] 5 It goes around the Earth once a month. [Moon] 6 The curved path of a planet or satellite. [orbit] 7 An object that goes around the Sun. [planet] 8 This travels into space. [rocket] 9 An object that goes around another object. 10 The star at the centre of the Solar System. [gravity] [satellite] [Sun] 11 The push from a rocket. [thrust] 12 The force of gravity on a mass. [weight] © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Starters.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:10 AM Page 7 6 Print current page (1 page) The Solar System J3 M p t Starters Problem solving ? Look at the table of data about the planets of the Solar System. u Decide which planets, if any, it might be possible to live on. Give reasons to support your answer. ^ _ UG LP Planet TN Mercury Diameter in kilometres (km) Approx. distance from the Sun in millions of kilometres (million km) Average temperature in degrees Celsius (ºC) Density in kilograms per cubic metre (kg/m3) 5000 60 430 5500 Venus 12 000 110 470 5200 Earth 12 800 150 15 5500 Mars 7000 230 –30 4000 Jupiter 140 000 780 –150 1300 Saturn 120 000 1400 –180 700 Uranus 52 000 2900 –210 1300 Neptune 50 000 4500 –220 1700 3000 6000 –230 500 Pluto © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Starters.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:10 AM Page 8 6 Print current page (1 page) XX J3 M The Solar System Starters Brainstorming p ? t u ^ _ UG LP TN Pluto Earth Mercury Jupiter Sun Neptune Venus Saturn © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Mars Uranus Sheet 1 of 1 J-Starters.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:10 AM Page 9 6 Print current page (1 page) Birth of the Moon – Think about J4 M Starters Suggested alternative starter activities (5–10 minutes) p ? Bridging to the unit t u Show a video clip of the first Show an OHT of scale drawings of Moon landing in 1969. Earth, Jupiter and Neptune with Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 their moons. ^ _ UG LP Setting the context Concrete preparation (1) Concrete preparation (2) Pupils discuss: (i) What do we mean Teacher-led discussion on the need by a theory? (ii) Why do we need for evidence to support theories and theories? models. Bridging to the unit ● Show a video clip of the first Moon landing in 1969. ● When he first stepped onto the Moon, Neil Armstrong said, ‘One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.’ Ask pupils what they think he meant. ➔ Catalyst Interactive Presentations 3 Setting the context ● Pupils look at an OHT showing Earth, Jupiter and Neptune with their moons, all drawn to a suitable scale. This will show how large Earth’s Moon is in comparison with other moons. ● Ask pupils what this suggests about the way Earth’s Moon was formed. ➔ Pupil sheet Concrete preparation (1) ● Pupils discuss the following questions in small groups: – What do we mean by a theory? – Why do we need theories? ● Write the views of each group on the board and lead the pupils towards sensible answers. Comments might include: – A theory is an idea, or model, that explains an observed effect. It may be modified or replaced by a new theory if evidence is found that proves it to be incorrect. A relevant example to mention is the theories of the Solar System. – We need theories to help us to understand effects that we cannot see (because they are too small, such as atoms) or cannot experiment on directly (because we cannot reach them, such as the Solar System). Concrete preparation (2) ● Lead a discussion on the need for evidence to support theories and models. Refer to the particle model in solids, liquids and gases, asking pupils to suggest pieces of evidence that support the particle model. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Starters.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:10 AM Page 10 6 Print current page (1 page) Birth of the Moon J4 M p Starters Setting the context ? The data in the table has been used t u to draw the planets and their moons to the scale: 1 cm = 10 000 km ^ _ (0.0001 cm per km). UG LP TN Planet Moon Earth Moon Jupiter Earth and Moon Earth Moon Actual Scale diameter diameter in in centimetres kilometres (km) (cm) 12 800 1.28 3500 0.35 143 000 14.3 Io 3600 0.36 Europa 3100 0.31 Ganymede 5300 0.53 Callisto 4800 0.48 49 400 4.94 2700 0.27 Neptune Triton Jupiter and some of its moons Io Jupiter Callisto Ganymede Europa Neptune and its moon Neptune Triton © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Tea&Tech.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:18 AM Page 1 6 Print current page (1 page) Gravity on the planets J1a M p ? t u ^ _ Teacher activity notes Type Purpose Differentiation Paper Pupils answer some questions about mass and weight on the Earth, Moon and planets. Core, Help Running the activity Pupils complete the questions on the Pupil sheets. Core: Pupils complete a table connecting mass, weight and surface gravity on each of the planets and UG LP then answer questions about going to the Moon. Help: Questions are restricted to mass and weight on the Earth and the Moon. Pitfalls It is probably worth emphasising that mass (in kilograms) is the same everywhere but weight (in newtons) varies from place to place. ICT opportunities It would be possible to set up a spreadsheet for the table in Question 1 on the Core sheet. Answers Core: 1 Planet Surface gravity in newtons per kilogram (N/kg) Weight in newtons (N) Mass in kilograms (kg) Mercury 4 8 2 Venus 9 45 5 Earth 10 6 Mars 4 20 5 Jupiter 26 520 20 Saturn 11 132 12 Uranus 11 Neptune 12 Pluto 5.5 6000 4 2 a 3600 N b 360 kg 3 a 240 N b 40 N 0.005 0.6 0.5 500 0.00125 Help: 1 600 g 2 6N 3 6 kg (or 6000 g) 4 6 kg (or 6000 g) 5 10 N 6 3600 N 7 360 kg 8 240 N 9 40 N © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Activities.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:12 AM Page 1 6 Print current page (1 page) J1a J1 M Activity Core Gravity on the planets p W You are going to answer some questions about mass and weight on different planets. ? t u On different planets ^ _ 1 The table shows the force of gravity on an object of UG LP TN mass 1 kg due to gravitational attraction. This is called surface gravity. Complete the table by filling in the missing values. The first one has been done for you. Planet Surface gravity in newtons per kilogram (N/kg) Weight in newtons (N) Mercury 4 8 Venus 9 45 Earth 10 Mars 26 Saturn 11 Uranus Pluto 2 5 20 132 5.5 12 4 Mass in kilograms (kg) 0.6 20 Jupiter Neptune Remember On Earth, 1 kg weighs 10 N. weight Surface gravity = mass 0.5 500 0.005 On the Moon Remember On the Moon, the 2 An astronaut uses a space buggy to explore the surface gravitational attraction is of the Moon. about one-sixth that on a If the space buggy weighs 600 N on the Moon, Earth. what did it weigh on Earth? b What is the mass of the space buggy? 3 The astronaut collects 24 kg of Moon rocks to bring back to Earth for analysis. a What will the rocks weigh when they reach Earth? b What is the weight of these rocks on the Moon? © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Activities.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:12 AM Page 2 Print current page (1 page) J1a M 6 Activity Help Gravity on the planets p W You are going to answer some questions about mass and weight on the Earth and the Moon. ? Remember 1 kg = 1000 g t u On Earth, 1 kg weighs 10 N. ^ _ Apples on Earth To calculate the weight on Earth, multiply the mass by 10. UG LP An apple has a mass of about 100 g. On Earth it will weigh about 1 N. TN 1 What is the mass of six apples? 2 How much do six apples weigh? 3 What is the mass of a box of apples that weighs 60 N? Apples on the Moon 4 A box of apples has a mass of 6 kg on Earth. What would the mass of the apples be on the Moon? 5 How much would the box of apples weigh on the Moon? Remember On the Moon, the pull of gravity is about one-sixth that on Earth. To calculate the weight of an object on the Moon, you divide its weight on Earth by 6. Exploring the Moon 6 The astronaut uses a space buggy to explore the surface of the Moon. If the buggy weighs 600 N on the Moon, what did it weigh on Earth? 7 What is the mass of the space buggy? 8 The astronaut collects 24 kg of Moon rocks to bring back to Earth for analysis. What will the rocks weigh when they reach Earth? 9 What is the weight of these rocks on the Moon? © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Tea&Tech.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:18 AM Page 2 6 Print current page (1 page) J1b M p ? t u ^ _ UG LP Investigating gravity Teacher activity notes Type Purpose Differentiation Paper Pupils reinforce the concept of gravitational attraction using a data interpretation exercise. Core (Extension), Help They use the information on the Resource sheet to help them to answer some questions. Resource Running the activity Pupils complete the questions on the Pupil sheet using data from the Resource sheet. The Core or Help activity should take 15–20 minutes, and the Extension activity about a further 5 minutes. Core: Pupils answer questions including data analysis and graphical work (Question 6) to relate the diameter of a planet and its surface gravity. Help: The questions include data analysis but no graphical work. Extension: The questions include data analysis and graphical work to relate the diameter of a planet and its surface gravity, as on the Core sheet, but pupils are required to use what they have found out to make sensible estimates. The graph from Question 6 is used to answer Question 10. Other relevant material Skill sheet 5: Drawing charts and graphs Graph paper and ruler for each pupil Pitfalls You may want to discuss the general relationships of Questions 6 and 7 to clarify understanding. ICT opportunities Pupils could produce their graphs using a spreadsheet such as Microsoft® Excel. Pupils could search the Internet for more information on gravity. Answers Core: 1 Jupiter; 2 Jupiter; 3 Yes/no – there is a general trend suggesting this but there are exceptions such as Saturn, which has a higher mass than Neptune but a lower surface gravity; 4 Pluto/Mercury/Mars; 5 Pluto; 6 There is no definite relationship, but there is a general trend suggesting that there is a relationship between the diameter of a planet and its surface gravity. There are exceptions such as Saturn, which has a bigger diameter than Neptune but a lower surface gravity. There are other exceptions. 7 Yes. Generally most of the smaller planets (those before the asteroid belt) except Pluto are nearer the Sun. However, there is no size order within these two groups. Extension: 8 They are not made of the same substances. 9 20 000 km; (estimate: accept calculated value of (4 × 12 8003)1/3 = 20 300 km). 10 Teacher interpretation from graph – could be a wide range. Help: 1 Jupiter; 2 Jupiter; 3 Pluto; 4 Pluto, Mars/Mercury, Venus, Earth, Uranus, Neptune, Saturn, Jupiter. No – there is a general trend suggesting that the surface gravity increases with mass, but there are large differences in relative mass for planets, such as Saturn and Uranus, which have the same surface gravity. 5 Pluto; 6 Jupiter; 7 Pluto, Mercury, Mars, Venus, Earth, Neptune, Uranus, Saturn, Jupiter. No – there is a general trend suggesting that surface gravity increases with diameter, but there are large differences in diameter for planets, such as Saturn and Uranus, which have the same surface gravity. 8 Yes, generally most of the smaller planets (those before the asteroid belt) except Pluto are nearer the Sun. However, there is no size order within these two groups. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Activities.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:12 AM Page 3 Print current page (1 page) J1b M p t 6 Investigating gravity Activity Core W Planets are held in orbit around the Sun because of the gravitational attraction of the Sun on them. ? You are going to find out about gravitational attraction by u examining some data about the planets in the Solar System. ^ _ Use the information on the Resource sheet to help you answer UG LP the following questions. TN 1 Which planet has the greatest surface gravity? 2 Which planet has the greatest mass relative to Earth? 3 Do you agree with the statement ‘Planets with the greatest 4 5 6 7 mass have the greatest surface area’? Explain your answer. Which planet has the lowest surface gravity? Which planet has the smallest diameter? Draw a graph to find out whether there is a relationship between the diameter of a planet and its surface gravity. Explain your answer. Do you agree with the statement ‘The planets in the Solar System can be sorted into two groups, smaller planets nearer the Sun and larger planets further from the Sun’? Explain your answer. Extension 8 Explain why planets of the same size may have different surface gravity. 9 Estimate the diameter of a planet that has a relative mass of 4 (Earth having a mass of 1) and is made of similar substances to Earth. 10 Use the graph you drew in Question 6 to estimate the diameter of a planet that has a surface gravity twice as great as that of Earth. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Activities.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:12 AM Page 4 Print current page (1 page) J1b M p t 6 Investigating gravity Activity Help W Planets are held in orbit around the Sun because of the gravitational attraction of the Sun on them. You are going to ? find out about gravitational attraction by examining some u data about the planets in the Solar System. ^ _ Use the information on the Resource sheet to help you answer the UG LP following questions. TN 1 Which planet has the greatest surface gravity? 2 Which planet has the greatest mass relative to Earth? 3 Which planet has the smallest mass relative to Earth? 4 List the planets in order of increasing mass (smallest mass first). Tom suggests that the greater the mass of a planet, the greater its surface gravity. Do you agree with him completely? Explain your answer. 5 Which planet has the smallest diameter? 6 Which planet has the largest diameter? 7 List the planets in order of increasing diameter. Meera suggests that the greater the diameter of a planet, the greater its surface gravity. Do you agree with her completely? Explain your answer. 8 Alex says ‘The planets in the Solar System can be sorted into two groups, smaller planets nearer the Sun and larger planets further from the Sun’. Look at the third column in the table on the Resource sheet. It gives the planets listed in order of distance from the Sun (nearest planet first). By comparing this with the list you made for Question 7, decide whether you agree with Alex. Explain your answer. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Activities.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:12 AM Page 5 6 Print current page (1 page) Investigating gravity J1b M W p ? t u Planet Mercury ^ _ UG LP TN Activity Resource Diameter in kilometres (km) Approx. distance from the Sun in millions of kilometres (million km) Surface gravity in newtons per kilogram (N/kg) Relative mass (Earth = 1) 5000 60 4 0.1 Venus 12 000 110 9 0.8 Earth 12 800 150 10 Mars 7000 230 4 Jupiter 140 000 780 26 320 Saturn 120 000 1400 11 95 Uranus 52 000 2900 11 15 Neptune 50 000 4500 12 17 3000 6000 4 Pluto © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Planet Mercury Diameter in kilometres (km) 0.1 0.0002 Sheet 1 of 1 Activity Resource Investigating gravity J1b 1 Approx. distance from the Sun in millions of kilometres (million km) Surface gravity in newtons per kilogram (N/kg) Relative mass (Earth = 1) 5000 60 4 0.1 Venus 12 000 110 9 0.8 Earth 12 800 150 10 Mars 7000 230 4 Jupiter 140 000 780 26 320 Saturn 120 000 1400 11 95 Uranus 52 000 2900 11 15 Neptune 50 000 4500 12 17 3000 6000 4 Pluto © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. 1 0.1 0.0002 Sheet 1 of 1 J-Tea&Tech.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:18 AM Page 3 6 Print current page (1 page) Rocketing away! J1c M p ? t u ^ _ UG LP TC Teacher activity notes Type Purpose Differentiation Practical Pupils watch some demonstrations of rocket motion and then answer some questions. Core Running the activity Demonstrate some examples of rocket motion such as a car powered by a small carbon dioxide cylinder, a water rocket, a Stomp rocket or a model rocket from a kit. Pupils then answer the questions on the Pupil sheet to reinforce their understanding of rocket motion. Expected outcomes Pupils acquire a good understanding of rocket motion. Safety notes The rocket car can be demonstrated in a laboratory but other demonstrations must be carried out outside in a large open space well away from buildings, cars, etc. Firework rockets should not be used. Pupils must be kept at a safe distance from the demonstration. Eye protection should be worn, except for the rocket car demonstration. ICT opportunities Pupils could search the Internet for information on the rockets used to launch spacecraft such as communications satellites and the space shuttle. Answers 1 a Arrow labelled M pointing to the right. b Arrow labelled G pointing to the left. c Force of rocket car on the carbon dioxide gas to left equals force of carbon dioxide gas on rocket car to right. (Newton’s Third Law says that the force on an object A due to an object B is equal and opposite to the force on B due to A; force on rocket car to right makes car move to right.) 2 a To increase the pressure. b A downward force pushes the water out. c The force on the water pushing downwards equals the force on the water rocket upwards (Newton’s Third Law). The upwards force on the rocket makes it move upwards. 3 a Arrow downwards labelled weight; arrow upwards labelled thrust/force due to rocket engine. b Thrust greater than weight so resultant/net force upwards; therefore rocket moves upwards. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Tea&Tech.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:18 AM Page 9 6 Print current page (1 page) Rocketing away! J1c M p ? t u ^ _ UG LP TN Technician activity notes Type Purpose Differentiation Practical Pupils watch some demonstrations of rocket motion and then answer some questions. Core Equipment Rocket car ● light model car chassis (obtainable from educational apparatus suppliers) ● small carbon dioxide cylinder (e.g. as used for Sparklets soda siphons or in shooting) ● sharp pointed tool (to pierce gas cylinder) ● hammer Water rocket 2 litre plastic drinks bottle (as used for cola, lemonade, etc.) ● water rocket kit (obtainable from educational apparatus suppliers) ● bicycle pump ● water ● Model rocket model rocket (from model shop) ● firing mechanism (from model shop) ● stand for rocket ● Stomp rocket Stomp rocket kit (from good toy shops) ● For your information Running the activity Demonstrate some examples of rocket motion such as a car powered by a small carbon dioxide cylinder, a water rocket, a Stomp rocket or a model rocket from a kit. Two or three demonstrations should be provided. Rocket car Attach the carbon dioxide cylinder to the car chassis. When the carbon dioxide cylinder is pierced the car moves very quickly across the floor in the opposite direction to the carbon dioxide gas. A clear floor area should be used for the best effect. Water rocket This demonstration should be done outside, on the school field or playground, well away from cars, etc. As air is pumped into the plastic drinks bottle it will lift off the base and can rise to a height of 10 m or so. Model rocket This demonstration should be done outside, on the school field. The model rocket purchased should be suitable for the area available for launching. Stomp rocket This demonstration should be done outside, on the school field or playground, well away from cars, etc. Full instructions are provided with the kit. Expected outcomes Pupils acquire a good understanding of rocket motion. Safety notes The rocket car can be demonstrated in a laboratory, but other demonstrations must be carried out outside in a large open space well away from buildings, cars, etc. Pupils must be kept at a safe distance from the demonstration. Eye protection should be worn, except for the rocket car demonstration. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Activities.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:12 AM Page 6 6 Print current page (1 page) J1c M p t Activity Core Rocketing away! W You are going to watch some demonstrations of rocket motion and then answer the questions below. ? 1 The diagram shows a model of a rocket car. u ^ _ CO2 UG LP TN TC a Copy the diagram and add an arrow to show the direction in which the car moved. Label it M. b Add an arrow to show the direction in which the carbon dioxide gas was emitted. Label it G. c Explain why the car moved in the direction you have shown. compressed air 2 The diagram shows a water rocket. a Why is air pumped into the bottle of the water rocket? b What effect does this have on the water in the bottle? c Why does this make the rocket move upwards? water rubber bung air from pump 3 The diagram shows a rocket used to launch a satellite into space. a Draw a sketch of the rocket and add labelled arrows to show the two forces acting on the rocket. b Explain how these forces make the rocket move upwards. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Tea&Tech.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:18 AM Page 4 6 Print current page (1 page) Escape from Earth J2a M p ? t u ^ _ UG LP Teacher activity notes Type Purpose Differentiation Paper Pupils review several different concepts first covered in Year 7 work on forces such as weight, mass and gravity that relate to the work covered in this unit. Core Running the activity Pupils work through the questions on the Pupil sheet individually or in pairs, which should take them 20–30 minutes. The final question requires pupils to complete the story using given key words (if ICT is used the activity will take longer to complete); this is best done individually. You may like to review weight, mass and gravity before the start of the lesson. Other relevant material Catalyst 1 unit K7. ICT opportunities Pupils could use ICT for Question 8, e.g. word processing, DTP or presentation software. Answers 1 force from engines weight (gravitational pull of Earth and friction (air resistance) 2 It is an orbit in which a satellite appears to stay still because it orbits the Earth above the equator every 24 hours, and so remains in the same place above the Earth’s surface. Geostationary orbits are often used for telecommunications satellites (for example, Sky). 3 Another type of orbit is the polar orbit, usually lower, in which the satellite’s path goes over the Earth’s poles. Weather satellites are in polar orbits so they can scan the Earth’s surface. 4 Most likely for space observation or communication. Possibly for monitoring weather patterns on the planet or for looking for geological deposits. 5 There will be less gravitational attraction on the artificial satellite if it is compared at the same orbiting height. 6 It will take longer. 7 It has less gravitational attraction on Mars as it is further away. 8 Pupils’ stories. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Activities.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:12 AM Page 7 6 Print current page (1 page) Escape from Earth J2a M W p ? t u Activity Core Space alley mme you H e h t gra rt of ning Pro As pa ai e r h T t y s m s se Acade ve to pa g exerci a n h i your n will trai take r g e n d i n w u follo you can pace. e nto s befor ission i m first e te th . omple er below c e s p a p Plea n natio exami luck! Good s, Cadet ^ _ UG LP TN arley der C. F n a m m o C ining l Tra e v a r ace T of Sp Head 1 Omega 1 weighs 20 000 N. Draw a diagram 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 The story so far … to explain what forces Biff’s spacecraft has Biff is on the launch pad at Mission Control to overcome to leave the ground. on Earth, sitting in the control module of the Explain what a geostationary orbit is. Say why spacecraft Omega 1. The countdown starts… such an orbit is useful and describe one use 10–9–8–7–6 initiate engines 5–4–3 release stabilisers 2–1 blast off! for a satellite in a geostationary orbit. Name another type of orbit that a satellite might use and describe the path it takes After take-off Biff is told to leave the Earth’s round the Earth. atmosphere and go around the Earth in a geostationary orbit. In what ways could the artificial satellite orbiting Mars be used? A message comes through: ‘Omega 1, Mars is a smaller planet and has less mass than progress to Moon Base Scorpio, land, pick up Earth. Explain how this affects the gravitational your cargo of an artificial satellite and take it attraction on the artificial satellite. to the Tracking Station on Mars.’ Mars is further away from the Sun than Earth. How does this affect the time it takes to orbit the Sun? Does the Sun have more or less gravitational attraction on the Earth than on Mars? Explain your answer. Use the following words and phrases to finish off the story. … nce more and Biff takes off o artificial satell ite Moon Jupiter launch natural satellit e © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. gravitational a ttraction force orbit h g i h Sheet 1 of 1 J-Tea&Tech.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:18 AM Page 5 6 Print current page (1 page) Famous scientists J3a M p ? t u ^ _ UG LP Teacher activity notes Type Purpose Differentiation ICT Pupils develop information handling skills and become familiar with the work of some of the most important astronomers. Core Running the activity Pupils use the Internet to answer the questions on the Pupil sheet. The activity may be used to support pupils in their independent research. The actual activity should last about 15–20 minutes, but pupils could spend longer researching other aspects. Other relevant material This is a useful website, but you may prefer to add others. Follow the ‘Biographies’ links. Different scientists can be selected by following the instructions given on the website once pupils have logged on to research one of the scientists – blupete (Peter Landry’s website). Answers 1 Copernicus 2 Galileo 3 Kepler 4 Hawking 5 Newton 6 a Galileo b Newton c Hawking 7 Kepler 1400 1500 1600 Copernicus 1700 1800 Newton 1900 2000AD Hawking Galileo © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Activities.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:12 AM Page 8 6 Print current page (1 page) Famous scientists J3a M p t Activity Core W Our understanding of space has been helped by the work of many famous scientists. Some came up with very important ideas and ? models that totally changed the way people thought about the u Solar System and outer space. ^ _ You are going to use the Internet to find out about six famous scientists. UG LP Copern icus TN Kepler Galileo Newton Hawkin g my Ptole Here is a website to get you started, though you may want to research your own sites. Follow the ‘Biographies’ links. Different scientists can be selected by following the instructions given on the website once you have logged on to research one of the scientists – blupete (Peter Landry’s website). 1 Read about each scientist. 2 Use the information on the websites to answer these questions. 1 Who came up with the idea that the Earth spins and also orbits 2 3 4 5 6 around the Sun? Who used telescopes to make important discoveries about planets? Who discovered that it was the pull of the Sun’s gravitational attraction that kept the planets in their orbits? Who explained how the Universe began and what black holes are? Who developed the laws of gravity and also designed a reflecting telescope? Which of the scientists listed above also did the following: a found that the rate at which an object falls is not related to its mass? b discovered the three laws of motion? c based his theory upon that of Albert Einstein? 7 Make a time line showing these five scientists and their contributions to our understanding of the Solar System. 3 If time allows, you can work in groups to prepare a short presentation summarising your research on one of the scientists. Each group should focus on a different scientist. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Tea&Tech.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:18 AM Page 6 6 Print current page (1 page) Earth-centred and Sun-centred models J3b Teacher activity notes M p ? t u Type Purpose Differentiation Paper Pupils read about the two models of the Solar System and then answer some questions. Core (Extension), Resource ^ _ Running the activity UG LP The ancient Greek astronomer, Ptolemy, believed in an Earth-centred universe. In the sixteenth century Copernicus, a Polish scientist, suggested that the Earth and all the other planets circle the Sun. Pupils read about these two models and then answer some questions. Core: Pupils answer five questions on Ptolemy and Copernicus. Extension: In addition to the core questions pupils answer three more questions requiring additional understanding. Pupils should be encouraged to research the answers to Questions 6 and 7 if necessary. ICT opportunities Pupils could search the Internet for additional information on the geocentric and heliocentric models of the Solar System. Answers Core: 1 Ptolemy believed the Sun, the stars and all the planets rotate around the Earth on a series of celestial spheres. 2 Copernicus placed the Sun at the centre with all the planets orbiting around it. 3 The priests argued that the Bible says that the Sun moves through the heavens and that as humans are made in God’s image we must inhabit a planet at the centre of the Universe. 4 Kepler produced lots of measurements of the movement of the planets which supported Copernicus’s model. 5 Yes/no with consistent reasons. For example: – Yes – because it was simpler and easier to understand than Ptolemy’s model; the mathematical arguments were very persuasive; Kepler’s experimental evidence was strong. – No – because the Bible says that the Sun moves through the heavens; the Church must be right; Ptolemy’s model had been around for a long time and explained what was seen. Extension: 6 Earth rotates around the Sun but we are on Earth so we think we are stationary and the Sun is moving. 7 Jupiter takes a lot longer than Earth to go around the Sun, so seen from Earth there are times when Jupiter appears to go backwards. (You may need to discuss the diagram showing how Mars appears to go backwards sometimes when viewed from Earth to help some pupils to answer this question.) 8 Newton meant that he was building on the discoveries of scientists who had lived before him. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Activities.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:12 AM Page 9 Print current page (1 page) J3b M W p ? 6 Earth-centred and Sun-centred models Activity Core The ancient Greek astronomer, Ptolemy, believed in an Eartht u centred universe. In the sixteenth century Copernicus, a Polish scientist, suggested that the Earth and all the other planets ^ _ orbit the Sun. You are going to read about these two models UG LP and answer some questions. TN Read the information on the Resource sheet and look carefully at the diagrams. 1 Describe the main features of Ptolemy’s geocentric model. 2 Describe the main features of Copernicus’s heliocentric model. 3 Why did Copernicus’s model upset the Church? 4 What further evidence was obtained to support the Sun-centred model? 5 Imagine you lived in the sixteenth century and heard about Copernicus’s ideas. Would you have believed him? Give two reasons to support your decision. Extension 6 Explain why we seem to see the Sun rotating around the Earth. 7 Ptolemy’s observation that Jupiter appears to move backwards was correct. He explained the peculiar motion of Jupiter in a complicated way. Use the diagram of Earth and Mars on the Activity resource sheet to help you to explain how the Sun-centred model accounts for Jupiter’s apparent backwards motion. 8 Newton said, ‘I am only standing on the shoulders of giants’ when he was congratulated for his ideas about the heliocentric model. What do you think he meant? © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Activities.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:12 AM Page 10 6 Print current page (1 page) J3b M W p ? t u Activity Resource Earth-centred and Sun-centred models Ptolemy Ptolemy believed the Sun, the stars and all the planets ^ _ rotate around the Earth on a series of celestial spheres. He made careful drawings and calculations to show how his UG LP model agreed with what he and other astronomers TN observed when they looked at the night sky. His model worked but was very complicated. For instance, he observed that Jupiter appears to move backwards at certain times in its orbit. He explained this by saying that Jupiter moved in epicycles (orbits around orbits). The more observations he made, the more complicated his explanations became. Copernicus Copernicus realised that explanations could be made much simpler if the Sun was placed at the centre with all the planets, including Earth, orbiting around it. He was soon in trouble though because this idea went against the teaching of the Church. The priests argued that the Bible says that the Sun moves through the heavens and that as humans are made in God’s image we must inhabit a planet at the centre of the Universe. Mars Earth six Earth 7 7 later months 3 6 5 7 6 5 s 4 3 1 2 4 4 onth later 3 one Earth m 2 1 sight-line 6 2 5 from Eart h to Mars now 1 Copernicus’s model explains epicycles because planets such as Mars and Jupiter take much longer than Earth to orbit the Sun. This means their line of sight from Earth changes direction, accounting for the ‘loops’ that we see. Kepler made lots of measurements of the movement of the planets which supported Copernicus’s model. Galileo, an Italian scientist, was put under house arrest by the Catholic Church for writing a book saying he agreed with Copernicus. Over a hundred years after Copernicus first developed his Sun-centred model, Isaac Newton explained how gravity holds the planets in orbits around the Sun. He was able to use his ideas to do calculations that agreed with Kepler’s experimental observations. At long last, Copernicus had been proved right! © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Tea&Tech.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:18 AM Page 7 6 Print current page (1 page) Researching Moon birth J4a M p ? t u ^ _ Teacher activity notes Type Purpose Differentiation ICT Pupils use the Internet to find out about one of the theories on how the Moon was formed. They then prepare a poster/fact sheet/presentation for the rest of the class. No pupil sheets Running the activity Pupils use the Internet to find out about one of the theories. UG LP The four theories are: 1 2 3 4 the spin theory the capture theory the double planet theory the giant impact theory. Divide the class into four groups. Ask each group to find out about one of the theories. Each group then prepares a poster/fact sheet/presentation for the rest of the class. Other relevant material These are suitable websites, though you may want to use others or ask pupils to research their own sites. Use the search facility on each site to search for ‘Moon birth’. Space website StudyWorks! website © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Tea&Tech.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:18 AM Page 8 6 Print current page (1 page) Acting out Moon birth J4b M p ? t u ^ _ UG LP Teacher activity notes Type Purpose Differentiation Discussion Working as part of a small group pupils produce a role play to illustrate one of the theories Core of how the Moon formed. Running the activity Working in small groups pupils produce a role play to illustrate one of the theories of how the Moon formed. Divide the class into groups and tell each group which theory it is going to act out. Suggest a suitable plan for the pupils: ● Choose people to represent the Earth and the Moon. ● Decide how you are going to act out the birth of the Moon, according to the theory you are going to demonstrate. ● Write a commentary to accompany your role play. This should include an introduction, an explanation of what is going on as the Moon is formed and a summing up that includes the evidence ‘for’ and ‘against’ the theory. After each group has acted out its role play, pupils can vote for the group that gave the best performance. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Activities.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:12 AM Page 11 Print current page (1 page) Acting out Moon birth J4b M p t 6 Activity Core W Working as part of a small group you are going to role play one of the theories of how the Moon formed. ? 1 Your teacher will divide the class into groups and tell you u which theory you are going to act out. ^ _ 2 Use the guidelines below to help you plan your role play. UG LP ● ● TN ● Choose people to represent the Earth and the Moon. Decide how you are going to act out the birth of the Moon, according to the theory you are going to demonstrate. Write a commentary to accompany your role play. This should include an introduction, an explanation of what is going on as the Moon is formed and a summing up that includes the evidence ‘for’ and ‘against’ the theory. 3 After each group has acted out its role play, vote for the group that gave the best performance. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. J4b Acting out Moon birth Sheet 1 of 1 Activity Core Working as part of a small group you are going to role play one of the theories of how the Moon formed. 1 Your teacher will divide the class into groups and tell you which theory you are going to act out. 2 Use the guidelines below to help you plan your role play. ● Choose people to represent the Earth and the Moon. ● Decide how you are going to act out the birth of the Moon, according to the theory you are going to demonstrate. ● Write a commentary to accompany your role play. This should include an introduction, an explanation of what is going on as the Moon is formed and a summing up that includes the evidence ‘for’ and ‘against’ the theory. 3 After each group has acted out its role play, vote for the group that gave the best performance. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Plenaries.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:20 AM Page 1 6 Print current page (1 page) J1 M A massive problem Plenaries Suggested alternative plenary activities (5–10 minutes) p ? t u ^ _ UG LP Review learning Sharing responses Group feedback Word game Looking ahead Pupils match the masses of various objects to their weight on different planets, given the surface gravities of the planets. Pupils discuss their responses to Activity J1a. Groups of pupils discuss their answers to Activity J1b and report back to the class. Pupils discuss word pairs (e.g. mass/weight, rocket/jet, Earth/Jupiter, Sun/star) Pupils complete diagrams to show the forces on a rocket at various points on its journey from Earth to the Moon. (Red only) Review learning Pupils match the masses of various objects to their weight on different planets, given the surface gravities of the planets. Sharing responses ➔ Pupil sheet Answers 2 kg → Neptune; 6 kg → Mars; 50 kg → Earth; 0.5 kg → Jupiter; 400 kg → Venus Pupils discuss their responses to Activity J1a. Make sure any wrong calculations or misconceptions are clarified. Group feedback Pupils work in groups to discuss their responses to Activity J1b. If pupils carried out this activity at different levels (Core, Help, Extension) it would be useful to arrange the groups accordingly. Word game Organise the class into groups of three. Give each pupil in the group one of the word pairs (see opposite). Ask them to think about what links/connects the two words and in what ways are they different. Pupils then discuss their ideas with other pupils who have also been given that word pair. Scan the class during this phase. Word pairs mass/weight Sun/star rocket/jet Earth/Jupiter force/gravity planet/moon Pupils return to their original groups. Each group member then shares his or her information. Groups summarise information on OHT/PowerPoint/as individual notes. Looking ahead Pupils complete diagrams to show the forces on a rocket at various points on its journey from Earth to the Moon. (Red only) ➔ Pupil sheet Answers Earth Moon © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Plenaries.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:20 AM Page 2 6 Print current page (1 page) A massive problem J1 M Review learning p ? t u Planet Surface gravity in newtons per kilogram (N/kg) ^ _ Mercury 4 UG LP Venus 9 Earth 10 Mars 4 TN Plenaries Jupiter 26 Saturn 11 Uranus 11 Neptune 12 Pluto 4 Draw lines to link each mass with its correct weight. (Use the information in the table above to help with any calculations you need to do.) Mass Weight 2 kg 500 N on Earth 6 kg 3600 N on Venus 50 kg 24 N on Mars 0.5 kg 24 N on Neptune 400 kg 13 N on Jupiter © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Plenaries.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:20 AM Page 3 Print current page (1 page) J1 M p t 6 A massive problem Plenaries Looking ahead ? The diagrams show a rocket at various points on its journey u from the Earth to the Moon. ^ _ Add arrows to each diagram to show the forces acting on the rocket at each stage of its journey. The length of each UG LP arrow should represent the size of each force (e.g. a long TN line means a big force). Remember On the Moon, the pull of gravity is about one-sixth that on Earth. Moon Earth Moon Earth Moon Earth © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Plenaries.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:20 AM Page 4 6 Print current page (1 page) Satellites J2 M Plenaries Suggested alternative plenary activities (5–10 minutes) p ? t u Review learning Sharing responses Group feedback Word game Looking ahead True/false quiz on facts about satellites. Pupils discuss their responses to Activity J2a Play ‘What am I?’ game. The winning group is the one with the most correct answers in the allotted time. Invite volunteer pupil to list as many things as possible related to the lesson in 30 seconds. Ask the question: ‘How do we know the Earth is round?’ ^ _ UG LP Review learning ● Pupils answer a set of true/false questions on satellites. ➔ Pupil sheet Answers 1 true; 2 false; 3 false; 4 true; 5 true; 6 true; 7 true Sharing responses ● Pupils discuss their responses to the questions in Activity J2a. ● Ask pupils to list the key things necessary to put a satellite in orbit. Group feedback ● Ask ‘What am I?’ Remind pupils they can only ask closed questions that can be answered with ‘yes’ or ‘no’. They have to determine the answer with as few questions as possible. Words/concepts satellite; Moon; Sun; Earth; Jupiter; geostationary satellite; artificial satellite; Sputnik; gravitational attraction; communications satellite; polar orbit; Hubble telescope Word game ● Invite a volunteer pupil up to the front of the class to list as many things as possible related to the lesson in 30 seconds. ● Write the suggestions on the board. ● Ask for further volunteers until most of the key words have been listed. Looking ahead ● Ask pupils to answer the question, ‘How do we know the Earth is round?’, by suggesting evidence they could observe. ● Collate evidence on the board (e.g. a ship can sail around the Earth and return to its starting point, pictures taken from space). © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Plenaries.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:20 AM Page 5 Print current page (1 page) J2 M 6 Satellites Plenaries Review learning p ? Decide if the following statements are true or false. t u 1 Sputnik 1 was the first artificial satellite. [True/False] ^ _ 2 There is no gravity acting on a satellite. [True/False] UG LP TN 3 A geostationary satellite does not move. [True/False] 4 A polar orbit goes over the North and South Poles. [True/False] 5 The Moon is a natural satellite of the Earth. [True/False] 6 To stay in orbit a satellite has to be travelling fast. [True/False] 7 Venus is a satellite of the Sun. [True/False] © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. J2 Sheet 1 of 1 Satellites Plenaries Review learning Decide if the following statements are true or false. 1 Sputnik 1 was the first artificial satellite. [True/False] 2 There is no gravity acting on a satellite. [True/False] 3 A geostationary satellite does not move. [True/False] 4 A polar orbit goes over the North and South Poles. [True/False] 5 The Moon is a natural satellite of the Earth. [True/False] 6 To stay in orbit a satellite has to be travelling fast. [True/False] 7 Venus is a satellite of the Sun. [True/False] © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Plenaries.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:20 AM Page 6 6 Print current page (1 page) The Solar System J3 M Plenaries Suggested alternative plenary activities (5–10 minutes) p ? t u Review learning Sharing responses Group feedback Word game Looking back Pupils play a ‘millionaire’ quiz. Each group makes a short presentation to summarise their research in Activity J3a. In groups, pupils write an argument for and against each of the two models of the Solar System. Wordsearch using key words from the unit to check progress. Pupils revise and consolidate knowledge from the unit. ^ _ UG LP Review learning ● Hand out the Pupil sheets. Ask pupils to have a go at answering as many questions as they can. Make it clear that the harder questions are towards the end. ➔ Pupil sheet ● When pupils have had 5 minutes to answer the questions, go over the answers with the class. Answers £100, Sun; £500, nine; £1000, Sun-centred; £5000, geocentric/Earth-centred; £10 000, Galileo; £50 000, Polish; £100 000, Newton; £500 000, Galileo; £1 000 000, Kepler Sharing responses ● Divide pupils into groups. Each group makes a short presentation to summarise their research in Activity J3a. Group feedback ● In groups, pupils write an argument for and against each of the two models. Ask groups to present their arguments. List important points for and against each model on the board. Word game ● Ask pupils to complete the wordsearch on the Pupil sheet. ● Ring the words on a copy of the Pupil sheet and show it as an OHT for pupils to check their answers. Use the words on it to revise the lessons in the unit. ➔ Pupil sheet Looking back ● Pupils revise and consolidate knowledge from the unit. ● They can use the Unit map, Pupil checklist or the Test yourself questions. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. ➔ Unit map ➔ Pupil checklist ➔ Test yourself Sheet 1 of 1 J-Plenaries.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:20 AM Page 7 Print current page (1 page) The Solar System J3 M p t 6 Plenaries Review learning ? Try and answer as many questions as you can. The questions get u harder as you work down the sheet. ^ _ £ Question UG LP 100 What is the name of the star that is nearest to Earth? 500 How many planets are there in the Solar System? 1000 What does heliocentric mean? 5000 What model did Ptolemy describe? 10 000 Who developed the first telescope? 50 000 What nationality was Copernicus? 100 000 Who explained Kepler’s observations with ideas about gravity and mass? 500 000 Name the Italian scientist who was imprisoned for supporting the heliocentric model. 1 000 000 Who made many observations and calculations to work out that planets’ orbits are ellipses (flattened circles)? TN © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Answer Sheet 1 of 1 J-Plenaries.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:20 AM Page 8 6 Print current page (1 page) The Solar System J3 M p t Plenaries Word game ? All these words are connected with the unit so far. See how many u of them you can find in the wordsearch. ^ _ UG LP mass weight Earth Saturn force Moon artificial natural TN star Sun rocket gravity planet Pluto Mercury W O G S E N R U T A S H B E S O P R U Y C E A R T H I G G M A S S O K T K E S G N R O L V T T C P A N P H A A O O D F A O E N A A T T V N P C F O R C E L C S U I W G H T B A E O P R A R T I F I C I A L R M J X A Y W F S Y R U C R E M P L U T O H M Y A S K B E © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Plenaries.qxd 01-Apr-04 11:20 AM Page 9 6 Print current page (1 page) Birth of the Moon – Think about J4 M Plenaries Suggested alternative plenary activities (5–10 minutes) p ? t u ^ _ Group feedback Bridging to other topics Pupils have 5–10 minutes to discuss, write down or display what they Ask pupils to think of other areas of science where a model has been have learned about a model, the need for evidence to support it and how replaced as further methods of obtaining evidence are developed. the model may need to be modified or abandoned as further evidence is obtained. UG LP Group feedback ● Pupils have 5–10 minutes to discuss, write down or display what they have learned about models in general, the need for evidence to support a model and how it may need to be modified or abandoned as further evidence is obtained. Bridging to other topics ● Ask pupils to think of other areas of science where a model has been replaced as further methods of obtaining evidence are developed. ● Other areas could include the model of particle movement in solids, liquids and gases (if not discussed fully in the Starter activity), the model of particle movement in heat transfer by conduction and convection, the model of an electric current or the atomic model (a positively charged nucleus with orbiting electrons) if pupils have come across it. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Specials.qxd 28-Apr-04 7:45 PM Page 1 6 Print current page (1 page) J1 M W p ? t u A massive problem Specials 1 Look at this cartoon then answer the questions about Jemma. ^ _ UG LP A a Is Jemma’s mass different in different places? b Is Jemma’s weight different in different places? c Does Jemma weigh more on the Earth or on the Moon? d Where does Jemma have no weight? e Which has the greatest gravitational attraction – the Earth or the Moon? 2 Use some of these words to fill in the gaps. smallest weight a The Sun is the It has the thrust weaker greatest largest stronger gravity object in our Solar System. mass. The pull of the Sun’s on the planets keeps the Solar System together. b The further away a planet is from the Sun, the the gravitational attraction between them. c To escape from the Earth, rockets need to push with a greater than their © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. . Sheet 1 of 2 J-Specials.qxd 28-Apr-04 7:45 PM Page 2 6 Print current page (1 page) J1 M W p ? t u Specials A massive problem (continued) 3 Look at this information about some planets and the Moon. 1kg = 4N Mars ^ _ UG LP 1kg = 1.7N A Moon 1kg = 10N Earth 1kg = 26N Jupiter Now answer these questions. a On which of them will Gemma have the smallest weight? b On which planet will Gemma weigh the most? c is the planet with the largest gravity. This is because it is the planet with the largest © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. . Sheet 2 of 2 J-Specials.qxd 28-Apr-04 7:46 PM Page 3 6 Print current page (1 page) J2 M W p ? t u Satellites Specials 1 Draw lines to match the words to their meanings. the Moon A satellite that stays in the same place over the Earth’s surface. artificial satellite The Earth’s natural satellite. Other planets have moons too. ^ _ UG LP A orbit The path a satellite takes over the Earth’s North and South Poles. gravity The path a satellite or the Moon takes around the Earth. geostationary polar orbit A machine launched into space by people. The force that keeps satellites in orbit. 2 Match the words below to their descriptions. communication satellites navigation satellites exploration sa tellites observation satellites space stations a These help ships, planes and cars know where they are on the Earth. b These are satellites where astronauts and cosmonauts live and work. c These send radio, TV and telephone messages around the world. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Specials.qxd 28-Apr-04 7:46 PM Page 4 6 Print current page (1 page) J3 M W p ? t u ^ _ UG LP A The Solar System Specials 1 Write true or false for each sentence. a The Earth is at the centre of the Universe. b Galileo used telescopes to see Jupiter’s moons. c There have been many models over time to explain the Solar System. d The heliocentric model, with the Sun at the centre of the Solar System, is the one we use today. 2 Draw lines to match the scientist to their ideas. Ptolemy (200AD) The first scientist to suggest the Sun is at the centre of the Solar System. Copernicus (1473–1543) He made accurate star charts, which showed how the planets moved. Galileo (1564–1642) An Egyptian astronomer who drew the Universe with the Earth at the centre. Brahe (1546–1601) He worked out that the planets’ orbits are flattened circles. Kepler (1571–1630) He used the idea of gravity and the masses of objects to explain why the planets orbit the Sun. Newton (1642–1727) He made and used telescopes to see Jupiter’s moons. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Specials.qxd 28-Apr-04 7:46 PM Page 5 6 Print current page (1 page) J4 M W p ? t u ^ _ UG LP A Birth of the Moon Specials 1 Here are some names of theories of how the Moon was formed. Write the name of the correct theory next to its description below. The double planet theo ry (1950s) eory (1909) The capture th The giant impact theo ry (1975) The spin theory (1878) a The Earth was hit by a huge object. Some material of the outer surface of the Earth was blasted into space. This material came together to form the Moon. b As the Earth formed, it spun so fast that a lump was thrown off. This lump cooled and formed the Moon. c The Moon was formed somewhere else. It came too close to the Earth and was captured by the Earth’s gravity. d The Moon was formed in the same way as the planets formed. This happened at the same time as the Earth was formed. 2 In question 1 the year each theory was put forward is given after its name. Put the theories in order of age, oldest first. 3 Write true or false for each sentence. a Moon rocks have been brought back to the Earth. b 80 pounds of Moon rock were brought back to Earth. c The Moon rocks contain lots of iron. d The capture theory is the one most scientists believe today. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 Spe Answers.qxd 6/23/2004 9:19 AM Page 10 6 Print current page (1 page) Gravity and space J M p ? t u ^ _ UG Specials answers J1 A massive problem J3 The Solar System 1 a b c d e 2 a b c 3 a b c 1 a false b true c true d true 2 Ptolemy (200 AD) – An Egyptian astronomer who drew the Universe with the Earth at the centre. Copernicus (1473–1543) – The first scientist to suggest the Sun is at the centre of the Solar System. Galileo (1564–1642) – He made and used telescopes to see Jupiter’s moons. Brahe (1546–1601) – He made accurate star charts, including how the planets moved. Kepler (1571–1630) – He worked out that the planets’ orbits are flattened circles. Newton (1642–1727) – He used the idea of gravity and the masses of objects to explain why the planets orbit the Sun. no yes on the Earth in space the Earth largest, greatest, gravitational attraction weaker thrust, weight Moon Jupiter Jupiter, mass J2 Satellites 1 the Moon – The Earth’s natural satellite. Other planets have moons too. artificial satellite – a machine launched into space by people. orbit – The path a satellite or the Moon takes around the Earth. gravity – The force that keeps satellites in orbit. geostationary – a satellite that stays in the same place over the Earth’s surface. polar orbit – The path a satellite takes over the Earth’s North and South Poles. 2 a navigation satellites b space stations c communication satellites J4 Birth of the Moon 1 a The giant impact theory (1975) b The spin theory (1878) c The capture theory (1909) d The double planet theory (1950s) 2 The spin theory (1878), The capture theory (1909), The double planet theory (1950s), The giant impact theory (1975) 3 a true b true c false d false © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-Homework.qxd 28-Apr-04 10:58 AM Page 1 6 Print current page (1 page) A massive problem J1 M W HELP p ? t u Homework 1 Look at the diagram below. It shows five planets, drawn to the same scale. ^ _ To the Sun UG LP A B C D E A a i Which planet will have the greatest gravitational attraction? ii Which planet will have the smallest gravitational attraction? iii Will the gravitational attraction on planet C be larger or smaller than the gravitational attraction on planet E? b All the planets are affected by the Sun’s gravitational attraction. i Which planet is most affected by the Sun’s gravitational attraction? ii Will the effect of the Sun’s gravitational attraction on Planet B be smaller or larger than on Planet D? iii Copy and complete the following sentence, referring to your answer to question 1 b, part ii. I think my answer to the question is correct because … . c Yuri is an astronaut. In an experiment, wearing his spacesuit, he jumps as high as he can on the Earth. He travels to the Moon and jumps as high as he can there. i Does he jump higher on the Earth or on the Moon? ii Where does he weigh more, on the Moon or on the Earth? CORE 2 Yuri, the astronaut in the last question, travels on through the Solar System. He stops off at all the planets shown in the diagram in question 1. a i On which planet will he weigh the most? ii Explain why he will weigh the most on this planet. b i Yuri has a mass of 82 kg on the Earth. What is his mass on Planet D? ii Explain why Yuri’s weight is not the same on Planet D and on the Earth, given that the Earth is smaller than Planet D. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 2 J-Homework.qxd 28-Apr-04 10:58 AM Page 2 6 Print current page (1 page) J1 M W p ? t u Homework A massive problem (continued) c i What units are used to measure Yuri’s weight? ii What do these units tell you about what weight is? d i ^ _ Yuri’s rocket has a mass of 3 000 500 kg on the Earth. Explain why it needs very powerful rocket engines to get it into orbit round the Earth. ii Explain why Yuri’s rocket needs less powerful engines as it moves away from the Earth. UG LP A EXTENSION 3 The table shows some data about some of the moons around Jupiter. Name Date of discovery Distance from Jupiter in km Diameter in km Amalthea 1892 181 000 170 Callisto 1610 1 800 000 4 800 Europa 1610 671 000 3 100 Ganymede 1610 1 100 000 5 300 Himalia 1904 11 500 000 185 Io 1610 422 000 3 600 Thebe 1979 222 000 100 a Which of the moons has the greatest gravitational attraction? b Which of the moons experiences the smallest gravitational attraction from Jupiter? c The moons all have a more or less circular orbit around Jupiter. Using ideas about balanced forces explain why they stay in this orbit. d i Suggest a reason why Callisto, Europa, Ganymede and Io were discovered before any of the others. ii These four moons were discovered by Galileo. Why was Galileo able to see them when other scientists before him did not? e Explain whether or not it would be correct to say that the gravitational field of Ganymede has no effect on the orbit of Callisto. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 2 of 2 J-Homework.qxd 28-Apr-04 10:58 AM Page 3 6 Print current page (1 page) Satellites J2 M W HELP p ? t u Homework 1 Match the beginning of each sentence with the correct ending. Write out each complete sentence. ^ _ Beginnings Endings UG LP A Communication satellites are used to 1 are called navigation satellites. B Observation satellites can 2 send telephone messages around the world. C The type of satellites used by ships to find their position on the Earth 3 are called space stations. D Exploration satellites can 4 take detailed photographs of the Earth. E The type of satellites where astronauts can live and work in space 5 take very clear pictures of the planets. A 2 a Give the name of one natural satellite of the Earth. b What keeps this natural satellite from flying off into outer space? c Give one difference between this natural satellite and the Earth. CORE 3 Telstar was the first artificial satellite to be put into Earth orbit. It could be seen crossing the night sky, from north to south. It took about 15 minutes to cross from the northern horizon to the southern horizon. a i What type of orbit was being used by Telstar? ii Explain how its position in the night sky would have been different, if it had been in the other type of orbit. b i Telstar could be seen as a bright object moving across the night sky on a clear night. It had no lights. Explain why it could be seen so clearly. ii Telstar also crossed the sky during the day but could not be seen. Explain why not. c i Telstar was used to carry live television pictures across the globe. Times were booked in advance. Sometimes, if the programme overran, the pictures suddenly cut out. Explain why this happened. ii What is the advantage of modern communication satellites, compared with those in orbits like Telstar? © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 2 J-Homework.qxd 28-Apr-04 10:58 AM Page 4 6 Print current page (1 page) J2 M W p ? t u Homework Satellites (continued) d Which of the following satellites would normally be in geostationary orbits around the Earth? ^ _ A – exploration satellites B – navigation satellites C – communication satellites D – the Moon UG LP EXTENSION A 4 Look at the diagram showing forces acting on the Moon as it orbits the Earth. A Moon B Earth a What would happen to force A if the speed of the Moon decreased? b If the speed of the Moon did decrease, what would happen to the Moon? c Explain how forces A and B together are responsible for keeping the Moon in its orbit round the Earth. d Explain why the Moon orbits the Earth, rather than having its own orbit around the Sun. e When the Apollo missions went to the Moon their speed decreased as they moved away from the Earth and then increased as they approached closer to the Moon. Use your knowledge about gravitational attraction to explain why this happened. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 2 of 2 J-Homework.qxd 28-Apr-04 10:58 AM Page 5 6 Print current page (1 page) The Solar System J3 Homework M W HELP p ? 1 a Match the name of the astronomer to the work that has made them famous. t u ^ _ UG LP A A Made very accurate star charts and worked out how Mars moved. Galileo Brahe C First person to say that the planets go round the Sun. Kepler Copernicus E b i Worked out that the planets orbit the Sun in ellipses. B Drew a model that showed the Sun and planets going round the Earth. D Observed that Jupiter's Moons orbited Jupiter and not the Earth. Ptolemy What model of the Solar System has the Earth at its centre? ii What model of the Solar System has the Sun at its centre? iii Which model was Galileo supporting when he was put in prison by the Roman Catholic Church? CORE 2 a Explain how Galileo’s observations about Jupiter’s moons helped him to decide which model of the Solar System was probably correct. b Explain why the ancient Greeks had not been able to use the same information as Galileo when they drew their model of the Solar System. c Explain how Isaac Newton’s work on gravitational attraction helped him to explain how the planets moved round the Sun. d Describe where the orbit of the Moon would have to go in the geocentric model of the Solar System. e i What technical developments in astronomical observations helped European astronomers to find out more about the orbits of the planets? ii Modern astronomy can locate objects much further away than those in our Solar System. What type of instrument is often used today, to track far distant objects in space? f How has the discovery of other galaxies helped to support the heliocentric model of our own Solar System? © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 2 J-Homework.qxd 28-Apr-04 10:58 AM Page 6 Print current page (1 page) J3 The Solar System (continued) M W EXTENSION p ? t 6 Homework 3 Imagine that you are standing on the surface of Neptune, looking towards the Sun. You are interested in the heliocentric u and geocentric theories about the Solar System. ^ _ UG LP a i A Describe what you would see if you observed the Earth and its Moon over a period of 28 days. ii Which theory about the Solar System would your observations support and why? b i At some stage during your observations, you would not be able to see the Earth at all. Explain why not. ii Which model of the Solar System does this observation support and why? iii Explain how this observation could be used to support the other theory about the Solar System. c i On Neptune you are reasonably close to Jupiter. You can see many of its moons. Describe what you would see over a period of an Earth year. ii Which model of the Solar System does this observation support and why? d From the observations described in these questions suggest which theory about the Solar System is more likely to be correct, explaining the reason for your choice. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 2 of 2 J-Homework.qxd 28-Apr-04 10:58 AM Page 7 Print current page (1 page) Homework mark scheme A massive problem J1 M W HELP p ? t u Question Answer 1 a i E 1 ii A 1 iii Smaller 1 A 1 ii Larger 1 iii I think my answer to the question is correct because B is nearer to the Sun than D/B is larger than D. Underscore is pupil response. 1 Higher on the Moon. 1 On the Earth. 1 ^ _ UG LP 6 b i HM c i ii Mark Total for Help 8 CORE Question Answer 2 a i E 1 It is the biggest so has the largest gravitational attraction. 1 82 kg 1 Planet D pulls him downwards/towards its centre more than the Earth, so his weight is greater than on the Earth. 1 1 Newtons 1 It is a force. 1 They have to produce a larger force upwards than the gravitational attraction pulling it downwards. 1 1 The Earth’s gravitational attraction decreases as he gets further away from it. 1 ii b i ii c i ii d i ii Mark Total for Core 10 EXTENSION Question Answer 3 a Ganymede 1 b Himalia 1 c The force created by their movement is balanced by the gravitational attraction of Jupiter so they are held in a circular orbit by the two opposite forces. 1 1 They are much larger so can be seen more easily. 1 He had a telescope. 1 It is not correct because all objects exert a gravitational attraction on all other objects. 1 d i ii e Mark 1 Total for Extension © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. 8 Sheet 1 of 1 J-Homework.qxd 28-Apr-04 10:58 AM Page 8 Print current page (1 page) M W HELP p ? t u UG LP Homework mark scheme Satellites J2 ^ _ 6 Question Answer 1 Complete sentences are: A 2; B 5; C 1; D 4; E 3. 1 mark each 5 The Moon. 1 b Gravitational attraction. 1 c One from: smaller/no atmosphere/less gravitational attraction/no water/no life. 1 2 a HM Mark Total for Help 8 CORE Question Answer 3 a i Polar orbit. 1 It would have seemed to stay in the same place in the sky. 1 It reflected light from the Sun. 1 1 The sunlight was so bright that it masked the reflection. 1 The satellite had moved below the horizon so signals could no longer reach it. 1 1 They do not move below the horizon/they stay in the same place above the Earth. 1 B and C. 2 ii b i ii c i ii d Mark Total for Core 10 EXTENSION Question Answer Mark 4 a It would get smaller. 1 b It would fall towards the earth. 1 c They are balanced/the same size so the Moon neither flies away from the Earth nor falls towards it. 1 1 d It is closer to the Earth than to the Sun so the Earth’s gravity has more effect upon it. 1 1 e As they left the Earth and after the rockets had shut down the Earth’s gravity slowed them down. As they reached the Moon the Moon’s gravitational attraction began to pull on the rocket and accelerate it towards the Moon. Accept other equivalent responses. 1 1 Total for Extension © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. 8 Sheet 1 of 1 J-Homework.qxd 28-Apr-04 10:58 AM Page 9 Print current page (1 page) Homework mark scheme The Solar System J3 M W HELP p ? t u Question Answer 1 a The correct links are: Galileo – D; Brahe – A; Kepler – E; Copernicus – B; Ptolemy – C. Award 1 mark for each correct link. ^ _ UG LP 6 b i HM Mark 5 The geocentric system. 1 ii The heliocentric system. 1 iii The heliocentric system. 1 Total for Help 8 CORE Question Answer 2 a He saw that the moons orbited Jupiter and not the Earth so concluded that not everything was in orbit around the Earth. 1 1 1 b They had no telescopes/could not see very much of the Solar System. Accept equivalent responses. 1 c He was able to explain why the planets stayed in their orbits due to the gravitational attraction of the Sun. 1 1 d It would have to go round the Sun. 1 e i They were able to make better and better telescopes. 1 Radio telescopes/the Hubble space telescope. 1 It has shown that there are other star systems in space like ours. 1 ii f Mark Total for Core 10 EXTENSION Question Answer 3 a i The Moon would orbit the Earth once in 28 days. 1 Supports the geocentric theory because the Earth is at the centre of the Moon’s orbit. 1 It would be on the other side of the Sun. 1 The heliocentric model because the Earth must be orbiting the Sun to get onto the other side of it. 1 The Sun could be orbiting the Earth and have moved to the near side of the Earth, supporting the geocentric theory. 1 The moons would orbit Jupiter. 1 The heliocentric model because it shows that not all heavenly bodies orbit the Earth. 1 The heliocentric model because the heliocentric model can explain all the evidence. 1 ii b i ii iii c i ii d Mark Total for Extension © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. 8 Sheet 1 of 1 Test-Qust.qxd 6/25/2004 10:33 AM Page 27 6 Print current page (1 page) Gravity and space J M p ? t u 1 Calculate the weight of these objects on the Earth (gravitational field strength = 10 N/kg): a a 5 kg bag of potatoes ^ _ b a 70 kg man UG c an 80 g orange. A Test yourself 2 Fill in the gaps with the correct word, mass or weight, in each of these statements. a stays the same everywhere in the solar system. b is less on the Moon than on the Earth. c is measured in kilograms and is measured in newtons. d is a force. e acts towards the centre of the Earth. 3 The gravitational field strength at the surface of Mars is 3.7 N/kg. a How much would a 1 kg bag of sugar weigh on Mars? b How much would a 65 kg person weigh on Mars? c If a person weighs 560 N on Earth, how much would they weigh on Mars? 4 The diagram shows the Sun and the Earth. Sun a What is the almost circular path of the Earth called? b What force keeps the Earth moving in this path? Earth c On the diagram draw an arrow showing the force. Label it F. d Imagine that the force is suddenly switched off. What will happen to the Earth? e Draw this new path on the diagram. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 3 Test-Qust.qxd 6/25/2004 10:33 AM Page 28 6 Print current page (1 page) J M Test yourself Gravity and space (continued) 5 The diagrams show two very large objects with the same mass. p ? t u In which diagram, A or B, is the gravitational force between the objects larger? ^ _ UG A A B 6 The diagrams show two planets and their moons. In which diagram, A or B, is the gravitational force between the objects larger? 10 000 km 10 000 km moon moon 0.5 × mass of Earth planet 10 × mass of Earth 0.9 × mass of Earth planet A 10 × mass of Earth B 7 The diagram shows the journey of a rocket from the Earth to the Moon. Moon Earth a Why does a rocket need a large thrust on take-off from the Earth? b What happens to the force of gravity as the distance between the rocket and the Earth increases? c What would happen if the thrust of the rocket at take-off was not enough to put the rocket in orbit around the Earth? © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 2 of 3 Test-Qust.qxd 6/25/2004 10:33 AM Page 29 6 Print current page (1 page) J M Test yourself Gravity and space (continued) 8 Complete the sentence. p ? t u ^ _ The Moon is a natural of the Earth. 9 Fill in the gaps to complete these sentences about satellites. a If a satellite is in a UG orbit, it stays at the same point above the Earth’s surface. It takes 24 hours to complete an orbit – A the time the Earth takes to rotate once. This is very useful for satellites which are used for . b If a satellite is in a orbit, it passes over the poles of the Earth. This is very useful for satellites which are used for 10 . Draw lines to match the scientist with his work on the solar system. Newton ● Copernicus Galileo Kepler Brahe ● ● ● Aristotle ● ● ● a geocentric model of the universe ● very accurate star charts and planet positions ● calculation to show that planets move in elliptical orbits round the Sun ● observation of Jupiter’s moons using a telescope ● explanation of elliptical orbits ● a heliocentric model of the universe © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 3 of 3 Test-Ans.qxd 16-Jun-04 2:55 PM Page 27 6 Print current page (1 page) Gravity and space J M p ? t u 1 Calculate the weight of these objects on the Earth (gravitational field strength = 10 N/kg): 50 N a a 5 kg bag of potatoes 700 N ^ _ b a 70 kg man UG c an 80 g orange. TY Test yourself Answers 0.8 N 2 Fill in the gaps with the correct word, mass or weight, in each of these statements. a Mass b Weight c Mass stays the same everywhere in the solar system. is less on the Moon than on the Earth. weight is measured in kilograms and is measured in newtons. d Weight is a force. e Weight acts towards the centre of the Earth. 3 The gravitational field strength at the surface of Mars is 3.7 N/kg. 3.7 N a How much would a 1 kg bag of sugar weigh on Mars? b How much would a 65 kg person weigh on Mars? 240.5 N c If a person weighs 560 N on Earth, how much would they weigh on Mars? 207.2 N 4 The diagram shows the Sun and the Earth. Sun a What is the almost circular path of the Earth called? F orbit b What force keeps the Earth moving in this path? Earth gravity c On the diagram draw an arrow showing the force. Label it F. d Imagine that the force is suddenly switched off. What will happen to the Earth? It would move in a straight line, along a tangent. e Draw this new path on the diagram. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 3 Test-Ans.qxd 16-Jun-04 2:55 PM Page 28 6 Print current page (1 page) J M Test yourself Answers Gravity and space (continued) 5 The diagrams show two very large objects with the same mass. p ? t u In which diagram, A or B, is the gravitational force between the A objects larger? ^ _ UG TY A B 6 The diagrams show two planets and their moons. In which diagram, A or B, is the gravitational force between the objects larger? 10 000 km B 10 000 km moon moon 0.5 × mass of Earth planet 10 × mass of Earth 0.9 × mass of Earth planet A 10 × mass of Earth B 7 The diagram shows the journey of a rocket from the Earth to the Moon. Moon Earth a Why does a rocket need a large thrust on take-off from the Earth? To escape the pull of gravity back to Earth. b What happens to the force of gravity as the distance between the rocket and the Earth increases? It decreases. c What would happen if the thrust of the rocket at take-off was not enough to put the rocket in orbit around the Earth? It would fall back to Earth. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 2 of 3 Test-Ans.qxd 16-Jun-04 2:55 PM Page 29 6 Print current page (1 page) J M Test yourself Answers Gravity and space (continued) 8 Complete the sentence. p ? t u ^ _ satellite The Moon is a natural of the Earth. 9 Fill in the gaps to complete these sentences about satellites. a If a satellite is in a geostationary orbit, it stays at the same UG point above the Earth’s surface. It takes 24 hours to complete an orbit – TY the time the Earth takes to rotate once. This is very useful for satellites which are used for communications b If a satellite is in a . polar orbit, it passes over the poles of the Earth. This is very useful for satellites which are weather used for 10 forecasting . Draw lines to match the scientist with his work on the solar system. Newton ● Copernicus Galileo Kepler Brahe ● ● ● Aristotle ● ● ● a geocentric model of the universe ● very accurate star charts and planet positions ● calculation to show that planets move in elliptical orbits round the Sun ● observation of Jupiter’s moons using a telescope ● explanation of elliptical orbits ● a heliocentric model of the universe © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 3 of 3 J-L-EUTest.qxd 18-Jun-04 11:00 AM Page 1 6 Print current page (1 page) J M End of unit test Green Gravity and space 1 Write ‘true’ or ‘false’ for each of these statements: p ? a The force of gravity keeps all the planets moving around the Sun. 1 mark t u b The force of gravity can be a pulling or a pushing force. 1 mark UG SS c On Earth, the force of gravity attracts everything towards the centre of the Earth. 1 mark MS ET d Some planets and moons have no air because they have no gravity. 1 mark ^ _ 2 Ali uses the bathroom scales to find that he has a mass of 50 kg. a What is his weight in newtons? Choose the correct letter. A 5N B 50 N C 500 N D 5000 N b What would his weight (in the same clothes) be in a lunar module on the Moon? Choose the correct letter. A the same as on the Earth B nothing C more than on the Earth D less than on the Earth c What is his mass on the Moon? Choose the correct letter. A 50 kg B 0 kg C 83.3 kg D 8.3 kg d Describe how jumping on the Moon would be different from jumping on the Earth. 1 mark 1 mark 1 mark 1 mark 3 This diagram shows the path taken by the Moon, which is in orbit around the Earth: Earth Moon © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 3 J-L-EUTest.qxd 18-Jun-04 11:00 AM Page 2 Print current page (1 page) J M p ? t u ^ _ UG SS MS ET 6 Gravity and space (continued) End of unit test Green a Which of these reasons explains why the Moon moves around the Earth? Choose the correct letter. A It is very heavy and cannot stop. B There is a magnetic attraction between the Moon and the Earth. C The force of gravity pulls the Earth and the Moon towards each other. D The force of gravity pushes the Moon round. 1 mark b A rocket is launched from Earth. It travels straight up away from the Earth and keeps going. (The Moon is on the opposite side of the Earth from where the rocket took off.) What happens to the force of gravity on the rocket? Choose the correct letter. A It gets bigger. B It stays the same. C It gets smaller. 1 mark 4 The planet Jupiter is the largest in the solar system. It has several moons. a What keeps the moons moving around Jupiter? 1 mark b Jupiter is much bigger than Earth. What would happen to your weight on Jupiter? 1 mark 5 Write down all the things in the list below which could be changed in order to change the force of gravity between two objects. ● the hardness of the objects ● the mass of one of the objects ● the mass of the other object ● squashing one of the objects into a smaller volume ● the distance between the objects ● the temperature of both of the objects 3 marks 6 The planet Venus has a mass of only about 0.8 times the mass of the Earth. a What effect would this have on the gravitational field strength of Venus compared with that of the Earth? 1 mark b Would a rocket need more or less thrust to take off from Venus than from the Earth? 1 mark © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 2 of 3 J-L-EUTest.qxd 19-Jun-04 9:23 AM Page 3 6 Print current page (1 page) J M p ? t u End of unit test Green Gravity and space (continued) 7 This satellite has been put into an orbit where it rotates at exactly the same rate as the Earth and stays overhead at the same place on Earth. Earth ^ _ UG SS MS ET a What is this type of orbit called? 1 mark b Give an example of a way we use this type of satellite. 1 mark c Satellites in lower orbits move quickly across the Earth’s surface. What could they be used for? 1 mark 8 There have been two models of the Solar System. One was called the geocentric model. The Earth is the centre of the universe and everything moves around it. The other is called the heliocentric model. The Sun is the centre of the Solar System, and the Earth orbits around the Sun. If you sit in your garden on a sunny day, the Sun appears to move across the sky. a Which of the two models does this evidence support? 1 mark Galileo used his telescope to observe that Jupiter had moons. The moons appeared to move around Jupiter, not the Earth. b i Which of the two models does this evidence support? 1 mark The idea of the geocentric model lasted over 1000 years. It was the work of scientists like Copernicus and Galileo that started to disprove the model. ii What was it about their evidence that started to disprove this model? The picture shows star trails around a star called the Pole Star. The Pole Star seems to stand still while the stars rotate slowly around it. Which model of the Solar System does this evidence support? ii Explain how this evidence supports that model. 1 mark Pole Star c i 1 mark 1 mark © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 3 of 3 J-L-EUTest.qxd 18-Jun-04 11:00 AM Page 4 6 Print current page (1 page) J M End of unit test Red Gravity and space 1 Ali uses the bathroom scales to find that he has a mass of 50 kg. p ? t u ^ _ UG SS MS ET a Using the value for gravitational field strength g = 10 N/kg, calculate his weight in newtons. 1 mark b What would his weight (in the same clothes) be in a lunar module on the Moon? Choose the correct letter. A the same as on the Earth B nothing C more than on the Earth D less than on the Earth 1 mark c What is his mass on the Moon? Choose the correct letter. A 50 kg B 0 kg C 83.3 kg D 8.3 kg 1 mark 2 Write down all the things in the list below which could be changed in order to change the force of gravity between two objects. ● the hardness of the objects ● the mass of one of the objects ● the mass of the other objects ● squashing one of the objects into a smaller volume ● the distance between the objects ● the temperature of both of the objects 3 marks 3 The planet Venus has a mass of only about 0.8 times the mass of the Earth. a What effect would this have on the gravitational field strength of Venus compared with that of the Earth? 1 mark b Would a rocket need more or less thrust to take off from Venus than from the Earth? 1 mark 4 This satellite has been put into an orbit where it rotates at exactly the same rate as the Earth and stays overhead at the same place on Earth. Earth a What is this type of orbit called? 1 mark b Explain why this is useful. 1 mark © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 3 J-L-EUTest.qxd 18-Jun-04 11:00 AM Page 5 6 Print current page (1 page) J M p ? t u ^ _ End of unit test Red Gravity and space (continued) 5 Geological companies looking for oil or minerals use satellites to survey the Earth. a What type of orbit would be suitable for this satellite? 1 mark b Explain your choice. 1 mark UG SS 6 This diagram shows the path taken by a rocket on a trip to the Moon. MS ET Moon B D E C Earth A a Where is the gravitational force on the rocket greatest? 1 mark b Where might the gravitational force on the rocket be zero? 1 mark c Explain your answer to b. 1 mark 7 Look at this table. Object Sun Mercury Diameter (km) Mass (number of Gravity at the times the mass surface (N/kg) of the Earth) 1390 000 968 000 4880 Earth 12 800 Mars 6780 274 0.06 3.7 1 9.8 0.11 3.7 Jupiter 143 000 318 23.2 Uranus 48 600 15 8.7 Pluto 2300 0.002 a Calculate the weight of a 50 kg person on Jupiter. b Using the data from the table, compare the gravity on Mercury and on Jupiter, describing how your weight would vary. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. 0.6 1 mark 2 marks Sheet 2 of 3 J-L-EUTest.qxd 18-Jun-04 11:00 AM Page 6 Print current page (1 page) J M p ? t u ^ _ UG SS MS ET 6 End of unit test Red Gravity and space (continued) c A robot explorer has been sent to Mars. After its mission it must take off from Mars to return to Earth. The robot explorer has a mass of 100 kg. i To launch the robot from Mars, the force of gravity on the robot explorer would have to be exceeded. What is the force of gravity on the robot? ii Some people are concerned that a large amount of fuel will be needed to provide this thrust (force) throughout the whole journey. In fact this is not the case. Explain how the force on the robot changes during the journey. 1 mark 1 mark 8 There have been two models of the Solar System. One was called the geocentric model. The Earth is the centre of the universe and everything moves around it. The other is called the heliocentric model. The Sun is the centre of the Solar System, and the Earth orbits around the Sun. Pole Star The picture shows star trails around a star called the Pole Star. The Pole Star seems to stand still while the stars rotate slowly around it. a i Which model of the Solar System does this evidence support? ii Explain how this evidence supports that model. 1 mark 1 mark Scientists who study space are called astronomers. They share their data and observations with other astronomers all over the world. b Why is this important to people who are developing theories and models? 1 mark Our Moon is very different from most moons. Astronomers have puzzled over its origin for many years. In 1969, the first astronauts landed on the Moon. c i What sort of evidence could astronomers collect about the Moon before 1969? ii In what way did this evidence change after 1969? © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. 1 mark 1 mark Sheet 3 of 3 J-L-EUTest.qxd 18-Jun-04 11:00 AM Page 7 6 Print current page (1 page) Gravity and space J End of unit test mark scheme Green (NC Tier 3–6) M Mark Level True 1 3 b False 1 3 ^ _ c True 1 4 UG SS d False 1 4 2 a C 1 5 b D 1 5 c A 1 5 d It requires less effort or you would go higher. (Do not credit ‘float’ or ‘easier’.) 1 5 3 a C 1 4 b C 1 5 The force of gravity. 1 4 It would be bigger. 1 5 The mass of one of the objects. 1 6 The mass of the other object. 1 6 The distance between the objects. 1 6 The gravitational field strength of Venus would be less than that of Earth. Allow 0.8 times. 1 6 It would need less thrust on Venus. 1 6 Geostationary 1 5 b Communications or other correct example. 1 4 c Surveying or other correct example. 1 4 Geocentric 1 4 Heliocentric It was based on data from observations made of planets and their moons. 1 5 1 5 Heliocentric The stars do not appear to be going around the Earth. The Pole Star would also move if the geocentric model were true. 1 6 1 6 p ? t u MS ET Question Answer 1 a 4 a b 5 Deduct one mark for each incorrect answer up to three. 6 a b 7 a 8 a b i ii c i ii Scores in the range of: NC Level 4–6 3 7–11 4 12–16 5 17–25 6 © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 J-L-EUTest.qxd 18-Jun-04 11:00 AM Page 8 6 Print current page (1 page) End of unit test mark scheme Gravity and space J Red (NC Tier 5–7*) M p ? t u Question Answer Mark Level 1 a 500 N 1 5 b D 1 5 c A 1 5 The mass of one of the objects. The mass of the other object. The distance between the objects. Deduct one mark for each incorrect answer up to three. 3 6 The gravitational field strength of Venus would be less than that of Earth. Allow 0.8 times. 1 6 It would need less thrust on Venus. 1 6 Geostationary 1 5 It can be communicated with all the time or it doesn’t disappear round the other side of the Earth. 1 6 Low Earth orbit. 1 6 Can travel all over Earth’s surface or can see more detail because closer to Earth. 1 6 6 a A 1 7 b C 1 7 c At a certain point (closer to the Moon than the Earth) the force from the Earth is equal and opposite to the force from the Moon. As the rocket travels further from Earth the force of gravity between the rocket and Earth decreases. As it gets closer to the Moon the force of gravity between the rocket and the Moon increases. 1 7* 50 kg × 23.2 kg/N = 1160 N One mark for correct answer and unit without showing working. 1 5 The gravity on Mercury is less than the gravity on Jupiter. 1 7 Weight would be less on Mercury than on Jupiter or more on Jupiter than on Mercury. 1 7 370 N The force of gravity on the robot becomes less as it gets further from the planet. 1 7 1 7* Heliocentric The stars do not appear to be going around the Earth. The Pole Star would also move if the geocentric model were true. 1 6 1 6 b They have lots of evidence to work with. 1 6 c i ii Indirect evidence using telescopes and instruments on Earth. Direct evidence from the moon including rock samples. 1 1 7 7 ^ _ UG SS 2 MS ET 3 a b 4 a b 5 a b 7 a b c i ii 8 a i ii Scores in the range of: NC Level 6–10 5 11–15 6 16–18 7 19–25 7* © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 Pupil-Checklist.qxd 17-Jun-04 8:00 PM Page 10 6 Print current page (1 page) J M Learning outcomes p ? t u ^ _ UG Gravity and space Pupil checklist I can do this very well I can do this quite well I need to do more work on this I can explain how gravitational attraction depends on mass. I can explain how gravitational attraction depends on the distance between two masses. I know that weight varies on different planets. I can explain how rockets are launched from Earth into space. I can describe how the forces on rockets or satellites vary as they travel away from the Earth. I can explain how satellites stay in orbit. I know the difference between natural and artificial satellites. I can give some uses of artificial satellites. I can describe the two main models of the Solar System. I can explain which model is now accepted as true. I can understand that scientific ideas change over time as new discoveries are made. I can describe theories about the birth of the Moon. I can name the theory about the Moon that is now believed to be true. I can explain why this theory is thought to be correct. I can explain why the other theories are not believed to be correct. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 Glossary.qxd 18-Jun-04 11:33 AM Page 11 6 Print current page (1 page) J M p ? t u ^ _ UG Gravity and space Glossary Word Definition artificial satellite The pushing force of a rocket or engine. geocentric model An object that orbits a larger object. geostationary orbit A satellite that is made by people, such as a communications satellite. heliocentric model natural satellite polar orbit satellite thrust volatile R A satellite that is made by nature, such as the Moon orbiting the Earth. The path around the Earth taken by a satellite travelling at the same speed at which the Earth rotates. The path taken by a satellite passing over the North and South Poles of the Earth. A model of the universe with Earth at the centre and everything, including the Sun, moving around it. A model of the Solar System with the Sun at the centre and the planets moving around it. Easily vaporised at normal temperatures. R © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 Keywords.qxd 18-Jun-04 11:35 AM Page 10 6 Print current page (1 page) J M Gravity and space artificial satellite polar orbit p ? geocentric model satellite t u geostationary orbit thrust ^ _ heliocentric model UG Key words volatile R natural satellite © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. J Gravity and space artificial satellite polar orbit geocentric model satellite geostationary orbit thrust heliocentric model volatile R Sheet 1 of 1 Key words natural satellite © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 1 Book Answers.qxd 18-Jun-04 12:44 PM Page 26 6 Print current page (1 page) ? t u ^ _ Green a 66 kg b Jupiter c Planet A, because it is closer to the star. 1 a false b true c true d false 2 a 30 000 000 N b The force upwards of 35 000 000 N was greater than the weight downwards of the rocket. 3 a The greater the mass of the objects the larger is the gravitational attraction between them. b The greater the distance between two objects, the less is the gravitational attraction between them. Red a Joe’s weight would be 0 N. b i 1300 N ii 450 N c 13 950 N d i The weight will become less. ii The amount of thrust needed will be less. e Because the moon has less mass, its gravitation force of attraction is less. The closer distance of the Moon to position 2 makes its force of attraction greater, to balance. f The force on the rocket is much greater on Earth because it is close to Earth. When it is 354 000 km away from Earth the force of the Earth’s gravitational attraction is much less. 1 a 30 385 000 N b 30 380 000 N c 3 352 900 N 2 The larger the distance between two objects, the weaker the gravitational attraction. 3 a decreasing b increasing c decreases J2 Satellites Green a An object made by people that orbits a larger object. b Any of the planets, other than Earth. c It slowed down. 1 a Gravitational attraction. b It falls out of orbit to Earth. 2 a An orbit that passes over the North and South poles. b An orbit in which the satellite travels at the same speed as the Earth is turning on its axis. This makes the satellite stay at the same place over the Earth. c A satellite used for radio, TV and telecommunication. 3 Risks of collision are greater with more satellites. Red 1 a b c 2 a Gravitational force. It falls to Earth. It flies off into space. A satellite in a geostationary orbit remains in one place over the Earth. It can be used for communications. b A satellite in a polar orbit can be used to photograph all parts of the Earth. 3 Risks of collisions are greater with more satellites. 4 a An advantage is that activities which require light can continue during night time hours. One disadvantage is that people’s biorhythms will be upset by the change from night and day pattern to an all day pattern. b light from Sun giant mirror TIME AY E p Book answers M J1 A massive problem M UG Gravity and space D J N I G H T TI Russian city J3 The Solar System Green a i Moving around the Earth. ii At the centre of the universe. b Individual answers. c He made telescopes. d Because the heliocentric model was correct. 1 The geocentric model put the Earth at the centre of the Solar System with the Sun, Moon, planets and stars moving around the Earth. The heliocentric model put the Sun at the centre of the Solar System with the Earth and other planets revolving in circular orbits around the Sun. 2 a Created the geocentric model of the Solar System. b Created the heliocentric model. c Kepler worked out that the orbits of planets around the Sun were ellipses rather than circles. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 1 of 3 Book Answers.qxd 18-Jun-04 12:44 PM Page 27 6 Print current page (1 page) J Book answers Gravity and space (continued) 3 M 350 BC p ? t u 1500 AD 1580 1590 1630 1680 Kepler worked out shapes of planets' orbits as ellipses. ^ _ UG Ancient Greeks and Egyptian Ptolemy believed Earth at centre of universe. Copernicus put Sun at centre with planets going round Sun. Newton showed how gravity works. Tyco Brahe made accurate Galileo made telescopes observations of planets' and supported heliocentric and stars' motions. model; imprisoned by Church. Red a The apparent sizes of the Sun and Moon would suggest that their distances from the Earth are quite similar. b The regular changes as day and night suggest that either the Sun goes around the Earth once a day, the Earth goes around the Sun once a day, or the Earth spins on its axis once a day. The last idea is the correct one. The seasons suggest that the Earth is closer to the Sun during the summer and the Earth is further away from the Sun in the winter. However this is not the correct explanation. The tilt of the Earth on its axis relative to its orbit around the Sun actually causes the seasons to occur. c i One would expect, considering only the masses of the planets, that a 1 kg mass would weigh much more on Saturn than on Earth. This is because the mass of Saturn is so much greater than the mass of the Earth, and gravitational forces of attraction are greater when the masses of the bodies are greater. ii The 1 kg mass weighs about the same on both planets because the radius of Saturn is so much greater than the radius of the Earth. The greater distance of the mass from the centre of the planet Saturn makes the gravitational force of attraction much smaller, but the greater mass of Saturn makes the gravitational force of attraction greater, so they balance. 1 Individual answers. 2 Data and observations supply facts and information which must fit theories and predictions and calculations. 3 350 BC 300 BC Ancient Greeks, Thales, Pythagoras, Aristotle believed Earth spherical and at centre of universe. 1500 AD 1580 1590 Copernicus suggested heliocentric model, as did Aristarchus. Aristarchus thought Earth revolved around Sun but idea didn't catch on. 1630 1680 Kepler used Brahe's observations and set out laws and equations of planetary motion. Galileo made telescopes and saw moons orbit Jupiter and saw Saturn's rings. He was convinced that Copernicus's heliocentric model was correct and was imprisoned by the Church as a result. Tyco Brahe made accurate observations and star charts. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Newton showed why Kepler's laws worked and explained gravity. Sheet 2 of 3 Book Answers.qxd 18-Jun-04 12:44 PM Page 28 6 Print current page (1 page) J J4 Birth of the Moon M p ? t u ^ _ UG Book answers Gravity and space (continued) Green a i The double planet theory. ii The spin theory. iii The capture theory. b The capture theory. c Yes. If they were formed in the same way they would have similar structures and chemicals. d i Material from the outer surface of the Earth, which contained almost no iron, was blasted off into space by the collision of the huge object with Earth. ii The material blasted off from the Earth, which eventually formed the Moon, came from the surface of the Earth, so the rocks on the Moon are very similar to the rocks on the surface of the Earth. 1 The spin theory, the capture theory, the double planet theory and the giant impact theory. 2 The scientists were able to get samples of rocks from the Moon. 3 There was never any evidence that the Earth had spun fast enough to ‘spin off’ a lump the size of the Moon. 4 They had the Moon rocks analysed and found their composition to be similar to the composition of the rocks in the surface of the Earth. Red a The spin theory. b The double planet theory. c The spin theory suggests that the Moon’s rocks would be similar to the Earth’s surface rocks. The capture theory would indicate that the rocks from Earth and Moon would be very different. The double planet theory suggests that the composition of the Earth and Moon should be very similar. But the density of the Moon is much less than that of the Earth which is strange if they formed at the same time. d The capture theory. e i The material used to form the Moon had come from the surface of the Earth, which contains little iron. ii The material used to form the Moon had come from the surface of the Earth. iii On collision with the Earth, the colliding body caused very high temperatures to form. The material ripped off the surface of the Earth and which formed the Moon had all of the volatile substances boil off into space. 1 Only evidence which was visual, by telescopes. 2 Astronauts landed on the Moon and were able to bring back rock samples. 3 The capture theory and double planet theory were incorrect, as the rocks were analysed to be similar to the rocks on the surface of the Earth. 4 Their conclusions were based completely on mathematical calculations and did not involve the chemical composition of the Earth and Moon. © Harcourt Education Ltd 2004 Catalyst 3 This worksheet may have been altered from the original on the CD-ROM. Sheet 3 of 3