* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Chapter 29 – The Solar System
Planet Nine wikipedia , lookup
Exploration of Jupiter wikipedia , lookup
Sample-return mission wikipedia , lookup
History of Solar System formation and evolution hypotheses wikipedia , lookup
Near-Earth object wikipedia , lookup
Planets beyond Neptune wikipedia , lookup
Naming of moons wikipedia , lookup
Definition of planet wikipedia , lookup
Formation and evolution of the Solar System wikipedia , lookup
Space: 1889 wikipedia , lookup
Section 1 – Wrote notes on board CHAPTER 29 – THE SOLAR SYSTEM SECTION 2 – THE INNER PLANETS  The inner planets are also referred to as Terrestrial planets (Earth-like)     Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars Small, dense, rocky Metal core No rings Mercury  Closest to the sun  Smallest planet now that        Pluto is not a planet Orbit period = 88 days Planetary day = 59 days Almost no atmosphere Cold nights (-280 F) Hot days (800 F) Very dense, thought to have large iron core No moons Venus  Second planet from the sun  Orbit period = 225 days  Planetary day = 243 days  Rotates opposite on its axis  Second to the Moon in brilliance  Similar to Earth in  Size, Density, and Location  Shrouded in thick clouds of sulfuric acid  Atmosphere is 97% carbon dioxide  Surface atmospheric pressure is 100 times that of Earth’s Venus  The clouds of Venus do not allow visible light through  The Magellan orbiter produced radar images of the surface of Venus from 1990 to 1994 Earth  Third planet from the sun  Fifth largest planet  One moon  Life is possible because of distance from sun  Venus to close…to hot for liquid water  Mars to far…to cold for liquid water Planets – A Brief Tour  Mars  The “Red Planet”  Orbit period = 687 days  Planetary day = 24 hours 37 minutes  Cold polar temps (-193 F)  Polar caps of water ice, covered by thick layer of frozen carbon dioxide Mars  Numerous large volcanoes  Largest is Olympus Mons Mars  Several canyons  Some larger than Earth’s Grand Canyon  Calles Marineras – The largest canyon  Almost 5000 km long  That’s as long as the U.S. Mars  “Stream drainage” patterns  Found in some valleys  No bodies of surface water on the planet  Possible origins  Past rainfall  Surface material collapses as the subsurface ice melts Planets – A Brief Tour  Moons of Mars  Two moons  Phobos  Deimos  Captured asteroids  The fourth planet out from the Sun, Mars, has two moons. The are named Phobos (meaning "fear") and Deimos (meaning "panic"); appropriate companions for Mars, the God of War. SECTION 3 – THE OUTER PLANETS The outer planets are also referred to as the Jovian planets (Jupiter-like)  Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune  Large, low-density, gaseous  Massive  Referred to as “Gas Giants”  All have rings, but Saturn's are the most prevalent Jupiter     5th planet from sun Largest planet Orbit period = 12 years Very massive  2.5 times more massive than combined mass of all the planets, satellites, and asteroids  If it had been ten times larger, it would have been a small star Jupiter  Rapid rotation  Slightly less than 10 hours  Slightly bulged equatorial regions  Banded appearance Jupiter  Great Red Spot  In planet’s southern hemisphere  Like a giant hurricane, has been going for hundreds of years  600 km/hr winds Jupiter  Structure  Liquid hydrogen ocean  Halfway into the interior, pressure causes liquid hydrogen to turn into metallic hydrogen  Core of rock and metallic minerals Jupiter  At least 28 moons  Four largest moons  Discovered by Galileo  Called Galilean satellites Saturn  Sixth planet from sun  Second largest planet  At least 20 moons  Orbit period = 29.5 years  Planetary day = 10 hours 40 minutes  Also has banded appearance Saturn  Saturn has such a low density (0.7 g/cm3) it would actually float in water! Uranus  7th planet from sun  3rd largest  Orbit period = 84 years  Planetary day = 17 hours  Uranus and Neptune are nearly twins  Rotates “on its side”  At least 15 moons Neptune  8th planet from sun  Orbit period = 165 years  Planetary day = 16 hours  Dynamic atmosphere  1,000 km/hr winds!  Great Dark Spot  Storm the size of Earth  White cirrus-like clouds above the main cloud deck  Eight moons Pluto  Now a “minor planet” or “planetoid”  Not visible with the unaided eye  Orbit period = 250 years  Planetary day = 6 days  Highly elongated orbit cases it to occasionally travel inside the orbit of Neptune, where it resided from 1979-1999  1 Moon (Charon)  The moon is half the size of Pluto  Average temp is -210 C Planets – A Brief Tour 29.4 – ASTEROIDS, COMETS, AND METEOROIDS  There are millions of smaller bodies of matter flying all around the solar system  Some are just bits of dust or ice, others are as large as small moons  They are leftover material from the nebula that formed our solar system Asteroids  Asteroids are the largest of the smaller bodies in the solar system  Fragments of rock that orbit the sun  More than 50,000 asteroids for sure, possible millions  Asteroids have impacted the Earth, causing mass extinctions in the past Asteroids  Most lie between Mars and Jupiter in what is known as the Asteroid Belt Asteroids  Three main types of asteroids  1.) Made of carbon materials  Dark in appearance  2.) Made of iron and nickel  Metallic appearance  3.) Made of silicate minerals  Looks like ordinary earth rocks Asteroids  Some asteroids are not in the asteroid belt  Trojan Asteroids are in groups just ahead of and just behind Jupiter  Earth-grazers have very elongated orbits which brings them close to Earth at times  They can, and have, collide with Earth Planets – A Brief Tour  Comets  Often compared to large “dirty snowballs”  Composition  Frozen Gases (water, methane, ammonia)  Rocky and metallic materials  Frozen gases vaporize when near the sun  Produces a glowing head called the coma  Some develop a tail that points away from the Sun due to radiation pressure and solar wind Comets  Three main parts  1.) Nucleus  2.) Coma  3.) Tail Comets  Scientists think that comets come from a very distant cloud of dust and ice called the Oort Cloud  They are so far away from the sun that many take millions of years to orbit Comets  Long-period Comets – Periods of several thousands or even millions of years  Short-period Comets – Periods of around 100 years  Halley’s Comet appears every 76 years Meteoroids  Meteoroids are smaller bits of rock or metal  Called meteors when they enter Earth’s atmosphere  A meteor shower is when Earth encounters a swarm of meteoroids  Meteoroids are referred to as meteorites when they are found on Earth Meteoroids  Most are less than 1 mm in diameter  A large one would be greater than 1 cm in diameter  Can be produced by collisions between asteroids Meteoroids  Most meteoroids burn up when entering Earth’s atmosphere  This is what you are seeing when you see a “shooting star” Meteoroids  Three basic types of meteorites  1.) Stony Meteorites  Similar to Earth rocks  2.) Iron Meteorites  Metallic appearance  3.) Stony-iron Meteorites  Contain both iron and stone (very rare) Meteorites from Mars?  Meteorite found in Antarctica in 1984  Thought to have come from Mars!  In 1996 scientists discovered fossil evidence of microorganisms  How could it have reached Earth? Why is this significant?
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            