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Download Dead Earth – Lesson 2 – Solar System
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Ardrossan Academy Dead Earth Subtopic – SPACE – the solar system 1 Ambition – Respect - Excellence Lesson Title: The Solar System Learning Intention:. To understand – How conditions on planets change with distance from the Sun, and what other objects exist in the Solar system I will be successful if I can : Explain how the conditions on a planet change as the distance from the Sun increases 2 Ambition – Respect - Excellence THE SOLAR SYSTEM THE SOLAR SYSTEM • Our Solar System has EIGHT planets • Four inner TERRESTRIAL planets - small and solid • Four outer GAS GIANT planets - huge and gaseous • Planets are visible because they reflect light from the Sun MERCURY • • • • • • • 58 million km from Sun Year = 88 days Day = 59 days Similar size to our moon No atmosphere Max Temp > 400 ℃ Min Temp < -170℃ VENUS • • • • • 110 million km from Sun Year = 225 days Day = 243 days Similar size to Earth Atmosphere of Sulphuric acid • Average Temp > 400 ℃ EARTH • • • • 150 million km from Sun Year = 365 days Day = 24 hours Atmosphere of Nitrogen & Oxygen • Max Temp > 50 ℃ • Min Temp < -90℃ MARS • • • • • • • 230 million km from Sun Year = 687 days Day = 24½ hours Approx half size of Earth Atmosphere of CO2 Max Temp > 20 ℃ Min Temp < -140℃ JUPITER • 780 million km from Sun • Year = 11.9 years • Day = 9 hr 50 min • More than 1000 times larger than Earth • Atmosphere of hydrogen & helium • Average Temp - 110 ℃ • Red Spot is a storm twice the size of the Earth SATURN • 1,430 million km from Sun • Year = 29.4 years • Day = 10 hr 14 min • More than 700 times larger than Earth • Atmosphere of hydrogen & helium • Average Temp - 180 ℃ • Rings are 250,000 km across, but only 1 km thick URANUS • 2,870 million km from Sun • Year = 84 years • Day = 17 hr 12 min • More than 60 times larger than Earth • Atmosphere of hydrogen, helium & methane • Average Temp - 210 ℃ • Planet rotates on its side, with south pole facing Sun NEPTUNE • 4,500 million km from Sun • Year = 165 years • Day = 16 hr 7 min • About 50 times larger than Earth • Atmosphere of hydrogen, helium & methane • Average Temp - 220 ℃ • Has both a dark spot ‘storm’ and rings DWARF PLANETS • Until 2006 Pluto was classified as a planet • It was reclassified as other similarly sized objects had been found, but not classified as planets • These include the largest known asteroid - ‘Ceres’ and a large object beyond Pluto ‘Eris’ ASTEROIDS • A band of rock fragments between Mars and Jupiter • Many fragments are extremely large - up to 1000 km across • Can fall out of orbit towards the Sun & Inner planets THE NIGHT SKY • On a clear night, away from bright lights in towns and cities, many bright objects can be seen in the sky • This picture was taken at an observatory in the Andes mountains in Chile STARS • Stars give out light, like our own Sun • They appear less bright as they are very far away • Our nearest star, Proxima Centauri, is 4.3 lightyears away. (40 million million km) CONSTELLATIONS • Constellations are groups of stars • They stay in the same places compared to each other, but move across the sky as the Earth rotates on its axis. CONSTELLATIONS • The constellation of ‘The Plough’ moves across the sky. • The star near the centre that doesn’t move is ‘Polaris’ - the star directly above the North Pole. GALAXIES • Galaxies are massive groups of stars • There may be many millions of stars in a Galaxy • Our galaxy is called ‘The Milky Way’ (from the latin ‘Via Lactea’) GALAXIES • Many galaxies, including our own, are spiral shaped • We can’t see all of the Milky Way because we are inside it • We can see a band of closely packed stars - one spiral arm COMETS • A comet is a ball of ice and dust that orbits the Sun • Comets move slowly across the sky, appearing for many months • As it approaches the Sun it heats up, creating the ‘tail’ which always points away from the Sun COMETS • In July 1994 a comet called Shoemaker-Levy crashed into Jupiter • Jupiter’s gravity had broken it up into a string of smaller pieces which left a trail in the atmosphere METEORS • Meteors are small pieces of rock • As they pass into the Earth’s atmosphere they heat up • They travel quickly across the sky in a few seconds, followed by a bright tail METEORS • As the Earth travels around the Sun it passes through areas where there are many meteors • This causes ‘Meteor Showers’