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Transcript
Formation of the Universe
Nebula
All the ingredients for building planets, moons, and
stars are found in the vast, seemingly empty regions of
space between the stars.
Clouds in space are called Nebulas – mixture of gases
(mainly hydrogen and helium) and dust (elements such
as carbon and iron).
Gravity pulls matter together – nebulas are less dense
than air . Therefore the gravitational pull is very weak.
Nebulae
The relationship between temperature and pressure
keep the nebula from collapsing.
Temperature is the measure of average kinetic energy
(energy in motion) of the particles in an object.
Little energy = slow movement and low temperature
High energy = fast movement and high temperature.
Pressure = when the moving particles collide they push
away from one another
How a Solar System Forms
 Globules – compressed regions of a nebula
 Solar Nebula – the nebula that formed our solar
system. (These collapse)
 Planetesimals – small planets
 Outer planets – planetesimals that formed near the
outer part of the solar disk where the hydrogen and
helium were located. (gas giants)
 Inner planets – planetesimals that formed closer to the
nebula’s center (too hot for gases to remain ) mostly
rocky material.
Nuclear Fusion
 The process where the nuclei of two or more small
atoms combine (fuse) to form a larger nucleus –
releases a lot of energy.
 Sun = 4 hydrogen nuclei fuse together to form
one
nucleus of Helium.
 Radiative Zone – dense region of the Sun through
which energy from the core passes
 Convective Zone – Region of the Sun where gases
circulate and carry energy to the photosphere
 Photosphere – The visible surface of the Sun.
Solar Activity
 Sunspots – cooler, dark spots of the photosphere of
the sun. - Cycle about every 11 years.
 Solar Flares – regions of extremely high temperature
and brightness that develop on the sun’s surface.
Sunspots
Solar Flares
The Earth takes Shape
 Made mostly of rock, ¾ of the planet is covered with
water. Surrounded by protective layer (atmosphere)
made mostly of nitrogen and oxygen (and small
amounts of other gases).
 Formed as a small planetesimals collided and
combined.
 Gravity – holds us together and made our shape more
round.
 Causes of Heat:
 Planetesimals colliding with Earth generated heat.
 Radioactive material heated the Earth
 All of this created an enormous amount of energy..
 Effects of heat:
 Volcanoes, earthquakes, hot springs
 Created the layers of the Earth.
Earth’s Layers
The core of the Earth is like a
ball of very hot metals.
The outer core is liquid.
The outer core is made up
of iron and is very dense.
1.) Crust = thin
and solid
outermost layer of
the Earth (above
the Mantle)
2.) Mantle = The
layer of rock
between the
Earth’s crust and
core
3.) Core = The
central part of the
Earth below the
mantle
Layers of the EARTH
CRUST
5 to 25 miles thick
and up to 1,600 F
MANTLE
1,800 miles thick
and up to 8,000 F
INNER CORE
800 miles thick
and up to 13,000 F
OUTER CORE
1,400 miles thick
and up to 11,000 F
Earth’s
Atmosphere
78% Nitrogen
21% Oxygen
1% Argon
-0.03 % Carbon
Dioxide
Misc. other gases.
Early Atmosphere
 Early Atmosphere was a mixture of gases that were
released as the Earth cooled.
 Scientist think that Earth’s early atmosphere was a
steamy mixture of carbon dioxide and water vapor.
(The molten rock released these)
Volcanoes contribution
 Volcanoes probably formed from volcanic gases.
 They released chlorine, nitrogen, and sulfur as well as
the carbon dioxide and water vapor.

(Some of this water vapor may have condensed to form the
Earth’s first oceans.)
 Comets crashed to Earth creating craters, also
contributed carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen to
the Earth.
Ultraviolet Radiation and Life
 Scientist think UV radiation helped produce the conditions necessary
for life.
 It has a lot of energy and can break apart molecules in the air. With no
Ozone to protect the early Earth.
 Molecules in the air and at the Earth’s surface broke up and ended up in
the water. These chemicals may have combined to form complex
molecules that made life possible.
 Then organisms that produced food by photosynthesis appeared and
with this process oxygen was released. This increased over time and
formed our ozone layer.
Oceans and Continents
 Once the Earth cooled enough rain fell and remained on
the surface.
 By about 4 billion years ago a global ocean covered the
planet.
 Rocks on the Earth have melted and cooled many times –
each time they melted the heavier elements sank and the
lighter ones rose to the surface. After time, some of the
rocks were light enough to pile on the surface. Voila –
Continents.
Planetary Motion
 Earth spins on its axis – the spin of a body on its axis is
ROTATION.
 The ORBIT is the path that a body follows as it travels
around another body in space.
 One complete orbit is a REVOLUTION.
 Therefore the Earth rotates on its axis and revolves
around the Sun in an orbit.
Kepler’s 3 Laws of Motion
 1.) Planets orbit the Sun in an Elongated circle called
an ellipse.



An Ellipse’s maximum length is the MAJOR AXIS
Half the distance is the SEMIMAJOR AXIS
The semimajor axis is used to describe the size of the ellipse.
 2.) Planets move faster closer to the Sun and slower
when they are far away.
 3.) Planets further away from the Sun take longer to
orbit the Sun.
Law of Universal Gravitation
 Newton’s law of Universal Gravitation states that the
force of gravity depends on the product of the masses
of the objects divided by the square of the distance
between the objects.
so if the objects are moved twice as far apart = 2² if they
are moved 10 times as far apart = 10²
Inertia = an object’s resistance in speed or
direction until the outside force acts on
the object.
Chapter 21
Calculations
 Distances are measured in Astronomical Units
 One AU (astronomical unit) = distance from the Earth
to the Sun.
The Speed of light = 300,000 km per second
Light minute = the distance light travels in one minute
(18,000,000 km)
How many AU = 8.3 light minutes?
One
Distances can be measured in Light minutes as well as light hours.
Telescopes
 Up until the 17th century only 8 bodies were known..
Earth, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, the Sun
and the Moon.
 When the telescope – 9 more large bodies were known
by the end of the 17th century.
 By the end of the 18th century Uranus, its two moons
and two more of Saturn’s moons.
 In the 19th century Neptune and the moons of other
planets discovered.
 20th century – Pluto and other bodies found
Inner verses Outer
 4 closest planets to the
 4 farthest planets from
Sun
 Denser and Rockier –
known as terrestrial
planets
 Spaced closely together
the Sun
 Larger and composed
mainly of gas.
 “Gas Giants”
 Terrestrial planet = one
of 4 highly dense planets
near the Sun
Section Review
1.) What is an Astronomical Unit?
The average distance from Earth
to the Sun
2.) When was Uranus
discovered?
18th Century
3.) What invention helped early scientist discover more bodies in our
solar system?
Telescope
4.) How are the inner planets different from the outer planets?
Inner planets are dense and rocky
– the outer ones are large and
made mainly of gas
Rotations
 Prograde Rotation = The counterclockwise spin of a
planet or moon as seen from above the planet’s north
pole. (same as Sun’s rotation).
 Retrograde Rotation = The clockwise spin of a planet
or moon as seen from above the planet’s north pole.
How Old
 If I lived on Mercury I would be 178 years old and Mrs.
Lewis would be 149.
 If you are 10 you would be 42
 If you are 11 you would be 46
 If you are 12 you would be 50
 Because on Mercury 1 year = 88 days.
Rotation verses Revolution
Rotation
Revolution
 Mercury = 58days 19hours
 88 days
 Venus = 243days 16hours (R)
 224days 17 hours
 Earth = 23hours 56 min
 365days 6hours
 Mars = 24hours 40 min
 1year 322 days
On Venus a day is longer (243 days) than a year (224)
Venus
 Venus is only slightly smaller than Earth. Its
atmosphere is slightly less dense, and slightly less
massive.
 Because it has a retrograde rotation, the Sun rises in
the west and sets in the east.
 It has volcanoes on the surface like Earth
 Its surface temperature is 464⁰ c – this is due to its
greenhouse effect.
 Greenhouse effect is where the carbon dioxide traps all
the thermal energy from sunlight.
Why is Earth so Special?
 1.) Earth formed at just the right distance from the
Sun. Therefore it is warm enough to keep most of its
water from freezing but cool enough (unlike Venus) to
keep its water from boiling away. (liquid water is
essential for chemical processes that living things
need).
What is the Earth Science Enterprise?
NASA’s program that uses satellites to study
Earth’s atmosphere, land, oceans, life, and ice.
Mars
 Mars has a thinner atmosphere and of the 4 inner
planets it is the farthest away from the Sun.
 Colder – and the air is so thin it is like our atmosphere
at 30,000km
 This makes the pressure so thin that liquid water boils
quickly away.
 The only water present is in the form of ice. – (Evidence
shows that liquid water existed in Mars’ past).
 Scientist believe that the water now exists as polar ice caps
and as ice beneath the surface.
Section Two Review
What is a terrestrial planet?
Define Prograde Rotation
Define Retrograde Rotation.
What is the difference
between a planet’s period
of rotation and period of
revolution?
Why is Venus’ surface
temperature higher than
other planets?
A planet that has a solid rocky surface
A counterclockwise rotation of a planet or
moon.
A clockwise rotation of a planet or
moon
Period of rotation = time a planet takes
to rotate on its axis. Period of
revolution = time a planet takes to
revolve around the Sun
Because of its greenhouse effect
The Outer Planets – Gas Giants
Rotation
Revolution
 Jupiter = 9 hours 54 minutes
 Jupiter = 11 years 313 days
 Saturn = 10 hours 42 minutes
 Saturn = 29 years 155 days
 Uranus = 17 hours 12 minutes
 Uranus = 83 years 273 days
 Neptune = 16 hours 6 minutes
 Neptune = 163 years 263 days
Gas Giants are planets that have deep, massive atmospheres rather than
hard and rocky surfaces like those of the inner planets.
Jupiter
 Jupiter is the largest planet in
our solar system
 Atmosphere is made of
layered clouds of water,
methane and ammonia.
 Gives off more energy than it
receives from the Sun.
 Great Red Spot = a storm
system over 400 years old and
about 3 times the diameter of
Earth
Saturn
 Still forming (helium falls from
the atmosphere and sinks to the
core).
 Rings are made of icy particles
ranging in size from a few cm to
several meters wide.
 Atmosphere is made of
methane, ammonia, and ethane.
 Gives off more energy than it
receives from the Sun
Uranus
Neptune
 Atmosphere is mainly hydrogen
 Atmosphere is mainly hydrogen
and methane
 Blue color comes because the
elements (hydrogen and methane)
absorb the red part of sunlight.
 Tilted – Uranus is tipped over on
its side. Its axis of rotation is
tilted almost 90⁰
and methane.
 Atmosphere has belts of clouds
that are much more visible.
 Great Dark Spot like Jupiter’s
Great Red Spot.
Pluto
 Now classified a Dwarf Planet
 ½ the size of Mercury
 Made mainly of ice and rock. (scientist think that it is
covered in frozen nitrogen)
 Atmosphere = thin and made of methane
 Moon (Charon) is half Pluto’s size.
 Pluto’s classification was questioned when Eris was
discovered – Eris is larger than Pluto.
 Dwarf Planets = any object that orbits the sun, is round
because of its own gravity, but has not cleared its orbital
path.
Classification
 A planet orbits a star
 Has enough mass to be rounded out by its own gravity.
 Not massive enough to cause thermonuclear fusion
 Has cleared its own field of debris. (planetesimals, etc)
Moons (section 4)
 Satellites – a natural or artificial body that revolves
around a planet.
 The surface of the moon tells us a lot. We know how
old the moon is and can therefore count the number of
craters to find the rate of cratering since the birth of
our solar system. This information can be used to
number the craters on other bodies and determine
their age.
How our moon formed
 When we collected moon rocks during Apollo 11,
scientist found their composition to be similar to that
of the Earth’s mantle.
 Scientist believe that while the Earth was forming a
large Mars-sized object hit the Earth and a part of the
mantle was blasted into orbit.
 Phase: The change in the sunlit area of one celestial
body as seen from another celestial body.
Phases of the Moon
 Waxing = the sunlit fraction that we can see is getting
larger.
 Waning = the sunlit fraction is getting smaller.
 Half the moon is always lit by the sun just like half of
the Earth is always lit.
 The moon’s period of rotation is the same as its period
of revolution so we always see the same side of the
moon.
Eclipse = an event in which the shadow of one
celestial body falls on another
A solar Eclipse – the moon comes between
Earth and the Sun – the shadow of the moon
falls on part of the Earth
A lunar eclipse – Earth comes between
the Sun and the Moon – the shadow of the
Earth falls on the Moon
The Moons of Other Planets
 Mars has two moon – Phobos and Deimos (they are
small, dark, and oddly shaped. Surface materials like
some asteroids.
 All the Gas Giants have multiple moons.
 Jupiter has dozens of moons – The largest are
Ganymede, Callisto, Io, and Europa. These were all
discovered by Galileo in 1610. (Galilean satellites).
 Saturn also has dozens of moons – made mostly of
frozen water. The largest is Titan.
Jupiter
Saturn
Uranus, Neptune and Pluto’s moons
 Uranus has several moons – made of ice and rock.

Miranda has smooth cratered plains but it also has regions
with grooves and cliffs.
 Neptune – several known moons. Only one is large –
Titon. It has a retrograde orbit.
 Pluto – has at least three moons. Charon, Hydra, Nix
The largest is Charon.
Section Summary
A ______ is a body that revolves around a larger
body (natural or artificial).
Ganymede is a Galilean satellite ?
Describe the current theory for the orgin of
Earth’s moon.
What causes the phases of the moon?
What is the difference between a lunar and a
solar eclipse?
Satellite
True
A large body collided with Earth causing part
of the Earth’s mantle to eject into orbit
around the Earth
The phases result from the moon’s changing
position relative to Earth and the Sun.
Lunar = Earth comes between the Sun and the Moon.
Solar = the moon comes between Earth and the Sun
Comets
 Comet – A small body of ice, rock, and cosmic dust loosely




packed together. (dirty snowballs).
Comets have tails when they come close to the Sun. The
solar radiation heats the ice so the comet gives off gas and
dust in the form of a tail. Sometimes it has two tails – an
ion tail and a dust tail.
The center is the nucleus.
Orbits the Sun in a elliptical manner
Many scientist think that comets come from the Oort
cloud. – a spherical region that surrounds the solar system.
They also exist in the Kuiper belt (outside the orbit of
Neptune).
Asteroids and Meteroids
 Asteroid = a small rocky object that orbits the sun.
 Asteroid belt = The region of the solar system that is
between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
 Asteroids in the outermost region have dark reddish
brown to black color.
 Asteroids in innermost region have light gray (stony or
metallic composition).
Meteoroids
 Meteoroid = a relatively small, rocky body that travels
through space.
 Meteorite = a meteoroid that reaches the Earth’s surface
without burning up completely. (Three types – stony,
metallic, stony-iron)
 Meteor = a bright streak of light that results when a
meteoroid burns up in Earth’s atmosphere.
 Meteor shows = large numbers of meteors. (Happen when
Earth passes through the dusty debris that comets leave
behind).
Impacts
 Impacts happen when an object in space collides with
another object.
How often do large objects strike Earth?
Large objects strike Earth every few
thousands years
The Torino scales is a system that allows scientist to rate the hazard level of an
object moving toward Earth. It ranges from 0 – 10. Zero is a very small change and
10 a definite strike.
The scale also has color codes – White = 0, Green = 1, Yellow = 2, 3, 4, Orange = 5, 6, 7 and
Red = 8, 9, 10.
Section Review
Explain the difference in meteor and
meteorite
Why do a comet’s two tails point in
different direction?
How can cosmic impact affect life on
Earth?
Where is the asteroid belt located?
What is the Torino scale?
Meteor is streak of light because it has
burned up in the atmosphere – meteorites
reach the surface
The ion tail is blown away from the Sun
by the solar winds but the dust tail is not.
It can change the global climate,
destroy cities, etc.
Between Mars and Jupiter.
A system that enables scientist to
rate the hazard level of an object
moving toward Earth.