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The Solar System Space. A dark territory of openness that we all want to someday travel through. How fun it would be to travel in space, our space, our Solar System. To be able to eventually travel to far planets, to see rings up close, or to land on a comet as it races across the openness of space. The Solar System -- three small words for a great amount of space and matter. Our Solar System is made up of lots of open and empty space. The largest body or matter in our solar system is the sun. Our sun contains 99.85% of the matter in our Solar System. Does that seem funny? Our sun seems small compared to all of the empty space, stars, and other matter we see so vibrantly at night in the dark sky. The beginning of our solar system is quite simple. Our Solar System was formed from a cloud of gas. The cloud of gas consisted of three things -- 75% of hydrogen, 25% helium and 1% heavier elements. These three main elements condensed into the gas cloud which continued to condense into solid objects. Those solid objects are what we know today as our Sun and the nine planets Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto. A very humble beginning. In addition to the sun and planets, our solar system also consists of small bodies. These small bodies are comets, asteroids, meteoroids, satellites of the planets, and interplanetary medium. Interplanetary medium is considered the gas and dust that floats around in our solar system. Solar System (ART 6.1) All of this "stuff", this matter, makes up our solar system. Below is the breakdown by percentage of our solar system and it's matter make-up: Sun = 99.85% Planets = .135% Comets = .01% Satellites = .00005% Minor planets = .0000002% Meteoroids = .000001% Interplanetary medium = .0000001% WOW! How amazing that our sun really contains that amount of matter. It really is as large as it seems out there in our sky! OK, remember when I mentioned everything that made up our solar system? Do you remember the planets? OK, our solar system is in a way divided in to two. The two "divides" are the inner solar system and the outer solar system Our "inner" solar system consists of the Sun, Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars. The four planets included in the "inner" solar system - Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars - are called the terrestrial planets. The terrestrial planets are called this because they have a solid, rocky surface. Our "outer" solar system consists of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Jupiter and Saturn are called the gas giants, while Uranus and Neptune are called the ice giants. All of these planets Page 1 of 2 together are known as the Jovian planets, after the planet Jupiter. Pluto is alone by itself just as it is in the solar system. Although Pluto is a solid planet like the terrestrial planets, it has an icier surface that allows it to be all by itself. There are other dwarf planets besides Pluto, but their make-up is still being determined. The "inner and outer" solar systems are divided by an asteroid belt. The asteroid belt lies between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. It is this asteroid belt that divides our solar system into the "inner" and "outer" solar system. This asteroid belt is where the majority of the asteroids in our solar system orbit. own place - the Asteroid Belt - comets have their own spaces as well – the Kuiper Belt, and the Oort Cloud. Right dab in the middle of our solar system is the Sun. The nine planets Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto then orbit the Sun. When a planet orbits the sun it basically means that the planet goes around the sun. An orbit is also called an ellipse. The ellipse or orbit of a planet is also not a perfect circle. It is more an oval. The oval ellipse was first discovered by German astronomer and mathematician Johannes Kepler. Now, to us our solar system is HUGE! Filled with the Sun and planets, and all the stars in the night sky, this is a lot but we are only one of many systems that make up an even larger body, our galaxy, The Milky Way. And, no, that is not the candy bar. The Milky Way is our galaxy and our solar system, large to us but small in the grand scheme of things, orbits in one of the spiral arms that make up the Milky Way. The spiral arm the solar system is part of is the Orion-Cygnus arm. There are more than 200 billion more stars that share our galaxy. Earlier, I also mentioned comets. Comets within our solar system lie in the farthest part of our solar system, behind the orbit of Pluto. As asteroids have their Solar System (ART 6.1) So as you can see we are just but a small part of the large picture. From the universe, to our galaxy, to our solar system, to our world, Earth; who knows how far we may be able to go tomorrow but for now keep watching our dark sky with bright stars. Page 2 of 2