Top Banner
29
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Ch15 solarsystemsection2
Page 2: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

Astronomy

• Chapter Fifteen: The Solar System

• Chapter Sixteen: The Sun and the Stars

• Chapter Seventeen: Galaxies and the Universe

Page 3: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

Chapter Fifteen: The Solar System

• 15.1 The Solar System

• 15.2 The Planets

Page 4: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

Investigation 15B

• How big are the planets relative to Earth?

The Sizes of the Planets

Page 5: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

Space Travel

• Why should I come visit your planet?

Page 6: Ch15 solarsystemsection2
Page 7: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

15.2 Mercury

• Mercury, the closest planet to the sun, is the second smallest (after Pluto) in both size and mass.

Page 8: Ch15 solarsystemsection2
Page 9: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

15.2 Venus

• Venus appears as the brightest planet in the evening sky and is the third brightest observable object (after the sun and moon).

Page 10: Ch15 solarsystemsection2
Page 11: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

15.2 Earth

• Earth is a small, rocky planet with an atmosphere that is made of mostly nitrogen (78 percent N2) and oxygen (21 percent O2).

Page 12: Ch15 solarsystemsection2
Page 13: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

15.2 The Seasons• The seasons are caused by the 23-degree tilt of Earth’s

axis of rotation relative to its orbit.

Page 14: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

15.2 The moon

• Earth’s single rocky moon is about one-quarter the diameter of Earth.

• At a distance of 385,000 kilometers, the moon is about 30 Earth diameters away from the planet, completing one orbit every 29 days.

Page 15: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

15.2 Mars

• The fourth planet out from the sun, Mars appears as a reddish point of light in the night sky.

Page 16: Ch15 solarsystemsection2
Page 17: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

15.2 Jupiter

• The fifth planet out from the sun, Jupiter is by far the largest.

• Jupiter’s mass is greater than the combined mass of all of the other planets.

• With 63 known moons, Jupiter is like a mini solar system.

Page 18: Ch15 solarsystemsection2
Page 19: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

15.2 Saturn

• Saturn, at almost 10 times the size of Earth, is the second largest planet.

• The most striking feature of Saturn is its system of rings and like Jupiter, has many natural satellites.

Page 20: Ch15 solarsystemsection2
Page 21: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

15.2 Uranus

• The seventh planet from the sun, Uranus can barely be seen without a good telescope and was not discovered until 1781.

Page 22: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

15.2 Neptune

• Neptune, the eighth planet from the sun, is the outermost of the gas planets.

• It was discovered in 1846 and its discovery almost doubled the diameter of the known solar system because of its great distance from the sun.

Page 23: Ch15 solarsystemsection2
Page 24: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

15.2 Pluto

• Pluto is a dwarf planet, and most of the time the farthest from the sun.

• Discovered in 1930, Pluto was named for the Roman god of the underworld.

Page 25: Ch15 solarsystemsection2
Page 26: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

15.2 The far outer system

• Outside the orbit of Pluto is a region called the Kuiper Belt.

• The Kuiper Belt stretches to 1,000 AU and is believed to contain many asteroid-size and a few Pluto-size objects.

• To avoid confusion, astronomers no longer count Pluto as a planet.

• Instead, Pluto is grouped along with Sedna, Xena, and similar distant bodies in the Kuiper Belt Objects (or KBOs).

Page 27: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

Astronomy Connection

Jupiter’s Volcanic Moon

• In December of 1995 the Galileo spacecraft entered into orbit around Jupiter.

• Io, Jupiter’s “pizza moon”, is considered to be the most volcanically active place in the solar system.

Page 28: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

Activity

• The plants and animals that live on Earth are uniquely suited to Earth’s environment.

• In this activity, you will create an organism that could live on another planet.

Alien Design

Page 29: Ch15 solarsystemsection2

15.2 The planets• The eight major planets of our solar system

together contain 250 times the surface area of Earth.

• This vast territory includes environments baked by heat and radiation (Mercury) and far colder than ice (Neptune).

• With a combined surface area 1,700 times the size of North America, the planets are an unexplored frontier full of discoveries waiting to be made.