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The Solar System Observing the Solar System
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The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

The Solar System

Observing the Solar System

Page 2: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Guide For Reading

• How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ?

• What did Kepler discover about the orbits of the planets?

• What two factors keep the planets in their orbits?

Page 3: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Wandering Stars

Page 4: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

The Greeks called the five points of light that seemed to move among the stars ______, meaning “______”.

• planets• wanderers

Page 5: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

The ancient Romans later called these planets:

• Mercury• Venus• Mars• Jupiter• Saturn

Page 6: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Greek Ideas: Earth at the Center

Page 7: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Describe the ancient Greek beliefs of the solar

system.

• The ancient Greeks thought Earth was a stationary object and the sun, moon, and planets were on a rotating celestial sphere

Page 8: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Checkpoint: What is a geocentric system?

• A geocentric system is one in which Earth is at the center of a system of revolving planets.

Page 9: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Figure 2: Interpreting DiagramsWhere is Earth located in this illustration?

• The Earth is in the middle of the solar system

• The sun, moon, and a planet are orbiting Earth on a large circle, while moving on a smaller cirlce

Page 10: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

How is Ptolemy’s model of the solar system differ from the Greeks before him?

• The Greeks before Ptolemy thought the universe was unchanging and the sun, moon, and planets moved together on a celestial sphere (like a carousel). Earth was stationary

• Ptolemy introduced the idea of the sun, moon and planets rotating on little circles which rotate on bigger circles

Page 11: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Copernicus’s Idea: Sun at the Center

Page 12: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Heliocentric

• A description of the solar system which all planets revolve around the sun

Page 13: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Guide For Reading: How do the heliocentric and geocentric descriptions of the solar system differ?

• In a geocentric system, Earth is at the center of the revolving planets.

• In a heliocentric system, Earth and the other planets revolve around the sun.

Page 14: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Galileo’s Observations

Page 15: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Checkpoint: What two discoveries made by Galileo supported the heliocentric description of the solar system?

• Jupiter’s four moons revolve around the planet.

• Venus goes through phases similar to those of Earth’s moon.

Page 16: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Brahe and Kepler

Page 17: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Brahe, a ______ ______, made much more accurate observations by carefully observing the positions of

the planets for almost _____ years.

• Danish astronomer• 20

Page 18: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Guide For Reading: What did Kepler discover about the orbits of the planets

• Kepler had discovered that the orbit of each planet is an ellipse.

• Ellipse: an elongated circle or oval shape.

Page 19: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Ellipse

• An elongated circle, or oval shape; the shape of the planets’ orbit

Page 20: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Which planet’s orbit did Kepler calculate to discover that a planet’s orbit is not a circle?

• Mars

Page 21: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Inertia and Gravity

Page 22: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Inertia

• Inertia: tendency of a moving object to continue in a straight line or a stationary object to remain in place.

Page 23: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

The more _____ an object has, the more ______ it has.

• mass• inertia

Page 24: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Gravity

• Gravity: The attractive force between two objects; its magnitude depends on their masses and the distance between them.

Page 25: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

The strength of gravity depends on the ______ of the objects and the ______ between them.

• mass• distance

Page 26: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Figure 5: Interpreting Diagrams -What would happen if a planet had no inertia?

• The planet would be pulled into the sun

Page 27: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Figure 5: Interpreting Diagrams -What would happen if a planet had no gravity?

• The planet would continue to travel straight off into space

Page 28: The Solar System Observing the Solar System Guide For Reading How do the heliocentric and geocentric description of the solar system differ? What did.

Guide For Reading: What two factors keep the planets in their orbits?

• Newton concluded that two factors – inertia and gravity – combine to keep the planets in orbit.

• Inertia keeps the planets the moving• Gravity from the sun keeps the

planets from traveling off in space