SUMMING UP THE SOLAR SYSTEM Formation of the

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SUMMING UP THE SOLAR SYSTEM

SUMMING UP THE SOLAR SYSTEM

Formation of the Solar System Nebular Hypothesis– 12 billion years ago a giant nebula

Formation of the Solar System Nebular Hypothesis– 12 billion years ago a giant nebula (cloud of gas & dust) rotated quickly, shrank, & compressed creating the sun and a planetary disc. As time passed, the disc condensed into small planets. 4. 6 billion years ago, most planets had formed, including Earth!

Models for Our S. S. Aristotle & Ptolemy 90 -168 A. D. geocentric model

Models for Our S. S. Aristotle & Ptolemy 90 -168 A. D. geocentric model of our S. S. Earth is at the center Copernicus 1473 -1543 A. D. heliocentric model for our S. S. Sun is at the center Kepler Explained the motions of planets with 3 laws– observed planet orbits from different places on Earth

Kepler’s 1 st Law Elliptical Orbits not Circular, with the Sun at one foci

Kepler’s 1 st Law Elliptical Orbits not Circular, with the Sun at one foci

Ellipse Geometry You do not have to copy this slide Major Axis Foci Minor

Ellipse Geometry You do not have to copy this slide Major Axis Foci Minor Axis Eccentricity=How oval is it?

Kepler’s 2 nd Law Perihelion- planet’s closest distance to Sun in orbit Moves faster

Kepler’s 2 nd Law Perihelion- planet’s closest distance to Sun in orbit Moves faster than @ aphelion Aphelion- planet’s farthest distance from Sun 2 nd Law- “Equal Area Law” b/c the planet has to move faster closer to the sun to get an area equal to that of an area furthest from the sun Click below for an Animation! http: //www. physicsclassroom. com/mmedia/circmot/ksl. cfm

Kepler’s 2 nd Law: When a planet is closer to the Sun, it moves

Kepler’s 2 nd Law: When a planet is closer to the Sun, it moves faster

Kepler’s 3 rd Law The more distant a planet’s orbit is from the Sun,

Kepler’s 3 rd Law The more distant a planet’s orbit is from the Sun, the slower it moves Compares planets to one another Period- time for one complete orbit around sun Let’s see all three in action

Measuring Distances in our S. S. Astronomical Unit (AU) the distance from Earth to

Measuring Distances in our S. S. Astronomical Unit (AU) the distance from Earth to the Sun (150 million kilometers OR 93 million miles) Things within our solar system are measure in A. U. ’s

Other areas within our S. S. 1. The Kuiper Belt: [30 -55 AUs] 1000

Other areas within our S. S. 1. The Kuiper Belt: [30 -55 AUs] 1000 s of objects s. a. dwarf planets and balls of ice/dust/gas (comets or “dirty snowballs”) - some get hurled towards the sun comet’s tail always points AWAY from the sun b/c of the solar wind 2. Oort Cloud: [5, 000 -100, 000 AUs] way past the Kuiper belt & Pluto; millions of comets that do not orbit the sun

S. S. FACTS 1. Inner planets- “terrestrial” planets 2. Outer planets- “gas giants” or

S. S. FACTS 1. Inner planets- “terrestrial” planets 2. Outer planets- “gas giants” or “Jovian planets” 3. Saturn would float in a bowl of water (density is <1. 0 g/cm³) 4. All outer planets have rings 5. Venus revolves around the sun quicker than it rotates on its axis (Its day is longer than its year!) 6. Venus is our “sister planet” b/c of its size and density 7. Venus is also known as the “morning star” b/c we can see it in the western sky in the

S. S. FACTS 8. Venus is the hottest planet b/c of a runaway Greenhouse

S. S. FACTS 8. Venus is the hottest planet b/c of a runaway Greenhouse Effect (too much gas!) 9. Uranus rotates on its side (spins like a bowling ball) 10. Neptune used to have a dark spot, like Jupiter, which was also thought to be a storm 11. Uranus & Neptune are about the same size

Size of planets in order from largest to smallest 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Size of planets in order from largest to smallest 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Earth Venus Mars Mercury Pluto (not a planet)

Why was pluto downgraded to a ‘dwarf planet’? 1. Too small ~1 mile across

Why was pluto downgraded to a ‘dwarf planet’? 1. Too small ~1 mile across 2. Doesn’t fit the categories of “terrestrial” or “gas” planet- predominantly ice & resides in Kuiper belt (like a comet) 3. Not always the 9 th planet– its orbit is so eccentric that it crosses Neptune’s orbital path every 228 years & spends ~20 years being closer to the Sun than Neptune