Title: Project by: John Isaac
1The Solar System
Mercury
- Project by John Isaac
- And Jazmine Carey
Choir Academy of Harlem
Home page
Venus
Earth
Mars
Jupiter
Saturn
Uranus
2Mercury
- The planet Mercury is very difficult to study
from the Earth because it is always so close to
the Sun. Even at elongation, it is never more
than 28 degrees from the Sun in our sky. It is
the second smallest planet (it was believed to be
the smallest until the discovery that Pluto is
actually much smaller than originally thought),
and also the fastest in its orbit since it is the
innermost planet. In fact, the name Mercury
derives from its speed in moving around its
orbit.
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3Venus
In the last 30 years we have learned a
great deal about our "sister" planet, and we now
know that almost nothing on Venus is like that on
the Earth. Much of the previous misconception can
be traced to the difficulty of observing Venus
because it is always covered with a thick cloud
layer. In the past 3 decades astronomers have
learned how to peer through that cloud layer and
unlock many of the secrets of this nearby but
previously not well known planet.
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4Earth
- The Earth is certainly the most familiar planet,
though it has only been a few hundred years since
we fully realized it was a planet. We begin our
study of objects in the Solar System with the
Earth because it is interesting in its own right,
and it provides a test of many observing
techniques that we wish to use for other objects
in the Solar System.
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5Mars
- Mars, the "Red Planet", is named after the Roman
god of war because it commonly appears with a
reddish tinge when viewed in our sky. It has
always held a fascination for those interested in
the possibility of life on other planets. In 1895
a professor of astronomy, Samual Leland Phelps,
wrote in a book called World Making that with a
new 40 inch telescope being built by the
University of Chicago
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6Jupiter
- The planet Jupiter is shown in the adjacent
Hubble Space Telescope true-color image (Ref).
Jupiter is by far the largest of the planets. It
is more than twice as massive as all other
planets combined if it had been only about 100
times more massive at birth (not so much by
astronomical standards) it would have become a
star instead of a planet. Then the Solar System
might be a double star system instead of a single
star with a planetary system.
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7Saturn
- Saturn, the second most massive planet, and the
most distant planet known to the ancients, is one
of the most beautiful sites in the Solar System,
as witnessed by the adjacent image. The most
striking feature of Saturn is the spectacular
ring system. Although this feature is no longer
unique, since we now know that all the Gas Giant
planets have rings, the rings of Saturn are much
more elaborate than those of any of the other
planets.
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8Uranus
- Uranus is largely hydrogen and helium, but (like
Neptune) contains higher proportions of heavy
elements than Jupiter or Saturn, and is covered
with clouds. Our only direct spacecraft
observation of Uranus came from Voyager 2 in
1986.
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9Neptune
- Neptune is the eighth planet from the Sun and
the fourth largest (by diameter). Neptune is
smaller in diameter but larger in mass than Uranus
   Neptune has been visited by only one
spacecraft, Voyager 2 on Aug 25 1989.
Neptune's composition is probably
similar to Uranus' various "ices" and
rock with about 15 hydrogen and a
little helium
10Pluto
- Pluto (planet), ninth planet from the Sun and
outermost known member of the solar system. Pluto
was discovered as the result of a telescopic
search inaugurated in 1905by American astronomer
Percival Lowell, Pluto revolves about the Sun
once in 247.7 Earth years at an average distance
of 5.9 billion km (3.67 billion mi) from the Sun.
Pluto is about 2,320 km (1,440 mi) in diameter,
about two-thirds the size of Earth's moon.