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The Solar System

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The Solar System 8th Grade Science The Solar System Evolves The solar system is the sun, the planets, and all the other objects that revolve around the sun. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Solar System


1
The Solar System
  • 8th Grade Science

2
The Solar System Evolves
  • The solar system is the sun, the planets, and all
    the other objects that revolve around the sun.
  • The nebular theory states that our solar system
    began as a huge cloud of dust and gas, which
    later condensed to form the sun and its nine
    planets.

3
The Sun Forms First
  • About 5 billion years ago, a star exploded in a
    huge supernova.
  • The nebula that was home to the star begins to
    collapse and pull matter toward the center.
  • At the center, a protosun forms.

4
The Planets Form
  • Gases and other matter surrounding the newly
    formed sun continue to spin around it.
  • Gravity causes the matter to gather into small
    clumps, then into larger clumps called
    protoplanets.
  • As the newly formed planets began to cool,
    smaller clumps of matter formed around them.
    Giving the planets their moons.

5
Motions of the Planets
  • In the second century B.C. Ptolemy proposed a
    theory that the Earth was at the center of the
    universe and that all objects moved in perfectly
    circular orbits.
  • Nicolaus Copernicus then proposed a theory that
    the Earth and the other planets actually revolved
    around the sun.

6
Motions of the Planets
  • However, like Ptolemy, Copernicus also believed
    that the planets orbited in perfect circles.
  • It was Johannes Kepler who realized after
    carefully studying the planets movements that the
    planets actually moved in oval orbits called
    ellipses.

7
Revolutions and Rotations
  • Kepler knew the planets orbited the sun, but how?
  • Isaac Newton realized that a planets motion
    around the sun is a result of inertia and
    gravity.
  • Inertia cause the planets to move in a straight
    line and gravity pulls them toward the sun.

8
Revolutions and Rotations
  • Another way to say a planet orbits the sun is to
    say it revolves around the sun.
  • The time it takes a planet to make one revolution
    around the sun is called its period of
    revolution.
  • Aside from revolving around the sun, planets also
    spin or rotate on their axis.
  • The time it takes a planet to rotate on its axis
    is its period of rotation.

9
A Trip Through the Solar System
  • The planets of our solar system have a wide
    variety of surface and atmospheric features.
  • Each planet has its own story to tell.

10
Mercury
  • Mercury is the closest planet to the sun and is
    its own crater-covered world.
  • The craters on Mercury were created billions of
    years ago, but without weather, there has been no
    change.
  • Mercury is one of the hottest and one of the
    coldest planets in the solar system.
  • Mercury contains steep cliff and vast plains,
    most likely formed by volcanoes during the
    planets formation

11
Venus-The Greenhouse in the Sky
  • Venus has about the same diameter, mass, and
    density as Earth. For this reason it is called
    Earths twin.
  • Astronomers were unsure about the surface of
    Venus because of its thick cloud cover. The lower
    level yellow clouds on Venus are made of sulfuric
    acid and carbon dioxide.
  • The surface of Venus has an orange glow and is
    dotted with the remains of many volcanoes.

12
Venus-The Greenhouse in the Sky
  • The temperatures on Venus can climb to 480C,
    which is hotter than the surface of Mercury.
  • The heat from the sun caused the water on Venus
    to evaporate into the atmosphere causing a
    tremendous greenhouse effect. This eventually
    caused the oceans to evaporate completely.
  • Venus also has a retrograde rotation, which means
    it rotates from east to west.

13
Mars-The Rusty Planet
  • As you approach Mars, the first thing you would
    notice is the reddish color. This is because
    Martian soil is covered in rust!
  • The surface of Mars is rocky and covered in
    craters.
  • Mars gives evidence to a very active past. It is
    also home to the largest know volcano in the
    solar system
  • Today there is no liquid water on Mars, but
    frozen water can be found on Mars polar ice caps.

14
The Asteroid Belt
  • On your way from Mars to Jupiter you will enter
    the asteroid belt.
  • The asteroid belt contains hundreds of thousands
    rocks and flying mountains.
  • Asteroids are made of rocks, metals, or a
    combination of the two.
  • Most asteroids are small and irregularly shaped.
  • The asteroid belt formed from pieces of matter
    that failed to join during the solar systems
    formation.
  • Scientists suspect that Jupiters gravitational
    pull kept the asteroids from coming together

15
Jupiter
  • Jupiter is the largest planet in our solar
    system.
  • Jupiter is made of primarily hydrogen and helium
    gases.
  • Scientists believe that if Jupiter had grown
    larger during its formation, gravity might have
    caused nuclear fusion to occur and a star to
    form.
  • One of Jupiters most well know feature is the
    Great Red Spot, which is a huge hurricane type
    storm that is three times the size of Earth and
    has lasted for more than 100 years.
  • Due to the pressure near the center of the
    planet, the dense clouds become an ocean of
    liquid hydrogen.

16
Jupiter
  • This liquid metallic layer of Jupiter is the
    cause of its gigantic magnetic field called the
    magnetosphere.
  • Jupiter is also strange in the fact that it gives
    off more heat than it receives from the sun.
  • It also has a total of 16 moons that circle it,
    but there are 4 very large moons discovered by
    Galileo.
  • IO is the closest of Jupiters moons and is very
    young and active.
  • EUROPA is ice covered and extremely smooth due to
    its volcano that spews water and ammonia ice.
  • GANYMEDE is Jupiters largest moon and is the
    largest in the solar system. It is about 1/2 rock
    and 1/2 water and is the only other object in the
    solar system known to have earthquakes.
  • CALLISTO is the most heavily cratered object in
    the solar system and is a very quiet moon.

17
Saturn-A World of Many Rings
  • Saturn is surrounded by seven major rings made up
    of icy particles.
  • Saturn is made mainly of hydrogen and helium
    gases and spins very fast on its axis, which
    causes its poles to flatten.
  • Saturn, like Jupiter, also has violent storms.
  • Saturns clouds also form the colored bands we
    see.
  • Saturn also has a very small density and would
    actually float in water.
  • Saturn has 21 known moons with the largest being
    Titan.

18
Uranus-A Planet on Its Side
  • Uranus is the seventh planet in our solar system
    and is almost twice as far from the sun as
    Saturn.
  • Uranus is also a gas planet made of mostly
    hydrogen, helium, and methane.
  • Strong evidence was found that Uranus is covered
    by an ocean of superheated water than may have
    formed from melted comets.
  • The axis on which Uranus rotates is one the most
    unusual features. The axis is tilted at an angle
    of about 90. This makes it look like it is
    tipped completely on its side.

19
Neptune
  • Upon examining the orbit of Uranus, astronomers
    noticed that there must be an object beyond
    Uranus.
  • Neptune is a giant bluish world.
  • Neptune is often called a twin to Uranus because
    they are about the same size, mass, and
    temperature.
  • Neptunes surface is probably and ocean of water
    and liquid methane, covering a rocky core.
  • Data was also found to indicate that Neptune has
    five rings made of dust particles.
  • Neptune also has at least 8 moons the biggest and
    most well known being Triton.

20
Pluto-A Double Planet
  • Pluto is little more than a moon-sized object
    than may be an escaped moon of Neptune.
  • Pluto is made of icy gases such as methane.
  • Pluto is the only planet with an atmosphere on
    its sunny side and none on its dark side.
  • Pluto also has a moon that is so close in size
    that it may be double planet.

21
Planet X-The Tenth Planet?
  • After discovering Pluto, scientists realized that
    it was too small to be pulling on Uranus and
    Neptune.
  • This causes scientists to believe there is
    another planet as far as 80 billion kilometers
    from the sun pulling on the planets causing their
    strange orbits.
  • Other scientists feel that they are being pulled
    on by a Brown Dwarf or possibly a black hole.

22
Comets
  • Most comets come from the Oort cloud, which is a
    vast collection of ice, gas, and dust.
  • The pull of gravity from a local star pulls parts
    of this cloud out into space.
  • Comets are made up of this ice, gas, and dust,
    which form a cloud around the core as it heats
    up.

23
Meteoroids, Meteors, and Meteorites
  • Meteoroids are chunks of metal or stone that
    orbit the sun.
  • When the meteoroid enters the atmosphere,
    friction causes it to burn. The streak of light
    in the sky is called a meteor.
  • Most meteors burn up in the atmosphere, but a few
    strike the Earths surface and are called
    meteorites.

24
Exploring the Solar System
  • Rocketry
  • Rocketry is based on Newtons third law of
    motion.
  • In a reaction engine, such as a rocket, the
    rearward blast of exploding gases causes the
    rocket to shoot forward.
  • However, rockets must be able to escape Earths
    gravitational pull.
  • Escape Velocity
  • In order for a rocket to escape Earths pull, the
    rocket must achieve the proper velocity.
  • The escape velocity of a planet is determined by
    the mass of the planet and the distance of the
    rocket from the planets center.
  • Rockets also need a fuel source that will
    continue to burn.

25
Live Long and Prosper!!!
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