creating our solar system

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Creating our solar system

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Creating our solar system. 26.1 Current model of the solar system. Today, we define the solar system as the sun and all objects that are gravitationally bound to the sun. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Creating our solar system

Creating our solar system

Page 2: Creating our solar system

26.1 Current model of the solar system

• Today, we define the solar system as the sun and all objects that are gravitationally bound to the sun.

• The solar system is roughly divided into the inner planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars) and the outer planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune)

• The dwarf planet Pluto is the oldest known member of a smaller group of frozen worlds orbiting beyond Neptune.

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26.1 Comparing size and distance

• The Sun is by far the largest object in the solar system.

• One astronomical unit (AU) is equal to 150 million km, or the distance from Earth to the Sun.

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26.3 The planets

• The planets are commonly classified in two groups.

• The terrestrial planets include Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars.

• The gas giants include Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.

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Comparing properties of the planets

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26.3 Mercury

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

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26.3 Venus• Venus appears as the brightest planet in the

evening sky and is the third brightest observable object (after the sun and moon).

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26.3 Earth

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

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26.3 Mars

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

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26.3 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.

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26.3 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.

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26.3 Uranus

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

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26.3 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.

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26.3 Pluto

• Pluto is a dwarf planet.

• Most of the time Pluto is the farthest from the sun.

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

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26.3 Pluto and the Kuiper Belt

• What is the Kuiper belt? A vast cloud of small rocky and icy objects orbiting the Sun at great distances, beyond Neptune and Pluto.

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

• It extends to a distance of about 50 astronomical units