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Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior.

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Page 1: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s

atmosphere, water, crust, and interior.

Page 2: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

1. How did the solar system form?-Nebula-gas, ice and dust-Gravity pulled materials closer-Nebula shrank/flattened to a disk-Disk begins to rotate-Materials in center become dense from outside pressure.-Sun is formed

Page 3: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior
Page 4: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

How did the Solar System Form?

-Nebula-gas, ice and dust

-Gravity pulled materials closer-Nebula shrank/flattened to a disk-Disk begins to rotate-Materials in center become dense from outside pressure.-Sun is formed

Page 5: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

2. What caused them to come together?

-Gravity is the force that every object exerts on all other objects because of their masses.

-Mass and distance are the factors.

GRAVITY Earth’s Structure, Lesson 1, Review, Personal Tutor, Gravity

Page 6: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

3.Which object has a stronger gravitational force?

A.

B.

Page 7: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

4. All four objects have the same mass. Which row has the weakest gravitational force between them?

A

B

Page 8: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

A

B

C

D

E

5. Which planet pair would have the greatest amount of gravitational pull between them?

6. Which planet pair would have the least amount of gravitational pull between them?

Page 9: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

7. Why does Earth exert a greater gravitational force on you than other objects like the sun?

Page 10: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior
Page 11: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

Earth has more mass than any object near you.

It exerts a greater gravitational force on you than other objects do.

You don’t notice the gravitational force between less massive objects.

Page 12: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

8. Which object in the solar system exerts the most gravitational pull on all the other objects, and why?

Page 13: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

The sun. It has the most mass of all the matter in our solar system.

Page 14: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

9. How are the planets shaped during Earth’s Final Formation?

Page 15: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

-Planets shape from remaining bits of material.

Page 16: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

-Earth formed as gravity pulled these small particles together-Particles stick in uneven shapes as they collide -The larger mass particles attracted more particles-Continued to grow large

Page 17: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

-Generated thermal energy inside from the surrounding pressure-Particles inside melt and flow-Gravity pulls in irregular bumps

Page 18: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

10. How were Earth’s layers created?-Collisions created a mass of solid particles-Thermal energy from within began to flow-Distinct layers formed based on Density-More dense toward the center, less dense toward the outside

Page 19: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

11. Relate the Earth’s formation by this experiment: Put an iron block and a pinewood block with the same volumes in a beaker of water. Which will float on the surface and which will be pulled through the water to the bottom of the beaker by gravity?

Page 20: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

-There is a stronger gravitational force between Earth and a denser object than there is between Earth and a less dense object.

Page 21: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

-When ancient Earth started melting, the densest materials sank and formed the innermost layer of Earth. -The least dense materials stayed at the surface and formed a separate layer. Earth’s Structure, Lesson 2, video, What’s Inside.

Page 22: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

Pulling it all together videoclip: Earth’s Structure, Lesson 2, Review, Personal

Tutor, Density

Page 23: Objective: Relate density to the relative positioning of Earth’s atmosphere, water, crust, and interior

CreditsAstronomy online

http://astronomyonline.org/SolarSystem/SolarSystemFormation.asp

Mail Onlinehttp://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-

2034667/Earths-gold-platinum-arrived-meteor-shower-lasting-200MILLION-years.html