the solar system models formation inner planets outer planets other objects in space

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The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space

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Page 1: The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space

The Solar System

ModelsFormation

Inner PlanetsOuter Planets

Other Objects in Space

Page 2: The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space

Ideas About the Solar System

• Known since ancient times, five planets are visible to the unaided eye as bright points of light in the night sky (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn).

• Early observers noticed that the positions of the planets changed with respect to the fixed stars, and their observations and belief systems influenced their ideas about the solar system.

• “Planet” is Greek for “wandering star.”

Page 3: The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space

Earth - Centered Model• Ancient Greek scientists

thought the planets (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn) as well as the Sun and the moon were in fixed, separate spheres that revolved around Earth.

• Stars were also thought to be in another fixed sphere that centered around the Earth.

Page 4: The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space

Sun - Centered Model• In the year 1543, the Polish astronomer

Nicholas Copernicus stated that the Earth and other planets revolved around the Sun.

• Copernicus believed that the daily movement of the planets and the stars was due to Earth’s rotation.

• In the year 1610, the Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei observed through his telescope that Venus went through a full cycle of phases like the moon. This could only happen if Venus orbited the Sun.

• Galileo concluded that Venus and the other planets revolve around the Sun, and that the Sun is at the center of the solar system.

Page 5: The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space

Modern View of the Solar System

• We now know that the solar system consists of eight major planets orbiting the Sun: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Pluto and other “dwarf planets,” as well as many other smaller objects also orbit the Sun.

• The solar system includes a huge volume of space that stretches in all directions from the Sun.

• Our star (the Sun) contains 99.86% of the entire mass of the solar system.

• Due to the gravitational pull of the Sun, it is the central object in the solar system, and all other objects in the system revolve around it.

Page 6: The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space

How the Solar System Formed• Scientists theorize that 4.6 billion years ago

our solar system formed from part of a nebula of gas, ice, and dust.

The Ant Nebula, a cloud of dust and gas between the stars, resembles an ant when observed using ground-based telescopes. The nebula lies within our galaxy between 3,000 and 6,000 light years from our solar system.

Page 7: The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space

• About 4.6 billion years ago, the solar system was part of a vast, swirling cloud of gas, ice, and dust (a nebula).

• A nearby star might have exploded, and shock waves from this event caused the cloud to start to contract under its own gravity.

Page 8: The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space

• As the cloud contracted under gravity, the matter within the cloud was squeezed into less space.

• As the density increased and the attraction of gravity pulled more gas and dust toward the center, the contracting nebula began to rotate faster and flatten into a disk with a dense center.

• Temperatures at the center increased greatly, at the reaching about 10,000,000 oC. At this temperature, nuclear fusion began.

• In nuclear fusion, hydrogen atoms combine to form helium atoms, and a small fraction of the nuclear mass is converted to vast amounts of energy (E = mc2).

• As nuclear fusion begins, a star is born that becomes our Sun.

Page 9: The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space
Page 10: The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space

Planet Formation• Gas, ice, and dust particles that were not drawn into the core

of the cloud and the infant Sun collided and stuck together to form planets, asteroids, and other solar system objects.

• Temperatures near the Sun caused easily vaporized water and ices preventing them from condensing into solids. This is why lighter elements and compounds are scarcer in the planets near the Sun than in planets further from the Sun. The formation of water and other ices are more common farther from the Sun.

• Rocky and iron-rich materials dominate the formation of bodies in the inner solar system.

• Further out, gases and ices dominate the formation of bodies in the outer solar system.

Page 11: The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space

Motion of Planets

• Nicholas Copernicus thought that the planets orbited the Sun in exact circles.

• In the early 1600s, the German mathematician Johannes Kepler began studying orbits of the planets. He determined that the shapes of all the planets’ orbits are not circular, but elliptical.

• From Kepler, we understand that orbits are ellipses, with the Sun at one focus of the ellipse. This includes the Earth, which has a slightly elliptical orbit with the Sun slightly offset from the center.

• This is why we are closer to the Sun in January (147 million km) than we are in July (152 million km).

Page 12: The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space

Speed of Planets• Kepler found that the planets travel in their orbits at

different speeds, and the planets closer to the Sun travel faster than those further away:

Planet Average Orbital Speed

Mercury 48 km/s

Venus 35 km/s

Earth 30 km/s

Mars 24 km/s

Jupiter 13 km/s

Saturn 9.7 km/s

Uranus 6.8 km/s

Neptune 5.4 km/s

Pluto (dwarf planet) 4.7 km/s

Page 13: The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space

Order of Planets

Page 14: The Solar System Models Formation Inner Planets Outer Planets Other Objects in Space

How Can I Remember the Order?

Here’s a few ways to help you remember the order:Mercury My MyVenus Very Very Earth Easy ExcellentMars Method MotherJupiter Just or Just

or ?Saturn Speeds ServedUranus Up UsNeptune Naming NinePluto Planets Pizzas