what’s that up in the sky???
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The difference between Comets , Meteors and Asteroids. What’s That Up In The Sky???. Comets, Asteroids, and Meteors . COMETS AND ASTEROIDS. Comets………Dirty Balls of Ice. They look like a star with a ghostly white tail . - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
WHAT’S THAT UP IN THE SKY???The difference between
Comets, Meteors and Asteroids
COMETS, ASTEROIDS, AND METEORS
COMETS AND ASTEROIDS
Comets………Dirty Balls of Ice They look like a
star with a ghostly white
tail.
The term "comet"
derives from the Greek
aster kometes,
which means "long-haired
star"---a reference to
the tail.
Comets………Dirty Balls of IceThey can be seen by us only
when they pass by the sun and the sun’s heat melts them.
The comet's tail is made of material from the comet;
gas from the ices and dust that
is mixed in with the ice. They escape as the comet
melts.The tail always points away
from the sun due to the solar winds (movement of
heat away from sun)
They travel around the sun in long looping orbits that bring them near
the sun on one end and around Jupiter on the other end.
Example:
If a comet has a large orbit, it takes a long time to go around the Sun. Some comets are "short-period"
comets that take five or ten years to complete an orbit. Some comets are "long-period" comets that take decades, centuries, or millenia to
orbit the Sun.
Comets………Dirty Balls of IceThe icy, hard part of the comet is
called the nucleus. As the comet melts, sometimes large chunks of ice break off in a hurry and large amounts of gases escape at once and cause a bright “outburst”.
The gas and dust are released and form an atmosphere around the
comet called the coma.
After 500 or so passes near the
Sun, most of a comet's ice and gas
is lost - leaving a
rocky object very much
like an asteroid in appearance
.
Asteroids……Rockin’ AroundAsteroids are
LARGE chunks of rock and
metal that orbit the sun.
They range from just over ½ a
mile (1km) to a few hundred
miles in diameter
(diameter = how wide across)
Most asteroids travel in the
wide gap between the inner planets
and outer planets
(between Mars and Jupiter).
But a few travel in paths across Mar’s orbit and
some even cross in Earth’s
orbit.
Most of the chunks or rock and metal in space came together long ago to form the planets and moons.
Asteroids are left-over
pieces of rock from when the solar system was formed.
How are meteorites related to asteroids?
Meteorites are pieces of asteroids - or sometimes
planets or the Moon.
Key Questions: 1.Has Earth ever been hit by a comet or an asteroid? If yes, how have such impacts affected Earth?
2.How often does a comet or an asteroid hit Earth?
Module 3 Activity 1: (Simulation Activity)
What happens when a comet or an asteroid hits Earth?
Main objective - describe how impact craters are formed when a comet or asteroid hits Earth, based on a simulation
QUESTIONS:Q1. What do you notice about the shape of your pebble’s crater and
the shape of the impact crater shown in the photo?
Q2. What do you think happened to the plants and animals living in
the area where the comet or asteroid crashed?
Q3. Which is most likely to make a more frequent “visitor” of Earth: a comet or an asteroid? Why do you
think so?
How does the Comet or asteroid hit Earth?
Barringer’s Crater
An iron meteorite 100 feet across and 70,000 tons slamed into the Earth at about
43,000mph in the Arizona desert near Flagstaff 40,000 years ago. Barringer Crater is
4,100 feet wide and 571 feet deep.
Key Ideas
Some comets and asteroids may become Near-Earth Objects as they orbit the Sun.
Other planets in the Solar System (gravity) are believed to affect the NEOs’ orbits, thus they crashed into Earth.
Comets and asteroids have hit
Earth in the past.
An impact crater is formed on the ground where a comet, asteroid, or their fragments hit Earth's surface.
Large-scale impacts changed the physical geography of the
surrounding, killed living creatures in the surrounding area, and most probably caused global climate
change (e.g., ice age).
Comets and asteroids have similarities and differences (Table 1). Their major differences are in their origin and composition.
Meteoroid, meteor, and
meteorite: How are they related?
Q1. What is a meteor?
Answer:
A meteor is a light phenomenon or a streak of light as observed from Earth when a meteoroid passes through Earth’s atmosphere.
Q2. What is a meteoroid?
A meteoroid is a fragment from a
comet, an asteroid, Moon, or even Mars that orbits around the Sun, following the orbit of its parent or source.
What celestial (space) objects can a meteoroid
come from?
Answer: Meteoroids can come from comets, asteroids, the Moon, and Mars.
What causes a meteor?
Answer:
A meteor is observed when a meteoroid
passes through Earth’s atmosphere and burns up in the
process.
Why does a meteor shower occur?
Answer A meteor shower happens
when Earth passes through the orbit of a comet (or an
asteroid) where fragments and dust remain in orbit and orbits
the Sun as well while Earth goes around the Sun. Since
there are more dust and fragments, there are more
meteoroids that may burn up in Earth’s atmosphere as Earth passes the orbit of the parent
comet or asteroid.
What have we learned?• Why is there an
asteroid belt? Orbital resonances with
Jupiter disrupted the orbits of planetesimals, preventing them from accreting into a planet. Those that were not ejected from this region make up the asteroid belt today. Most asteroids in other regions of the inner solar system accreted into one of the planets.
• How are meteorites related to asteroids?
Most meteorites are pieces of asteroids. Primitive meteorites are essentially unchanged since the birth of the solar system. Processed meteorites are fragments of larger asteroids that underwent differentiation.
Comets and asteroids may break apart while orbiting
the Sun. These smaller fragments are called
meteoroids.
Rock fragments coming from the Moon,
Mars, and other planets are also called
meteoroids.
The meteoroid burns as it enters Earth’s
atmosphere. Surviving fragments that land on
Earth are called meteorites.
Meteor and meteor showers are light
phenomena.
Meteors…Shooting Stars or Space Garbage
Meteors are also called shooting stars
Meteors are small pieces of space debris (junk)
pulled into Earth’s atmosphere by gravity.
Meteorites are metallic rocks broken off from asteroids and comets
Meteors fall to Earth at speeds from 22,000
MPH to 64,000 MPH (8x shuttle speed)
You Can Buy Meteors-
Most meteors are only as big as a grain of sand.
Most burn up while entering Earth’s Atmosphere
However………………They can be bigger. Craters in the Earth and ones studied below the surface show that one about the size of a house landed about 250,000 years ago! Is that what killed the dinosaurs???
Meteors are falling all the time.
On a clear, dark night you may see one.
During the annual meteor storms, you may see 100 per hour.
How can something as small as a grain of sand light up so
brightly?
Entering the Earth’s atmosphere so fast creates a lot of friction.
The friction causes them to heat up and give off light.
The light trail may stay in the sky for up to 30 minutes and
end with a “POP”.REALLY bright meteors are called
FIREBALLS
What’s That Up In The Sky???
COMETS ASTEROIDS METEORS
Made of ice-have tails
Made of rock and metal
Made of rock and metal
Stay in space Stay in space Fall into Earth’s atmosphere
Orbit the sun Orbit the sun Gravity pulls to Earth; they burn up as they fall