1 / 32

What’s in our Solar System?

What’s in our Solar System?. The Star Powering our Solar System: The Sun. Composition: Hydrogen 92.1% Helium 7.8% Oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, neon, iron, silicon, magnesium, and sulfur Rotation Period:25.38 Earth days Named after: Greek: Helios Roman: Sol

Télécharger la présentation

What’s in our Solar System?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What’s in our Solar System?

  2. The Star Powering our Solar System: The Sun • Composition: • Hydrogen 92.1% • Helium 7.8% • Oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, neon, iron, silicon, magnesium, and sulfur • Rotation Period:25.38 Earth days • Named after: • Greek: Helios • Roman: Sol • Surface Temperature: 5800°K • Core Temperature: 15,600,000°K • Age: 4.6 billion years old • Contains 99.8% of the mass of the solar system

  3. The Planets

  4. Mercury AUs from sun: 0.38 Temperature range:-173 to 427°C Named after: Roman god who was the messenger of the gods Mercury is heavily cratered.

  5. Mercury • Atmosphere Composition: Helium 42%Sodium 42%Oxygen 15% • Length of Day: 58.7 Earth days • Length of Year: 87.96 Earth days • # of Moons: 0 • Rings?: No

  6. Venus • AUs from sun: 0.72 • Temperature range: 462°C • Named after: Roman goddess of love and beauty Distinguishing Features: • Sulfuric acid clouds • Retrograde rotation

  7. Venus • Atmosphere Composition: Carbon dioxide 96% Nitrogen 3% • Length of Day: 243 Earth days • Length of Year: 224.68 Earth Days • # of Moons: 0 • Rings?: No

  8. Earth • AUs from sun: 1.00 • km from sun:149,600,000 • Temperature range: -88 to 58°C • Named after: Old English goddess Gaia also known as Mother Earth Distinguishing Features: • Only planet known to support life • Water exists as solid, liquid, and gas

  9. Earth • Atmosphere Composition: • Nitrogen 77% • Oxygen 21% • Other 2% • Length of Day: 24 hours • Length of Year: 365.26 days • # of Moons: 1-Moon • Rings?: No

  10. Astronomical Unit (AU) • An astronomical unit (AU for short) is the average distance between the earth and the sun which equals 149,597,870 kilometers.

  11. Mars • AUs from sun: 1.52 • Temperature range: -87 to -5°C • Named after: Roman god who was the god of war • Distinguishing Features: • covered with iron-rich dust which makes it look red • largest volcano in the solar system named Olympus Mons

  12. Mars • Atmosphere Composition: • CO2 95.32% • Nitrogen 2.7% • Argon 1.6% • Oxygen, carbon monoxide, water, neon, krypton, zenon, ozone • Length of Day: 24.6 Earth hours • Length of Year: 686.98 Earth days • # of Moons: 2 – Phobos and Deimos • Rings?: No

  13. Jupiter • AUs from sun: 5.20 • Temperature: -148°C • Named after: Roman king of the gods • Distinguishing Features: • covered with bands across its latitudes • great red spot that is a giant continuous storm

  14. Jupiter • Atmosphere Composition: • Hydrogen 90% • Helium 10% • Length of Day: 9.84 Earth hours • Length of Year: 11.862 Earth years • # of Moons: 63 • lo • Europa • Ganymede • Callisto • Rings?: Yes

  15. Saturn • AUs from sun: 9.54 • Temperature range: -178°C • Named after: Roman god who was Jupiter’s father • Distinguishing Features: • beautiful rings • Would float in water

  16. Saturn • Atmosphere Composition: • Hydrogen 97% • Helium 3% • Length of Day: 10.2 Earth hours • Length of Year: 29.456 Earth years • # of Moons:33 - Titan • Rings?: Yes

  17. Uranus • AUs from sun: 19.218 • Temperature range: -216°C • Named after: Earliest known supreme god who was son and mate of Gaia and father of Saturn • Distinguishing Features: • Horizontal axis • Retrograde rotation

  18. Uranus • Atmosphere Composition: • Hydrogen 83% • Helium 15% • Methane 2% • Length of Day: 17.9 Earth hours • Length of Year: 84.07 Earth years • # of Moons: 27 • Rings?: Yes

  19. Neptune • AUs from sun: 30.06 • km from sun: 4,504,000,000 • Temperature: -214°C • Named after: Roman god of the sea • Distinguishing Features: • blue planet • high winds.

  20. Neptune • Atmosphere Composition: • Hydrogen 85% • Helium 13% • Methane 2% • Length of Day: 19.1 Earth hours • Length of Year: 164.81 Earth years • # of Moons: 13 - Triton • Rings?: Yes

  21. The Dwarf Planets

  22. Pluto • AUs from sun: 39.5 • Temperature range: -233 to -223°C • Named after: Roman god of the underworld • Distinguishing Features: • Pluto has a more elliptical orbit than circular, so that at times Pluto is closer to the sun than Neptune

  23. Pluto • Atmosphere Composition: • Methane • Nitrogen • Length of Day: 6.39 Earth days • Length of Year: 247.7 Earth years • # of Moons: 3 - Charon • Rings?: No

  24. Eris Eris is the Greek goddess of discord and strife. She stirs up jealousy and envy to cause fighting and anger among men. • Discovered January 5, 2005 by Michael E. Brown, Chad Trujillo, and David L. Rabinowitz • Diameter 1,490 miles (2,400 km), 5% larger than Pluto • Distance from Sun: 96 AU • Closes point to Sun: 37.9 AU • Orbital period: 557.8 years • Surface temperature: -405°F (-243°C) • Surface composition: Methane ice (Pluto-like) • Moon: Dysnomia, about 190 miles (305 km) across

  25. Discovered: January 1, 1801 by Giuseppe Piazzi • Located in the asteroid belt • Diameter 950 km • Contains approximately 1/3 of the asteroid’s belt mass • Named for Roman goddess of the harvest and motherly love • Distance from sun: 2.544 AU – 2.987 AU • Surface temperature: -38°C Ceres

  26. Other Solar System Objects

  27. Comets A comet is a small, fragile, irregular shaped body of icy water and gases, and dust. Comets have highly elliptical orbits around the sun. Parts • Nucleus – center of comet made of mostly ice, gases, and dust • Coma – dense cloud of water, carbon dioxide, and neutral gases that sublime from the nucleus • Hydrogen cloud • Dust tail – smoke sized dust particles that are driven off the nucleus by escaping gases • Ion tail – plasma laced with rays and streamers caused by interactions with solar wind Famous comets: • Halley • Hale-Bopp

  28. Asteroids • Small, metallic objects that orbit the sun but are too small to be considered planets. They range in size from 1000 kilometers to pebble sized. • There is a main belt of asteroids in orbit around the sun between Mars and Jupiter called the asteroid belt.

  29. Meteors & Meteoroids • A meteor is also known as a shooting star. It is a meteoroid that has entered earth’s atmosphere that lights up as it burns due to friction with the air in earth’s atmosphere. • A meteoroid is a rock in space. • A meteorite is a part of a meteoroid that survives entering earth’s atmosphere.

  30. The Kuiper Belt • A disk shaped region past the orbit of Neptune containing many small icy bodies considered the source of short period comets.

  31. Oort Cloud • The oort cloud is an immense spherical cloud surrounding our solar system. The oort cloud extends about 3 light years from the sun. This is considered the end of our sun’s gravitational influence.

More Related