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Our Solar System

Our Solar System. Jonathan Hodge Tanglewood Nature Center Photos courtesy of NASA. Have you ever looked at the empty sky and wondered?. The Sun. Sun spots are magnetic disturbances, cooler than the surrounding surface of the sun, they can be 50k miles across.

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Our Solar System

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  1. Our Solar System Jonathan Hodge Tanglewood Nature Center Photos courtesy of NASA

  2. Have you ever looked at the empty sky and wondered?

  3. The Sun

  4. Sun spots are magnetic disturbances, cooler than the surrounding surface of the sun, they can be 50k miles across Solar flares are massive eruptions of the Suns energy. The energy they release takes just 8 minutes to reach Earth! The Solarwind is a stream of very fast moving energy particles that travel at incredible speeds towards the Earth What do you think about the Sun?

  5. What is the Sun? • The Sun is our nearest star. It is a giant ball of super hot gas. It burns Hydrogen which in turn produces Helium….but it doesn’t burn like a fireplace does, the star is not “on fire”. It’s called “thermonuclear fusion”. • How old is the Sun? Where are stars born? • The Sun was born about 5 billion years ago from a giant cloud of dust! Stars are born in “Nurseries!”

  6. The Orion Nebula: Photo Jonathan Hodge

  7. Is the Sun the center of our Galaxy? • No! The sun is the center of our Solar System. Our solar system is on the Orion arm of our own spiral galaxy • What is the name of our Galaxy? • Our galaxy is called the Milky Way!

  8. What do you think about Mars?

  9. Mars is the ? planet from the Sun? • The fourth! • What are the first ? planets? • Mercury, Venus and Earth • What color is Mars and why? • Mars is red because of the soil which is rich in Iron Oxide • Would you weigh more or less on Mars? • You would weigh about a third of your weight.. if you are 70 pounds….you’d weigh 27!

  10. Mars is very bright, which makes it easy to spot in the night sky. • It was named after the Roman god of war because its reddish color reminded the people of blood. Olympus Mons is the largest volcano in our solar system! Although people have never landed on Mars, we have sent robotic explorers there. MARS Martian crater

  11. What do you think about Jupiter?

  12. What is Jupiter made out of? • Jupiter is a “Gas Planet”. It’s thick atmosphere of gas eventually turns into an ocean of Hydrogen and Water • How much would you weigh on Jupiter? • If you weighed 70 pounds on Earth you would weigh 185 pounds on Jupiter

  13. What is the “Eye of Jupiter” and how and big is it? • It is a massive storm over three hundred years old, bigger than the Earth with super hurricane force winds

  14. Jupiter, the fifth planet from the Sun, is the largest planet in our solar system. • Jupiter is so big that over 1,000 planets the size of Earth could fit into it. • It has over 60 moons and 3 rings.  • Can life exist on Jupiter's moon, Europa? The “Great Red Spot” or “Eye of Jupiter” JUPITER Here are a few of Jupiter’s moons

  15. We can’t forget about Pluto!

  16. …some things are so far beyond our current technology that we can only guess what they look like.

  17. Which is further away from Earth? Neptune or Pluto? • That depends!! Objects usually orbit in a circle….Pluto orbits the sun in more of an egg shape…so sometimes it is closer to Earth than Neptune as their orbits cross! • Is Pluto a planet? • Not anymore! Poor Pluto was downgraded from being a planet in 2006. Objects like Pluto are now called “Plutoids”

  18. How big is Pluto? • Pluto is very small, it is only about a third the size of our Moon • Pluto has how many moons? • Pluto has 3 moons!

  19. Pluto used to be the ninth planet from the Sun, which made it the smallest planet in our solar system. • Some scientists believe that Pluto once was one of Neptune’s moons, and that it pulled out away from Neptune and made its own orbit. PLUTO Clearest view to date of Pluto and Charon

  20. A little show and tell!

  21. I am sometimes made of Iron • I have three names • I have seen things you can only imagine • I came from outer space

  22. What is this?

  23. A meteoroid is a particle of debris in the Solar System. (They can be as small as sand or as big as a boulder!) • When the meteoroid enters Earth's (or another body's) atmosphere it is called a meteor, a shooting star or falling star. If the meteor reaches the ground and survives impact, it is called a meteorite.

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