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The Solar System

Explore the evolution of our understanding of the solar system, from the Earth-centered model to the sun-centered model developed by Copernicus, Galileo's observations through a telescope, Kepler's discovery of elliptical orbits, and the formation of the solar system. Learn about the Big Bang Theory, the redshift phenomenon, and the formation of the Milky Way galaxy. Discover the Earth's rotation, revolution, and seasons, as well as the fascinating moon phases and facts about the moon. Lastly, delve into the solar system, including the eight planets, dwarf planets, and other objects orbiting the sun.

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The Solar System

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  1. The Solar System 11-1

  2. Earth-Centered Model • Early Greek scientists thought the planets, the sun, and the moon circled around the Earth. • Everything revolved around the Earth.

  3. Dead Guy #1Nicolas Copernicus • Copernicus - was the 1st to develop the sun-centered model of the solar system.

  4. Dead Guy #2Galileo Galilei • Galileo - found more evidence to support the sun-centered model by using a telescope.

  5. Dead Guy #3Johannes Kepler • Kepler – discovered that the planets orbit was not circular but elliptical. • Speed increases closer to Sun

  6. Scale BIGUniverse l Galaxy l SMALLSolar System

  7. Solar System

  8. Milky Way Galaxy

  9. Formation of Universe Big Bang Theory – • Beginning of the Universe • 14 billion year old • Explosion of expanding matter

  10. Red Shift • Hubble space telescope • Spectral lines in light shifted towards the red end of spectrum • Doppler effect • When object moves away from you waves are stretched out

  11. Formation of the Solar System • Our sun and solar system formed from a cloud of gas, ice, and dust. • Formed 5 billion years ago. • Slowing rotating in space.

  12. Solar Nebula • Rotating cloud of dust and gas from which the sun and planets form

  13. Solar System • Large clumps collided and grew in size. • Larger clumps became planets.

  14. Earth’s Rotation • Earth spins around an imaginary line called an axis • Rotation – the spinning of Earth on its axis • 1 time every 24 hours

  15. Rotation • Sun appears to be moving in the sky • Sun rises in east • Sun sets in west • Causes night and day

  16. Earth’s Revolution • Orbit – the path of Earth’s movement • Revolution – the path Earth travels as it moves around the Sun • 1 year

  17. Earth’s Orbit

  18. Seasons • Earth’s axis is tilted • The tilt of Earth causes seasons • Why?

  19. Seasons • Part of Earth tilted towards Sun – more direct sunlight • Summer • Part of Earth tilted away from Sun – less direct sunlight • Winter

  20. Seasons • Longer days in summer. • Sun is higher on horizon. • Spring and Fall?

  21. Space Age Sheet

  22. Moon Phases • Luna • Moon revolves around Earth • Once every 27.3 days • Moon looks different at different times • WHY?!

  23. Moon Phases • Lunar phases are created by changing angles (relative positions) of the earth, the moon and the sun, as the moon orbits the earth.

  24. Moon Phases • Looks different at different time of the month. • Moon phases – change in appearance of the Moon from Earth

  25. Moon Phases • Light from Moon is reflected from the Sun • Waxing – looks to be getting larger • Waning – looks to be getting smaller

  26. Moon Facts • Dr. Eugene Shoemaker, a Geological Surveyor, who educated the Apollo mission astronauts about craters, never made it into space himself, but it had always been one of his dreams. He was rejected as an astronaut because of medical problems. After he died, his ashes were placed on board the Lunar Prospector spacecraft on January 6, 1999, which was crashed into a crater on the moon on July 31, 1999. The mission was to discover if there was water on the moon at the time, but it also served to fulfill Dr Shoemaker's last wish. • When Neil Armstrong took that first historical step and said "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind" it would not have occurred to anyone that the step he took in the dust of the moon was there to stay. It will be there for millions of years because there is no wind on the moon. That is, assuming the downdraft from the Command Module upon takeoff back into space didn't destroy the print. Buzz Aldrin reportedly saw the American flag, much further away, blow over during launch. Nevertheless, any footprints made by the famous astronauts undisturbed by takeoff are, in fact, there to stay. • When Alan Sheppard was on the moon, he hit a golf ball and drove it 2,400 feet, nearly one half a mile.

  27. Moon Facts • In a survey conducted in 1988, 13% of those surveyed believed that the moon is made of cheese. • The multi layer space suits worn by the astronauts to the moon weighed 180 pounds on earth, but thirty pounds on the moon due to the lower gravity. • Apollo 15 was the first mission to use a lunar rover. The top speed that was ever recorded in this 4-wheeled land vehicle was 10.56 miles per hour. • The moon rotates at 10 miles per hour compared to the earth's rotation of 1000 miles per hour. • The dark spots we see on the moon that create the image of the man in the moon are actually craters filled with basalt, which is a very dense material. • The moon is the only extraterrestrial body that has ever been visited by humans. It is also the only body that has had samples taken from it.

  28. The Solar System • Solar System – made up of 8 planets • Including numerous other objects that orbit the sun

  29. Planets • Orbits Sun • Nearly spherical shape

  30. Dwarf Planets • Do not have more mass than objects it orbits nearby • Rock and ice • Smaller than Earth

  31. Measuring Space • Astronomical Units – AU’s • 150 million km’s • 93 million miles • Distance from Earth to Sun

  32. Comets • Giant dirty snowballs • Made of dust and frozen gases • Ice • Oval orbit • Over 100 billion

  33. Asteroids • Small rocky objects • Orbit the Sun • Between Mars and Jupiter

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