Transcript Document

The Planets page 694
Formation of the Solar System
• The sun formed by gravitational
contraction of a huge amount of
interstellar matter around 5 billion years
ago. We call this process accretion.
The universe began primarily
as hydrogen.
• All other elements have to form in stars
through nuclear fusion.
Ellipse Activity
Materials
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Cardboard
Pins (2)
Pencil
String (20-25cm)
Paper
• Place blank paper on
cardboard and put pins
3cm apart
• Tie string into circle
with circumference
15-20 cm
• Put string around pins
and put a pencil in the
string
• Draw several ellipses
• Vary the distance
between the pins
• OBSERVE
Johann’s thing
Keplers Laws of
Planetary Motion
Law 1:
Each planet moves in an elliptical orbit
having the sun at one focus.
Law 2:
An imaginary line from the sun to any
planet sweeps out equal areas in equal
time intervals.
So . . . planets move faster when it is
near the sun and more slowly when
it is far away
2
3
p =d
Law 3:
The square of any
planet’s period is
proportional to the
cube of the
planet’s average
distance from the
Sun
Period—
• the time it takes for a planet to
make one complete revolution
Bode's Law
• (That is actually neither Bode's not
a Law.)
– Begin a series of numbers with
zero, add 3, then double the
number hereafter
– Add 4
– Divide by 10
Original series
Add 4
Divide by 10
0
4
.4
3
7
.7
6
10
1.0
12
16
1.6
24
28
2.8
48
52
5.2
96
100
10.0
192
196
19.6
384
388
38.8
768
772
77.2
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Mercury
Venus
Earth
Mars
Jupiter
Saturn
Uranus
Neptune
Pluto
Bode's
Actual
0.4
0.7
1.0
1.6
2.8
5.2
10.0
19.6
30.6
38.8
0.39
0.72
1.0
1.52
2.77
5.20
9.54
19.18
30.07
39.44
Stars remain relatively fixed in
the sky, but the planets wander
The definition of a planet recently
changed
Planet qualifications
• Must orbit the sun
• Must have a basically round shape
(hydrostatic equilibrium
• Must have cleared its orbit of other
objects
– Pluto misses the third—the Kuiper Belt
My very excellent mother just
served us nine pizzas.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn,
Uranus, Neptune, (Pluto)
Two groups of planets:
Inner & Outer
Inner planets: The four planets closest to
the sun
• Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars
• also called the Terrestrial planets-small, rocky, high density
• The mass of a body cannot be found
unless it has a Satellite
Mercury
• Fastest planet
• Rotation 88 days
• Rotates 3 x's for every 2 revolutions so
daytime is very hot, 430 C
• Very little atmosphere-- nighttime cold,
-170C
• Mariner probe visits –used to determine
mass
Venus
Usually the brightest planet in the sky
Brighter than Mercury and seen near
the Sun at sunup or sunset
Venus is sometimes called
Earth's twin
Similar size, density, and distance from the sun
But there are differences
Venus Greenhouse Effect
Very dense atmosphere, and opaque cloud
cover
severe greenhouse effect
Sulfuric acid rain
Very hot place 460 C
1 rotation = 243 Earth days 1 revolution = 225
Earth days
So. . . a day is longer than a year
Earth --The Blue Planet
Earth is special
because water may
exist
as a liquid and so it
is conducive to life
71% water
Mars—The Red Planet
Red is from FeO iron
oxide—rust
Mass is 1/9 of Earth
A little more than 1/2
Earth's size
Atmosphere is 95% CO2
Two small moons:
Phobos and
Deimos—
potato shaped
Olympus Mons:
• largest mountain
in the Solar
System rising 24
km (78,000 ft.)
above the
surrounding plain
• base is more than
500 km in
diameter
• rimmed by a cliff
6 km (20,000 ft)
high (right)
Erosion on Mars
There is very clear
evidence of erosion
in many places on
Mars including large
floods and small
river systems (left)
At some time in the
past there was
clearly some sort of
fluid on the surface