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theory (casual usage of the word) vs. scientific theory
theory (casual usage of the word) vs. scientific theory

... galaxies are identified in 2D images (right), then have their distance determined from their spectrum to create a 2 billion light-years deep 3D map (left) where each galaxy is shown as a single point, the color representing the luminosity - this shows only those 66,976 our of 205,443 galaxies in th ...
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... Edwin Hubble on this date, November 20th, in 1889. Both these men made remarkable discoveries about our Universe. Shapley discovered that our sun and solar system were not at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy, but instead a little over halfway out, and that the Milky Way was much larger than anyone ...
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Unit 13 The Solar System

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... Makemake, a dwarf planet in our Solar System, appears to have no atmosphere; it is bald! This means it’s not able to hold on to the few sunrays it receives at its distant location, which is even farther away from the Sun than its cousin, Pluto. Until a few years ago, Pluto was considered to be the m ...
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... • σ = 5.7 x 10-8 W/(m2-K4) • 1 parsec = 3.26 light years 1) In the sky, you follow an object as it passes through the constellations Leo, Hydra, and Canis Major. What can you say about this object? A) This object is one of the nine planets. B) This object is not one of the nine planets. C) This obje ...
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... • σ = 5.7 x 10-8 W/(m2-K4) • 1 parsec = 3.26 light years 1) In the sky, you follow an object as it passes through the constellations Leo, Hydra, and Canis Major. What can you say about this object? A) This object is one of the nine planets. B) This object will collide with the sun. C) This object is ...
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... observations of Venus, the Maya were timing some of their wars based on the stationary points of Venus and Jupiter, Humans were sacrificed on the first appearance, when Venus was at its dimmest magnitude. They observed the moon (ixchel): Was as important as the sun!, Ixchel the moon goddess battled ...
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Lesson 29

... There is much information to learn about the planets. It takes Earth one year, 365 days, to complete one orbit around the sun. The planet Mercury takes only 88 days to orbit the sun, since it is closest to the sun; but Pluto takes 248 years. Pluto and Neptune are the coldest planets with temperature ...
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Comparative planetary science

Comparative planetary science or comparative planetology is a branch of space science and planetary science in which different natural processes and systems are studied by their effects and phenomena on and between multiple bodies. The planetary processes in question include geology, hydrology, atmospheric physics, and interactions such as impact cratering, space weathering, and magnetospheric physics in the solar wind, and possibly biology, via astrobiology.Comparison of multiple bodies assists the researcher, if for no other reason than the Earth is far more accessible than any other body. Those distant bodies may then be evaluated in the context of processes already characterized on Earth. Conversely, other bodies (including extrasolar ones) may provide additional examples, edge cases, and counterexamples to earthbound processes; without a greater context, studying these phenomena in relation to Earth alone may result in low sample sizes and observational biases.
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