
The Planets in our Solar System
... influenced the condensation of various substances within the evolving solar system. • Eventually, the condensing material merged to form large bodies hundreds of kilometers in diameter. ...
... influenced the condensation of various substances within the evolving solar system. • Eventually, the condensing material merged to form large bodies hundreds of kilometers in diameter. ...
Formation of the Solar System
... Formation of the Solar Nebula Material begins to evaporate While protoplanets are forming, the Sun’s luminosity is growing, first due to gravitational contraction, then due to nuclear ignition. Regions of the nebula close to the Sun will get hot; the outer regions will stay cool. In the hot reg ...
... Formation of the Solar Nebula Material begins to evaporate While protoplanets are forming, the Sun’s luminosity is growing, first due to gravitational contraction, then due to nuclear ignition. Regions of the nebula close to the Sun will get hot; the outer regions will stay cool. In the hot reg ...
Our local neighbourhood – The Solar System (PPT file, 6.12 MB)
... All orbits are in the same direction and in the same plane. Suggests a common origin. Solar system formed when a cloud of gas and dust in space was disturbed. Gas and dust drawn together, forming a solar nebula. The cloud began to spin as it collapsed and therefore flattened. ...
... All orbits are in the same direction and in the same plane. Suggests a common origin. Solar system formed when a cloud of gas and dust in space was disturbed. Gas and dust drawn together, forming a solar nebula. The cloud began to spin as it collapsed and therefore flattened. ...
Planets beyond the solar system
... In our own solar system, we find life (at least so far) only on a planet – Earth. Planets in other solar systems are an obvious place to look for life beyond Earth. ...
... In our own solar system, we find life (at least so far) only on a planet – Earth. Planets in other solar systems are an obvious place to look for life beyond Earth. ...
31_Finding Earths
... and He such as C, O, Fe…). We think these elements helped form the first solids as the gas cloud cooled and these solids acted as nucleation sites for additional material to condense to form rocky cores of planets. ...
... and He such as C, O, Fe…). We think these elements helped form the first solids as the gas cloud cooled and these solids acted as nucleation sites for additional material to condense to form rocky cores of planets. ...
Stellar Formation 1) Solar Wind/Sunspots 2) Interstellar Medium 3) Protostars
... In dense molecular clouds gravity eventually wins ...
... In dense molecular clouds gravity eventually wins ...
Cosmochemistry from Nanometers to Light- Years A Written by
... Measurements of the material ejected from comet Tempel 1 when a massive projectile whacked into it at 10 kilometers per second showed that crystalline silicates were present, not just noncrystalline materials. [Deep Impact image gallery] ...
... Measurements of the material ejected from comet Tempel 1 when a massive projectile whacked into it at 10 kilometers per second showed that crystalline silicates were present, not just noncrystalline materials. [Deep Impact image gallery] ...
A Drastic Chemical Change Occurring in Birth of Planetary System
... consisting of gas and dust. In the course of this process, a gas disk (protoplanetary disk), whose size is an order of 100 AU, is formed around the protostar, and is evolved into a planetary system. The Solar system was also formed in this way about 4.6 billion years ago, and the life is eventually ...
... consisting of gas and dust. In the course of this process, a gas disk (protoplanetary disk), whose size is an order of 100 AU, is formed around the protostar, and is evolved into a planetary system. The Solar system was also formed in this way about 4.6 billion years ago, and the life is eventually ...
Unit 3 *The Solar System* 6th Grade Space Science
... System by characteristics, such as: shape, and appearance, what they orbit, how large they are, and how far away their orbits are from the Sun. ...
... System by characteristics, such as: shape, and appearance, what they orbit, how large they are, and how far away their orbits are from the Sun. ...
Neptune Trojans
... 2. Single Stellar Encounter -Galactic tides too weak (only good for Oort cloud ~10,000 AU) -Needs to be very close encounter for Sedna to be excited (~500 AU) -May hint that our Sun formed in a very dense stellar environment. -May cause edge in Kuiper Belt -Too early and Sedna not formed in outer KB ...
... 2. Single Stellar Encounter -Galactic tides too weak (only good for Oort cloud ~10,000 AU) -Needs to be very close encounter for Sedna to be excited (~500 AU) -May hint that our Sun formed in a very dense stellar environment. -May cause edge in Kuiper Belt -Too early and Sedna not formed in outer KB ...
Midterm Review Sheet
... Giant impacts and explanation for peculiarities in the solar system (formation of the ...
... Giant impacts and explanation for peculiarities in the solar system (formation of the ...
Asteroseismology of Kepler Exoplanet Host Stars
... • Super-Earth and Neptune (8:1 density ratio) in neighboring orbits. How? Carter et al. (2012, Science) ...
... • Super-Earth and Neptune (8:1 density ratio) in neighboring orbits. How? Carter et al. (2012, Science) ...
Chapter13
... • Sun will expand to a Red giant in ~ 5 billion years • Expands to ~ Earth’s radius • Earth will then be incinerated! • Sun may form a planetary nebula (but uncertain) • Sun’s C,O core will become a white dwarf ...
... • Sun will expand to a Red giant in ~ 5 billion years • Expands to ~ Earth’s radius • Earth will then be incinerated! • Sun may form a planetary nebula (but uncertain) • Sun’s C,O core will become a white dwarf ...
Astro 102/104 Our Solar System Spring 2008 NAME: Section
... whereas the terrestrial planets formed from just the small fraction of nebular material that was solid inside the frost line. This resulted in the smaller size and different composition of the terrestrial planets. c. [2 points] Given your answer to part (b), why was it surprising to find “hot Jupite ...
... whereas the terrestrial planets formed from just the small fraction of nebular material that was solid inside the frost line. This resulted in the smaller size and different composition of the terrestrial planets. c. [2 points] Given your answer to part (b), why was it surprising to find “hot Jupite ...
Why Is the Sun a Star
... star? If an object is massive enough its gravity will be strong enough to begin crushing the matter at the core and a star is “born”. Imagine that we could pile everything we could get our hands on and throw it into a pile in the center of the grass field at school. Eventually if our pile got big en ...
... star? If an object is massive enough its gravity will be strong enough to begin crushing the matter at the core and a star is “born”. Imagine that we could pile everything we could get our hands on and throw it into a pile in the center of the grass field at school. Eventually if our pile got big en ...
Are there Planets outside the Solar System
... Stability of an additional planet known parameters of system: mass of star [M_sun]: 0.5 mass of giant planet [M_jup]: 0.21 semi-major axis of giant planet [AU]: 4.6 eccentricity of giant planet: 0.11 +/- error of eccentricity: 0.05 ...
... Stability of an additional planet known parameters of system: mass of star [M_sun]: 0.5 mass of giant planet [M_jup]: 0.21 semi-major axis of giant planet [AU]: 4.6 eccentricity of giant planet: 0.11 +/- error of eccentricity: 0.05 ...
Physical Attributes of Stars
... • It takes 24 hours! That’s why we have day and night • It also revolves or orbits around the sun • A complete revolution takes about 1 year! ...
... • It takes 24 hours! That’s why we have day and night • It also revolves or orbits around the sun • A complete revolution takes about 1 year! ...
The Evolution of the Solar System
... released solar winds that pushed the surrounding dust and gases all around areas. Grains of dust collided and formed bigger and bigger lumps. Some of these lumps crashed together and formed planets, drawn together under gravity. The four solid rock planets, Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars were creat ...
... released solar winds that pushed the surrounding dust and gases all around areas. Grains of dust collided and formed bigger and bigger lumps. Some of these lumps crashed together and formed planets, drawn together under gravity. The four solid rock planets, Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars were creat ...
Death of Stars
... Birth Place of Stars: Dark and cold inter-stellar clouds These clouds are made of more hydrogen than helium. These clouds have very small amount of heavier elements. ...
... Birth Place of Stars: Dark and cold inter-stellar clouds These clouds are made of more hydrogen than helium. These clouds have very small amount of heavier elements. ...