
the universe notes - Cloverleaf Local Schools
... 5. The cloud grew hotter and denser in the center, with a disk of gas and dust surrounding it that was hot in the center but cool at the edges. 6. As the disk got thinner and thinner, particles began to stick together and form clumps. 7. Some clumps got bigger, as particles and small clumps stuck t ...
... 5. The cloud grew hotter and denser in the center, with a disk of gas and dust surrounding it that was hot in the center but cool at the edges. 6. As the disk got thinner and thinner, particles began to stick together and form clumps. 7. Some clumps got bigger, as particles and small clumps stuck t ...
First detection of a planet that survived the red giant expansion of its
... only 1.7 times the medium distance between the Earth and the Sun. During a “red giant phase”, the stars, after exhausting their primary fuel, hydrogen, in the core, experience an enormous expansion (with their volume increasing by a factor of a few millions) that can easily reach and engulf the i ...
... only 1.7 times the medium distance between the Earth and the Sun. During a “red giant phase”, the stars, after exhausting their primary fuel, hydrogen, in the core, experience an enormous expansion (with their volume increasing by a factor of a few millions) that can easily reach and engulf the i ...
Monday – October 29th - East Hanover Township School District
... Gas Giants • The outer solar system (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune) are called the Gas Giants. • These planets are HUGE! • Jupiter alone is 318 times bigger than our Earth! ...
... Gas Giants • The outer solar system (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune) are called the Gas Giants. • These planets are HUGE! • Jupiter alone is 318 times bigger than our Earth! ...
Atmospheres of TrES-1 and HD209458b (Part 2)
... How significantly do atmospheres deviate from radiative equilibrium (energy sources and sinks) How is day-night temperature homogenization affected by: Incident flux Surface gravity Atmospheric metallicity Rotation rate What is the role of cloud opacity? Does it effect emitted spectra a ...
... How significantly do atmospheres deviate from radiative equilibrium (energy sources and sinks) How is day-night temperature homogenization affected by: Incident flux Surface gravity Atmospheric metallicity Rotation rate What is the role of cloud opacity? Does it effect emitted spectra a ...
PPT - El Camino College
... – Collisions can destroy small planetesimals. – What’s left at the end? – What’s the temperature like near the Sun? • Gases won’t stay on the planets ...
... – Collisions can destroy small planetesimals. – What’s left at the end? – What’s the temperature like near the Sun? • Gases won’t stay on the planets ...
Chapter 13 Notes – The Deaths of Stars
... Final stages of fusion in high-mass stars ( ___________ solar masses) leading to the formation of an ___________ core, happen extremely rapidly: _________ burning only lasts for about _______ day Iron core ultimately _________________, triggering an explosion that destroys the star: A __________ ...
... Final stages of fusion in high-mass stars ( ___________ solar masses) leading to the formation of an ___________ core, happen extremely rapidly: _________ burning only lasts for about _______ day Iron core ultimately _________________, triggering an explosion that destroys the star: A __________ ...
Astronomy Review Sheet
... - Astronomy- study of out space (planets, stars, moons) - Solar System- the Sun, the planets, and their moons - Spherical- round shaped like a ball - Atmosphere- layer of gas found around some planets (including Earth) - Inertia- a moving object will keep moving in a straight line until another forc ...
... - Astronomy- study of out space (planets, stars, moons) - Solar System- the Sun, the planets, and their moons - Spherical- round shaped like a ball - Atmosphere- layer of gas found around some planets (including Earth) - Inertia- a moving object will keep moving in a straight line until another forc ...
PLANETS
... dust & rocks), outflow has stopped, the star is visible. Theory: Gas disperses, “planetesimals” form (up to 100 km diameter rocks), collide & stick together due to gravity forming protoplanets). Protoplanets interact with dust disks: tidal torques cause planets to migrate inward toward their host st ...
... dust & rocks), outflow has stopped, the star is visible. Theory: Gas disperses, “planetesimals” form (up to 100 km diameter rocks), collide & stick together due to gravity forming protoplanets). Protoplanets interact with dust disks: tidal torques cause planets to migrate inward toward their host st ...
Day-26
... newly forming star that was much hotter than the protoSun. What would we expect about its planets? A. The planets orbit at random angles around the star. B. Rocky planets might be formed over a wider range of distances than in our Solar System. C. The star would be “naked,” without a surrounding dis ...
... newly forming star that was much hotter than the protoSun. What would we expect about its planets? A. The planets orbit at random angles around the star. B. Rocky planets might be formed over a wider range of distances than in our Solar System. C. The star would be “naked,” without a surrounding dis ...
Introduction to the solar system
... LEARNING TARGET: I WILL BE ABLE TO DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE PARTS OF OUR SOLAR SYSTEM ...
... LEARNING TARGET: I WILL BE ABLE TO DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE PARTS OF OUR SOLAR SYSTEM ...
Lecture 43
... pressures are 0.006 atm). The Martian atmosphere is dominated by CO2, with N2 as the second most abundant component. However, significant amounts of liquid water existed on the Martian surface during its first billion years or so, and there is evidence of some small ephemeral streams now. To attain ...
... pressures are 0.006 atm). The Martian atmosphere is dominated by CO2, with N2 as the second most abundant component. However, significant amounts of liquid water existed on the Martian surface during its first billion years or so, and there is evidence of some small ephemeral streams now. To attain ...
"The Solar System" Slideshow
... due to collision with some other body) • Originally thought to be a star • Bright blue-green due to methane gas in its atmosphere • 64 Earths could fit inside it ...
... due to collision with some other body) • Originally thought to be a star • Bright blue-green due to methane gas in its atmosphere • 64 Earths could fit inside it ...
Ch16: The Milky Way
... The orbital speed (v) and radius (r) of a star on a circular orbit around the galaxy tells us the total mass (Mr) contained within that orbit ...
... The orbital speed (v) and radius (r) of a star on a circular orbit around the galaxy tells us the total mass (Mr) contained within that orbit ...
Class 1 and 2 lecture slides (Solar System Formation)
... • As the nebula collapses, it forms a spinning disk (due to conservation of angular momentum) • The collapse releases gravitational energy, which heats the centre; this central hot portion forms a star • The outer, cooler particles suffer repeated collisions, building planet-sized bodies from dust g ...
... • As the nebula collapses, it forms a spinning disk (due to conservation of angular momentum) • The collapse releases gravitational energy, which heats the centre; this central hot portion forms a star • The outer, cooler particles suffer repeated collisions, building planet-sized bodies from dust g ...
practice exam #1
... 11. What do astronomers suspect is the reason for the high-density planets being close to the Sun, and the low-density planets further away? a. The low-density planets all have weaker gravity, so they have moved further away b. The high-density planets have very strong magnetic fields that pull them ...
... 11. What do astronomers suspect is the reason for the high-density planets being close to the Sun, and the low-density planets further away? a. The low-density planets all have weaker gravity, so they have moved further away b. The high-density planets have very strong magnetic fields that pull them ...
Midterm II Jeopardy
... $200 - This planet occasionally has dust storms which obscure its ENTIRE surface. (Mars) $400 - You can only see these planets close to the horizon (45 degrees or less). (Venus & Mercury) $600 - This is how we observed the rings around Uranus. (Occultation) $800 - These two planets most closely rese ...
... $200 - This planet occasionally has dust storms which obscure its ENTIRE surface. (Mars) $400 - You can only see these planets close to the horizon (45 degrees or less). (Venus & Mercury) $600 - This is how we observed the rings around Uranus. (Occultation) $800 - These two planets most closely rese ...