
File
... piece of cardboard or tag board. You could even paint the board black to make it look like space. What's Happening? You just made a model of the solar system! It represents the way the planets are positioned and the different sizes and colors that each one is. The planets always remain in this order ...
... piece of cardboard or tag board. You could even paint the board black to make it look like space. What's Happening? You just made a model of the solar system! It represents the way the planets are positioned and the different sizes and colors that each one is. The planets always remain in this order ...
4. Massive Stars and HII Regions
... if rare in numbers, have a profound impact on their environment. They are the fundamental producers of heavy elements, generate huge amounts of high energy radiation, trigger star formation. Their lifetime on the main sequence is rather short: ...
... if rare in numbers, have a profound impact on their environment. They are the fundamental producers of heavy elements, generate huge amounts of high energy radiation, trigger star formation. Their lifetime on the main sequence is rather short: ...
Astronomy – The Milky Way Galaxy
... __________________ Galaxy is comparable in size, though slightly larger. ...
... __________________ Galaxy is comparable in size, though slightly larger. ...
Objectives
... • Less massive stars burn cooler and therefore can last longer • Our Sun will fuse hydrogen for about 10 billion years • Once a star’s Hydrogen supply runs out, fusion stops and the core begins to contract • At this time, the outer layers of hydrogen fuse at an incredible rate and the star expands t ...
... • Less massive stars burn cooler and therefore can last longer • Our Sun will fuse hydrogen for about 10 billion years • Once a star’s Hydrogen supply runs out, fusion stops and the core begins to contract • At this time, the outer layers of hydrogen fuse at an incredible rate and the star expands t ...
Neutron Stars - Otterbein University
... • core continues to cool and contract • Size ~ Earth • Density: a million times that of Earth – 1 cubic cm has 1000 kg of mass! ...
... • core continues to cool and contract • Size ~ Earth • Density: a million times that of Earth – 1 cubic cm has 1000 kg of mass! ...
Epsilon Aurigae Mystery and Opportunity
... The secondary orbits at the distance of Uranus from the Sun. Both components are 14-15 solar masses. ...
... The secondary orbits at the distance of Uranus from the Sun. Both components are 14-15 solar masses. ...
pdf - Starchitect
... Opportunities to build planets come in specific windows during the life of the star. Giant worlds come first: these can’t support life, but they can help shield planets from asteroids and comets that could lead to extinction events. Moons come next, since they are often formed over material that did ...
... Opportunities to build planets come in specific windows during the life of the star. Giant worlds come first: these can’t support life, but they can help shield planets from asteroids and comets that could lead to extinction events. Moons come next, since they are often formed over material that did ...
Orbital Instabilities in Triaxial Mass Distributions and
... Back to our original questions: [1] How does the initial cluster environment affect the formation of stars and planets? [2] What can we say about the basic properties of the birth cluster for our own Sun and its Solar System? ...
... Back to our original questions: [1] How does the initial cluster environment affect the formation of stars and planets? [2] What can we say about the basic properties of the birth cluster for our own Sun and its Solar System? ...
30-2 Directed Reading
... c. the main-sequence stage d. the nebula stage _____ 16. A star that has the same mass as the sun’s mass a. stays on the main sequence for about 10 million years. b. stays on the main sequence for about 10 billion years. c. stays on the main sequence for about 14 billion years. d. stays on the main ...
... c. the main-sequence stage d. the nebula stage _____ 16. A star that has the same mass as the sun’s mass a. stays on the main sequence for about 10 million years. b. stays on the main sequence for about 10 billion years. c. stays on the main sequence for about 14 billion years. d. stays on the main ...
earth & space science
... As gravity makes dense regions within a nebula more compact, these regions spin and shrink and begin to form a flattened disk. The disk has a central concentration of matter called a protostar. The protostar continues to contract and increase in temperature for several million years. Eventually the ...
... As gravity makes dense regions within a nebula more compact, these regions spin and shrink and begin to form a flattened disk. The disk has a central concentration of matter called a protostar. The protostar continues to contract and increase in temperature for several million years. Eventually the ...
Planets Images - Institute of Physics
... full-disk image of Mars, “the red planet”. Mars is a cold desert world about half the diameter of Earth and has the same amount of dry land. Like Earth, Mars has seasons, polar ice caps, volcanoes, canyons and weather, but its atmosphere is too thin for liquid water to exist for long on the surface. ...
... full-disk image of Mars, “the red planet”. Mars is a cold desert world about half the diameter of Earth and has the same amount of dry land. Like Earth, Mars has seasons, polar ice caps, volcanoes, canyons and weather, but its atmosphere is too thin for liquid water to exist for long on the surface. ...
Nebulae
... 2. What kind of matter exists in the spaces between the stars? 3. In what kind of nebulae do new stars form? 4. What steps are involved in forming a star like the Sun? 5. When a star forms, why does it end up with only a fraction of the available matter? 6. What do star clusters tell us about the fo ...
... 2. What kind of matter exists in the spaces between the stars? 3. In what kind of nebulae do new stars form? 4. What steps are involved in forming a star like the Sun? 5. When a star forms, why does it end up with only a fraction of the available matter? 6. What do star clusters tell us about the fo ...
The Solar System
... systems), outflows and jets. • Disperse their cocoon to become visible. • Typically form in clusters, dominated by light from 1–2 brightest members. GENS4001 Astronomy ...
... systems), outflows and jets. • Disperse their cocoon to become visible. • Typically form in clusters, dominated by light from 1–2 brightest members. GENS4001 Astronomy ...
pptx - University of Rochester
... origin require fine tuning so that planets can bypass 4:3, 5:4, 6:5 resonances and capture into the 7:6 resonance. Stochastic forcing would pull the system out of resonance unless the gas disk is depleted soon after capture • Encounters with planetary embryos can remove two planets from outer resona ...
... origin require fine tuning so that planets can bypass 4:3, 5:4, 6:5 resonances and capture into the 7:6 resonance. Stochastic forcing would pull the system out of resonance unless the gas disk is depleted soon after capture • Encounters with planetary embryos can remove two planets from outer resona ...
PPT - McMaster Physics and Astronomy
... • Horizontal Branch (stage 10): He core burn – and H shell burn. The “MainSequence” for He burning. • Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) stage 10 – stage 11: Shell burning for both He and H. Carbon ash accumulates in core. •Produces much larger red star – Red Supergiant [500 solar radii – swallows Mars! ...
... • Horizontal Branch (stage 10): He core burn – and H shell burn. The “MainSequence” for He burning. • Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) stage 10 – stage 11: Shell burning for both He and H. Carbon ash accumulates in core. •Produces much larger red star – Red Supergiant [500 solar radii – swallows Mars! ...
TCI_Paper2_ConditionsForLife
... masses holds the correct amount of gravity to form such a planet (Traub 6). A planet more than ten times more massive than the Earth will accumulate a very large atmosphere very quickly during its formation, developing into a gas giant similar to Jupiter or Uranus. On the other hand, Mars, at about ...
... masses holds the correct amount of gravity to form such a planet (Traub 6). A planet more than ten times more massive than the Earth will accumulate a very large atmosphere very quickly during its formation, developing into a gas giant similar to Jupiter or Uranus. On the other hand, Mars, at about ...
Phys 214. Planets and Life
... Hot-jovian describes the most common type of extrasolar planet discovered to date. The orbits of most extrasolar planets detected to date are highly elliptical. Most of the extrasolar planetary systems discovered to date are very different than our own solar system having Jovian-sized planets close ...
... Hot-jovian describes the most common type of extrasolar planet discovered to date. The orbits of most extrasolar planets detected to date are highly elliptical. Most of the extrasolar planetary systems discovered to date are very different than our own solar system having Jovian-sized planets close ...