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Student Created Jeopardy
Student Created Jeopardy

... Answer: Neptune Back to the Game Board ...
AGS General Science Chapt 17
AGS General Science Chapt 17

... the photosphere. This is the layer of gas that gives off light. Just outside of this layer is another layer of gas called the chromosphere. The gas of the chromosphere can sometimes be seen during a total solar eclipse, when the photosphere is blocked. The outer layer of the sun's atmosphere is the ...
Distances intheSolar System
Distances intheSolar System

... Discuss the concept of distance. Ask the children which things they think are nearby and which are far away. Examples to think about are the school, the local supermarket, France, Australia, the Moon, and the Sun. Write the children's answers in the column 'Nearby' or 'Far away'. They may initially ...
Meteorites
Meteorites

... would lie rather than stones would fall from heaven." – Thomas Jefferson Astro 102/104 ...
Planet Tour
Planet Tour

... things move the way they do. It needs to be verified by tests. ...
Phases of the Moon, Planets, and Seasons 4th Grade Science
Phases of the Moon, Planets, and Seasons 4th Grade Science

... Day and night cycles are caused by Earth's spin on its axis. Earth turns or rotates one time every 24 hours. The part of Earth that is facing the Sun experiences day, and the part facing away from the Sun experiences night. As Earth spins counterclockwise (viewed from above the North Pole) the regio ...
Meet Our Solar System
Meet Our Solar System

... that may need extra reinforcement. The goal is to provide opportunities to assess student progress without creating the need for a separate, formal assessment session (or activity) for each of the 40 hands-on activities at this grade level. 1. Ask, Is our classroom a “system”? Is this school buildin ...
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Slide 1

... – Mercury low in the sky. – Mercury is small. – Contrasts are weak. ...
The Great Archaean Bombardment (and the Late Heavy
The Great Archaean Bombardment (and the Late Heavy

... occurred between 3.8 and 4.1 Gyr ago. The most likely trigger for the onset of the LHB was a dynamical instability in the outer solar system which made the giant planets scatter each other. The eccentric giant planets and the appearance of secular resonances at 2 AU destabilised the E-belt, which is ...
24. Life Beyond Earth: Prospects for Microbes
24. Life Beyond Earth: Prospects for Microbes

... • Have we discovered habitable planets around other stars? • No, our current technology is not quite up to the task. However, upcoming missions should soon tell us whether terrestrial planets exist within the habitable zones of nearby stars, and missions a decade or two away may tell us whether thes ...
BIG Education Pack:
BIG Education Pack:

... will burn steadily for around 9 billion years with a surface temperature of 5800K (~5,500ºC). Larger stars generally burn faster and hotter, smaller stars burn more gently and for longer. The Sun is about halfway through its current life so there are around 4.5 billion years before the Sun runs out ...
Science Program — Key Stage 2
Science Program — Key Stage 2

... trying to figure out why Uranus’s orbit was different than astronomers predicted. They hypothesised that there must be another planet affecting the orbit and – sure enough – they found Neptune! Neptune is another giant gas planet. Scientists think it has a liquid core that is as large as Earth. Nept ...
ON PLANETARY ELECTROMAGNETISM AND GRAVITY Ashwini
ON PLANETARY ELECTROMAGNETISM AND GRAVITY Ashwini

... worldly objects. The giant electromagnet seated within the Earth is bounded by the layers of mantle and crust. As such, the intensity of magnetic field generated due to dynamo action in the Earth's core gets depleted due to the presence of overlaying layers of mantle and crust comprising mostly of ...
Quakes on other plantes
Quakes on other plantes

... With no active tectonics or volcanism, what is causing the moonquakes, and why are they so deep? ...
CIDER 2012: Deep Time Impacts Tutorial Handout (v4) July 17
CIDER 2012: Deep Time Impacts Tutorial Handout (v4) July 17

... If all the debris is not all re-accreted, then it is possible to enhance the core/mantle mass ratio in the largest bodies by collisional erosion [SL2012]. Collision models have not yet directly addressed the issue of erosion of the crust. This is a work in progress by different groups. It may be pos ...
Zoom Astronomy is a comprehensive on
Zoom Astronomy is a comprehensive on

... This planet is covered with fast-moving sulphuric acid clouds which trap heat from the Sun. Its thick atmosphere is mostly carbon dioxide. Venus has an iron core but only a very weak magnetic field. This is a planet on which a person would asphyxiate in the poisonous atmosphere, be cooked in the ext ...
Orbit of Mercury
Orbit of Mercury

... line between the Sun and your new Earth position Label this position so you know what line this is later ...
Exoplanet Science with AFTA
Exoplanet Science with AFTA

... • Ground-based surveys only sensitive to masses ...
Science Program — Grade 5
Science Program — Grade 5

... trying to figure out why Uranus’s orbit was different than astronomers predicted. They hypothesized that there must be another planet affecting the orbit and – sure enough – they found Neptune! Neptune is another giant gas planet. Scientists think it has a liquid core that is as large as Earth. Nept ...
Lect09-2-8-17
Lect09-2-8-17

... These new data rule out most existing models for Mercury's formation that had been developed to explain the unusually high density of the innermost planet, which has a much higher mass fraction of iron metal than Venus, Earth, or Mars, Peplowski pointed out. Overall, Mercury's surface composition is ...
Space Olympics Tasks 2001
Space Olympics Tasks 2001

... the table, and a part is on the floor. After the chain was released, it began to move. Find the speed of the chain when motion became uniform. Height of the table is h. Friction to be neglected. 6. A small body of mass m was dragged up the hill with constant speed by means of force, directed in each ...
WINDS on VENUS and other Planets
WINDS on VENUS and other Planets

... transports of momentum, energy and trace species in the Lorenz framework however remains a distant goal, although attempts are being made for Jupiter and Venus. Similarly general circulation models have also been developed or adapted for Mars, Venus and Jupiter. Can the same models and methods used ...
space stuff - Science PowerPoints
space stuff - Science PowerPoints

... • The photograph below provides some evidence that this use to cover the Martian surface? ...
How Big Is Jupiter? - Nevada Outdoor School
How Big Is Jupiter? - Nevada Outdoor School

... be about equal size. If they are between planets, color, shapes, about nine third graders. So, not, have them remark the cuts. surface, etc. this would be When the pieces are relatively ...
Worlds in Comparison
Worlds in Comparison

... Gather information, describe, and display the physical characteristics of components of the solar system (205-2, 300-23, 104-80) ...
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Space: 1889

Space: 1889 is a role-playing game of Victorian-era space-faring,created by Frank Chadwick and originally published by Game Designers' Workshop from 1988 to 1991 and later reprinted by Heliograph, Inc. in 2000 and 2001. In February 2013 Chronicle City announced that they are working with Uhrwerk Verlag on a new English edition of Space 1889 RPG.The first published description of Space: 1889 was in the ""Feedback"" column in the TSR/SPI publication Ares Magazine in 1983, as a proposal for a board wargame. The title is both a parody of the television show Space: 1999 and a continuation of the GDW naming convention applied to two of its previous role-playing games, Twilight: 2000 and Traveller: 2300 (the latter of which was later renamed 2300 AD in order to prevent confusion with Traveller), though neither previous game had any connection to the Space: 1889 universe. The name Space: 1889 is a registered trademark belonging to Chadwick.
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