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English - Tinybop
English - Tinybop

... Space is big, REALLY big. It took 36 years for the NASA spacecraft Voyager to reach the edge of our solar system. Our solar system is just one of billions in the Milky Way galaxy. There is so much to explore, discover, and learn about what is out there! Astronomers, scientists who study space and a ...
Solar System
Solar System

... Image on right from http://pds.jpl.nasa.gov/planets/images/browse/mercury/mercury1.jpg Image on left from http://astrogeology.usgs.gov/Projects/BrowseTheSolarSystem/gifs/mercury2.gif ...
The Solar System Powerpoint
The Solar System Powerpoint

... Image on left from http://www.lunarplanner.com/Images/Mars2003/Mars.jpg Image on right from http://www.spacetoday.org/images/Mars/MarsRovers2003/MarsRover2003_1.jpg ...
Solar System - Bellevue ISD
Solar System - Bellevue ISD

... Image on left from http://www.lunarplanner.com/Images/Mars2003/Mars.jpg Image on right from http://www.spacetoday.org/images/Mars/MarsRovers2003/MarsRover2003_1.jpg ...
Click www.ondix.com to visit our student-to
Click www.ondix.com to visit our student-to

... Mars, Earth's neighbor, is the fourth planet from the Sun. Mars' bright appearance and reddish color stand out in the night sky. It has impressive surface features such as valleys that are frequently obscured by huge dust storms and volcanoes. The uniquely red surface of Mars has many features - so ...
Directed Reading
Directed Reading

... ______ 5. How do the gas giants compare with the terrestrial planets? a. Gas giants are larger and more dense. b. Gas giants are larger and less dense. c. Gas giants are smaller and more dense. d. Gas giants are smaller and less dense. ______ 6. Compared with the terrestrial planets, the gas giants ...
Properties of the Planets
Properties of the Planets

... water on its surface and the only planet with molecular oxygen in its atmosphere. The Earth’s surface, like that of Venus, has very few impact craters, due to an active geology (plate tectonics) and robust weathering from wind and rain. ...
Where Are We Going?
Where Are We Going?

... Sun. What do you notice about the sizes of the orbits? Compare the orbits near the Sun with those farther away from the Sun. If you were the commander of a spacebus that traveled among the planets, would you rather travel between the Inner Planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars) or the Outer Planets ( ...
Modeling Sizes of Planets
Modeling Sizes of Planets

... 1) What is the difference between the planets in the inner solar system (Mercury to Mars) and the planets beyond Mars? If you like, speculate about why there is a difference. [Answer suggestions: The inner planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars) are all small compared to the outer planets (Jupiter ...
Planet Exploration http://www.kidsastronomy.com/solar_system.htm
Planet Exploration http://www.kidsastronomy.com/solar_system.htm

... 120,536 km  95 x Earth  ● ring spaces from moons or their gravity  ● lightest planet in solar system  ● spins fast making a fat middle  ● orbit twice as far as asteroid belt  ...
File
File

... 120,536 km 95 x Earth ● ring spaces from moons or their gravity ● lightest planet in solar system ● spins fast making a fat middle ● orbit twice as far as asteroid belt ...
KERPOOF LESSON PLAN
KERPOOF LESSON PLAN

... How long does sunlight take to travel all that distance? o It takes sunlight about 8 minutes to travel to Earth, but about 4 hours to get to Neptune. Imagine for a moment that we could look at other planets millions of light years away—even farther away than Neptune. Looking at these other planets w ...
Chapter 8 The Parts of the Solar System Section 8.1 The Sun
Chapter 8 The Parts of the Solar System Section 8.1 The Sun

... is liquid, but the inner ore is solid. Earth is unique in our solar system in having liquid water at its surface. In fact, most of Earth’s surface, about 70 percent, is covered with water. Perhaps our planet should be called “water” instead of “earth”! Earth has a suitable temperature range for wate ...
Properties of the Planets - Onondaga Community College
Properties of the Planets - Onondaga Community College

... water on its surface and the only planet with molecular oxygen in its atmosphere. The Earth’s surface, like that of Venus, has very few impact craters, due to an active geology (plate tectonics) and robust weathering from wind and rain. ...
File - Mr. Catt`s Class
File - Mr. Catt`s Class

... – Mercury’s craters are less prominent and its surface has less extensive ray patterns – The planet’s surface gravity is twice that of the Moon so loose material doesn’t stack as steeply or travel as far. 3. Mercury lacks the larger maria seen on the Moon. Because Mercury cooled more slowly, meteori ...
Document
Document

... rotation, it has an apparently global magnetic field. Mariner 10 made measurements and according to him ,it is 1.1% as strong as Earth. It’s magnetic field is generated by an effect called the Dynamo effect. It means that a celestial body can generate a magnetic field. This would result from the cir ...
Solar System - Tri-City
Solar System - Tri-City

... How  Did  Moon  Form •  Earth and moon are made of similar but not identical materials •  New theory states moon broke off from Earth when large objet hit Earth about 4.5 billion years ago o  Much of Earth was molten or melted ...
MERCURY
MERCURY

... increased speed required to reach it is relatively high, and due to the proximity to the Sun, orbits around it are rather unstable. MESSENGER is the first probe to orbit Mercury. ...
Chapter 6 Solar System Chapter Test Lesson 1 Sun Aurora borealis
Chapter 6 Solar System Chapter Test Lesson 1 Sun Aurora borealis

... 8. _____ tides occur when the moon is on the opposite side of the planet from where the tides are occurring. The moon’s gravity is weaker, enabling the water to get closer to the land. 9. _____ tides occur when the moon is above the area. The moons gravity causes the water to go away from the land. ...
The solar system - LemoineHPCScience
The solar system - LemoineHPCScience

... Jupiter has a mass that is 2 ½ times greater than the mass of all the other planets and moons combined, yet the sun is 800 times larger than Jupiter. Structure of Jupiter: Jupiter’s hydrogen-helium atmosphere also contains small amounts of methane, ammonia, water, and sulfur compounds. The wind syst ...
Activity 4: Seasons on other planets (PDF 56KB)
Activity 4: Seasons on other planets (PDF 56KB)

... three degrees (in the opposite direction to the other planets) so temperatures across the planet do not vary much throughout a Venus year. The climate on this planet is always hot because it is relatively close to the Sun and has a thick atmosphere that keeps temperatures stable. You could say that ...
Unit D - apel slice
Unit D - apel slice

... Jupiter’s Moons Jupiter has many 'moons, Galileo was the first person to our largest moons through his, telescope in 1610. They re about: the size of Earth's moon. Jupiter also has rings, but fey are too dark to be seen from Earth. Io has more active volcanoes than any other body in the solar system ...
1. Revisiting Kepler`s measurements Kepler`s first law states that the
1. Revisiting Kepler`s measurements Kepler`s first law states that the

... Notice that Mars’ (as well as all the other planets’) astronomical eccentricity is very small. This means that it does not have much “flatness” or that its orbit is nearly circular. This fact is the reason why Copernicus’ model, while erroneous, was still very accurate in its measurements. Of all th ...
File
File

... • What's the difference between regular planets and dwarf planets? As you might guess, it's partly an issue of size, with dwarf planets being smaller. But just how big does a planet need to be to become a full-fledged planet instead of a dwarf? You might think the minimum size requirement is arbitra ...
The Formation of the Solar System
The Formation of the Solar System

... To some degree, this is inevitable! If you had two planets in orbits that were quite close to one another, their mutual gravitational tugs would ‘tweak’ the orbits and, over time, lead to big changes. Planets can even migrate in this way. ...
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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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