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The Goldilocks Planet
The Goldilocks Planet

... close as possible to what the Earth is: Its mass should be between 0.5 and 5 Earth-masses; It must have liquid water, preferably some solid surfaces; it must have an atmosphere, a temperate zone between 0 and 50 degrees; sunshine, seasons and a magnetic field. Perhaps a Goldilocks planet also needs ...
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Solar System - hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca
Solar System - hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca

... f. List of period of revolution (1 year on each planet) and rotation period (1 day on each planet) g. List of planets in order of size Using the information provided by your colleagues during their presentations as well as the lectures/powerpoints from class (on website), answer the following questi ...
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... O. Which of the following is/are regularities that the major planets in our solar system share? T F 57) They all orbit in about the same plane. T F 58) They all orbit in the same direction. T F 59) They are all made mostly of hydrogen and lithium. T F 60) They are all made mostly of rock and metal. ...
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... 13. This planet has multi-colored cloud bands and a storm which has raged for over 300 years. a) Venus, b) Jupiter, c) Saturn, d) Neptune 14. The lava flooded plains of the Moon are called a) maria, b) terrae, c) basins, d) umbra 15. Suppose a planet is orbited by a number of satellites. Which of th ...
young astronomers newsletter - Forsyth Astronomical Society
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... detect mostly Jupiter-like planets that are close to their stars because our detection methods are best-suited to detecting Jupiter-like planets – Earth-like planets now being detected - Kepler Mission ...
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... b) The field around a celestial body. c) The collective term for the sun, moon, stars, and planets. 5. The field around a celestial body. (The field weakens as you get farther away from the celestial body.): a) Speed of Light ...
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... A star with a planet will move in its own small orbit in response to the planet's gravity. This leads to variations in the speed with which the star moves toward or away from Earth. I.e. the variations are in the radial velocity of the star with respect to Earth This has been by far the most produc ...
The Sun and Planets Homework 9.
The Sun and Planets Homework 9.

... does this technique work best for detecting massive planets, and those in short period orbits around their host star? What planetary parameters can you determine using this technique? 2. Briefly explain the transit method for detecting extrasolar planets. What type of planets is this technique most ...
Our Solar System
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...  The Asteroids also orbit around the sun.  The Asteroid Belt orbits between Mars and Jupiter while going around the Sun. ...
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... o civilizations unlikely there (?)  but read Dragon's Egg by R. Forward • slight doppler wobble of star due to planets o most planets now found this way • slight occultation of planet by star o Kepler satellite will likely find thousands • gravitational lensing o once and done, but can see low mass ...
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7-outer-planets - High Point University
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... • How do we know the period of rotation of the outer planets? (Note: we use a different technique of measuring rotational period of the terrestrial planets.) • How do we know that a moon’s surface is ice? • How do we know the size of matter within the rings? • How do we know that a moon has an “old” ...
Habitability: Good, Bad and the Ugly
Habitability: Good, Bad and the Ugly

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Solar System Table in ESRT

... 12.Which planet rotates once in about the same time as earth? _________ 13.Which planet is closest to being the same size as the earth? _________ 14. Which planet has the orbit that is most nearly a perfect circle? ______________ 15.Which planet has the most elliptical orbit of the sun? ___________ ...
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Super-Earth



A super-Earth is an extrasolar planet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below the mass of the Solar System's ice giants Uranus and Neptune, which are 15 and 17 Earth masses respectively. The term super-Earth refers only to the mass of the planet, and does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term ""gas dwarfs"" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, as suggested by MIT professor Sara Seager, although mini-Neptunes is more common.
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