Solar System: Sun, Earth and Moon
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Transcript Solar System: Sun, Earth and Moon
Solar System:
Sun, Earth and Moon
Earth’s size and shape
The earth is sphere.
Aristotle made three observations:
Objects fall straight down
Earth’s shadow is curved
People see different stars
Earth
Gravity
The attractive force between two objects
Depends on the masses and distance
between two objects.
How does the pull of gravity indicate
that the Earth’s shape is spherical?
Earths properties:
Diameter Pole to Pole
12,714 km
Diameter through equator
Circumference poles
Circumference equator
Mass
12,756 km
40,008 km
40,008 km
5.98 X 1024 kg
Avg distance from sun
Avg distance from moon
Period of rotation
149,600,000km
384,400 km
23hr 56 min
Period of revolution
365 days, 6h,9min
Earth’s magnetic field
Hypothesized that the strong rotation of the
earth and the movement in the core set up
the magnetic field
The magnetic poles are 11.5* off from
the physical poles.
They wander due to the movement of the
Earths crust and mantle
Magnetic fields
http://www.google.com/i
mgres?q=earths+magnetic
+poles&hl=en&sa
Magnetosphere
An area in the Earth’s magnetic field that
deflects harmful radiation coming from the
sun as solar wind
These collide with atoms in the
atmosphere causing the aurora borealis or
aurora australis
Earth’s Orbit
ellipse
http://scienceblogs.com/startswithabang/2010/10/counterclockwise_but_there_are.php
Earth
Is a planet
Supports life
Has lower CO2 than Venus but trapped
CO2 may contribute to green house effect
Ocean absorbs CO2
If the magnetic field was not there to protect
us what would happen to the earth?
The Sun and Earth:
seasons
The earth moves in two ways:
Rotation: the earth spinning like a top
around its axis. 24 hours or one day
Revolution: The earth traveling around the
sun. It takes one year 365 ¼ days
Rotation of the earth
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=knK87GoNyGo
Revolution of the earth
Where the sunlight hits the
earth
Slanted less intense at an angle
Direct intense light
Slanted less intense at an angle
Seasons
Seasons are caused by the tilt of the Earth’s
axis as it moves around the sun.
The amount of sunlight depends on the
Latitude that the sunlight is directly hitting.
Solstices
Solstices occur twice a year on the days that
the sun appears directly overhead at latitude
23.5 north or 23.5 south. Remember the
earth tilts 23.5 degrees off of the axis.
Northern Hemisphere: Summer solstice on
June 21st. The Northern Hemisphere is
tilted toward the sun. The longest day in the
North and the shortest in the South.
North- Summer, South-Winter.
Solstice
Winter solstice occurs on December 21 six
months after the Summer Solstice.
The Northern Hemisphere is tilted away
from the sun and receives the least amount
of light.
Shortest day in the North and Longest day
in the South.
North-Winter, South-Summer
Equinoxes
See page 754:
Halfway between the solstices are two days
called Equinoxes.
At the Equinox neither hemisphere is tilted
toward the sun the length of day light and
night is EQUAL.
March 22- Spring, September 22- autumn
Spring equinox is called Vernal equinox.
Autumn equinox is called the Autumnal
equinox.
On these two days the sun is directly
overhead the equator.
http://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/ter
c/content/visualizations/es0408/es0408page01.cfm
Review
What two ways does the earth move in
space?
What determines the change in seasons?
Solar eclipse
http://stargazerpaul.com/s_eclips.htm
http://www.mreclipse.com
/Special/image/SEDiagra
m1c.JPG