g9u4c11part 2
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Transcript g9u4c11part 2
The Planets
Terrestrial and Gas planets
To be considered a planet
must orbit one or more stars
its own gravity holds it in a spherical shape
be the only body occupying the orbital path
Terrestrial and Gas planets
Large distances keep our solar neighbourhood’s family
of eight planets well separated from each other
Astronomical unit (AU), is equal to the average
distance between the Sun and Earth, about 150 million
km.
Earth is 1 AU from the Sun, while Jupiter is 5.27 AUs
from the Sun.
Terrestrial planets
Four inner Planets
Have rocky surfaces
Terrestrial planets
Mercury
The closest planet to the Sun is also the smallest.
slightly larger than our Moon
differences between night and daytemperatures on its
surface (ranging from 400°C to –183°C).
Terrestrial planets
Venus
often called Earth’s sister planet
similar size and composition to Earth
Venus’s atmosphere is almost
completely carbon dioxide
the Magellan spacecraft revealed that
large portions of the planet arevery
flat, while other areas have volcanoes,
lava flows, and cracks called rifts.
Terrestrial planets
Earth
little blue planet, third from the
Sun
only life yet discovered
only place known to have water in
three phases
Water covers nearly three quarters
of Earth’s surface
Atmosphere of nitrogen and
oxygen
Terrestrial planets
Mars
called the red planet
half the size of Earth
Mars has a very thin atmosphere
of carbon
dioxide and can experience
winds of more than 900 km/h.
Mars has two polar ice caps made
of frozen carbon dioxide
Outer Planets
Called Jovian Planets
Much Larger than the Inner Planets
Have no real surface
Outer Planets
Jupiter
largest planet in the solar system
It has a mass 2.5 times greater than
that of all the other planets
combined
“Great Red Spot” a storm raging in
the clouds of hydrogen and helium
that form the planet’s outer layers ,as
large as three Earths
the shortest day (10 hours)
Outer Planets
Saturn
elaborate system of
rings (from ice
particles)
composed mainly of
hydrogen and some
helium
Outer Planets
Uranus
fourth most massive planet
Similar composition to Jupiter
and Saturn, including a ring
system
blue colour from the methane
gas in its atmosphere
unusual rotation in that it is
flipped on its side
Outer Planets
Neptune
outermost planet
third most massive
composition is similar to that of
Uranus, and it has the same dark
blue colour
Has a ring system
Some times has a large, blue,
Earth-size patch on Neptune’s
surface likely a storm in the
clouds
Terrestrial and Gas planets
Questions
Page 411 #2,9,11