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The Solar System The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

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Page 1: The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

The Solar System

The Solar System

Laci Lachance

Mr. Reed

Akimel Middle School

Page 2: The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

The Solar SystemThe following presentation will share interesting information about our solar system.

Page 3: The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

The Sun The sun is the largest object in the

Solar System The Sun is, at present, about 70%

hydrogen and 28% helium The temperature is 15.6 million

Kelvin and the pressure is 250 billion atmospheres.

The diameter is 1,390,000 km. The mass is 1.989e30 kg The temperature is 5800 K (surface)

15,600,000 K (core) Right now our sun is about 4.5 billion

years old and Since its birth it has used up about half of the hydrogen in its core.

Page 4: The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

Mercury Mercury is the closest planet to the

sun Temperature on Mercury are the

most extreme in the solar system ranging from 90 K to 700 K. The temperature on Venus is slightly hotter but very stable

Mercury is the second most major body in the Solar System, after Earth.

Earth's density is due in part to gravity; if not for this, Mercury would be denser than Earth

Mercury's orbit is highly eccentric it is only 46 million km from the Sun.

Page 5: The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

Venus Venus is a dim world of intense heat and volcanic activity. Similar

in structure and size to Earth, Venus' thick, toxic atmosphere traps heat in a runaway greenhouse effect.

The scorched world has temperatures hot enough to melt lead. Glimpses below the clouds reveal volcanoes and deformed mountains. Venus spins slowly in the opposite direction of most planets.

When using special satellite technology to penetrate the clouds.

When looking through a normal telescope

Page 6: The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

Earth Everyone knows that NASA studies space; fewer people know that NASA

also studies Earth. Since the agency’s creation almost 50 years ago, NASA has been a world leader in space-based studies of our home planet. Our mission has always been to explore, to discover, and to understand the world in which we live from the unique vantage point of space, and to share our newly gained perspectives with the public.

Those who intend to use the Blue Marble: Next Generation in their own publications or projects should be aware of areas that still require improvement. Areas of open water still show some “noise.” In tropical lowlands, cloud cover during the rainy season can be so extensive that obtaining a cloud-free view of every pixel of the area for a given month may not be possible. Deep oceans are not included in the source data; the creator of the Blue Marble uses a uniform blue color for deep ocean regions, and this value has not been completely blended with observations of shallow water in coastal areas.

Page 7: The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

Mars Mars is a cold desert world. It is half

the diameter of Earth and has the same amount of dry land. Like Earth, Mars has seasons, polar ice caps, volcanoes, canyons and weather, but its atmosphere is too thin for liquid water to exist for long on the surface. There are signs of ancient floods on Mars, but evidence for water now exists mainly in icy soil and thin clouds.

Curiosity, a robotic rover about the size of a small SUV, is designed to find whether the Red Planet ever was -- or is still today -- an environment suitable for life. The rover landed on Mars in August 2012.

Page 8: The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

Jupiter

Jupiter's appearance is a tapestry of beautiful colors and atmospheric features. Most visible clouds are composed of ammonia. Water vapor exists deep below and can sometimes be seen through clear spots in the clouds. The planet's "stripes" are dark belts and light zones created by strong east-west winds in Jupiter's upper atmosphere.

Jupiter, the most massive planet in our solar system -- with dozens of moons and an enormous magnetic field -- forms a kind of miniature solar system. Jupiter does resemble a star in composition, but it did not grow big enough to ignite. The planet's swirling cloud stripes are punctuated by massive storms such as the Great Red Spot, which has raged for hundreds of years.

Page 9: The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

Saturn Adorned with thousands of beautiful ringlets, Saturn is unique

among the planets. All four gas giant planets have rings -- made of chunks of ice and rock -- but none are as spectacular or as complicated as Saturn's. Like the other gas giants, Saturn is mostly a massive ball of hydrogen and helium.

NASA's Cassini orbiter is on an extended mission to explore Saturn and its rings, its magnetosphere and its moons. Cassini also delivered Europe's Huygens probe to its historic landing on Titan in 2005.

Page 10: The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

Uranus Uranus is the only giant planet whose equator is nearly at

right angles to its orbit. A collision with an Earth-sized object may explain Uranus' unique tilt. Nearly a twin in size to Neptune, Uranus has more methane in its mainly hydrogen and helium atmosphere than Jupiter or Saturn. Methane gives Uranus its blue tint.

Most of what we know about Uranus came from Voyager 2's flyby in 1986. The spacecraft discovered 10 additional moons and several rings before heading on to Neptune.

Page 11: The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

Neptune

Dark, cold and whipped by supersonic winds, Neptune is the last of the hydrogen and helium gas giants in our solar system. More than 30 times as far from the sun as Earth, the planet takes almost 165 Earth years to orbit our sun. In 2011 Neptune completed its first orbit since its discovery in 1846.

Most of what we know about Neptune is thanks to Voyager 2's 1989 flyby. The spacecraft also discovered six of Neptune's moons.

Page 12: The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

Pluto Discovered in 1930, Pluto

was long considered our solar system's ninth planet. But after the discovery of similar intriguing worlds deeper in the distant Kuiper Belt, icy Pluto was reclassified as a dwarf planet. This new class of worlds may offer some of the best evidence about the origins of our solar system. Pluto is also a member of a group of objects that orbit in a disc-like zone beyond the orbit of Neptune called the Kuiper Belt.

Page 13: The Solar System Laci Lachance Mr. Reed Akimel Middle School

Planet Sizes

Planet Mass Period of rotation

Distance from the sun

Mercury 5% of Earth

58,6461 days

57 million kilo.

Venus 81% of Earth

243.16 days

107 million kilo.

Earth 6.000.000.000.000.000.000

23 hours and 56 minutes

150 million kilo.

Mars 10% of Earth

24 hours and 37 minutes

229 million kilo.

Jupiter 317 times more than earth

9 hours and 55 minutes

777 millions kilo.

Saturn 95 times more than Earth

10 hours and 13 minutes

1, 429 million kilo.

Uranus 14.6 times more than Earth

17.2 hours

2.871 million kilo.

Neptune 17 times more than Earth

16 hour and 17 minutes

4.496 million kilo.