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UniverseAll matter and energy, including Earth, all the galaxies and space
GalaxyA collection of stars, gas, and dust that make up the universe.
Diameter range: 1,500 to 300,000 light years
solar systemThe sun (a sun) combined with planets, moons, asteroids and comets, all traveling at high speed in orbits around the sun
starA giant sphere (ball) of gas that produces its own light by making its own energy through nuclear fusion. It’s held together by its own gravity.
Life span: hundreds of millions or billions of years
sunA star that is orbited by planets and other bodies in a solar system
Earth’s Sun:93 million miles from EarthDiameter:864,000 miles (more than 100 times bigger than Earth)Supplies our planet Earth with light and heat
planetA celestial (relating to the sky or heavens) body that does not produce its own light, is larger than an asteroid and revolves around a sun which gives it light.
Our Solar System: 8 planets
moonA natural satellite of a planet that orbits around a planet
Jupiter has 28 moonsSaturn has 30 moonsEarth has 1 moon
eclipseThe total or partial blocking of light from one celestial body as it passes through the shadow of another celestial body.
comet
A celestial object that orbits the sun in an elliptical path.
asteroid
Any small (often irregularly shaped bodies that orbit a sun.
Diameter range: size of a speck of dust up to several hundred miles
Many found in the region between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter
meteoroidA small rock floating in orbit near Earth (not in Earth’s atmosphere)
When it enters atmosphere, it becomes a meteor and the friction with the air cause the rock to glow with heat
nebulaA cloud of interstellar gas and dust
Plural: nebulae or nebulas
black holeAn extremely dense celestial object that nothing can escape, not even light. A black hole is formed by the collapse of a massive star’s core called a supernova
gravityis the attraction that objects have for each other because they have mass and occupy space.
Because Earth is so huge it has a lot of gravity and it “pulls” us to the center of the Earth and keeps us attached to the surface.
Speed of lightLight travels at a speed of 186,000 mi/sec.
A traveler, moving at the speed of light, would circum-navigate the equator approximately 7.5 times in one second.
By comparison, a traveler in a jet aircraft, moving at a ground speed of 500 mph, would cross the continental U.S. once in 4 hours.
Light yearA light-year is a unit of distance. It is the distance that light can travel in one year.
So in one year, light can travel about 10 trillion km.
We use the term "light years" to describe the distance between stars, galaxies, and other objects that are humongous distances apart.
• For example, the closest star to the earth, not counting our own sun, is Alpha Centauri. This star, our closest stellar neighbor is 4.3 light years away from the earth!
Think about that for a moment... The closest star to the earth (besides the sun) is 23,462,784,000,000 miles away from us!
rotationThe motion of an object around its own axis
The “spin”
axis
revolutionThe motion of an object around another point, for example, around a sun, or the moon around the Earth.
orbitThe path of a celestial body or an artificial satellite as it revolves around another celestial body
alienextraterrestrial being: a form of life assumed to exist outside the Earth or its atmosphere