astronomy chapter seventeen: the solar system 17.1 about the solar system 17.2 the planets 17.3...

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Page 1: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects
Page 2: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects

Astronomy

Page 3: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects

Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System

• 17.1 About the Solar System

• 17.2 The Planets

• 17.3 Other Solar System Objects

Page 4: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects

Investigation 17A

• How fast are we using non-renewable resources?

Non-Renewable Resources

Page 5: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects

17.1 About the solar system• Ancient observers

noticed that five bright objects seemed to wander among the stars at night.

• They called these objects planets, from the Greek word meaning “wandering star,” and named them Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn.

Page 6: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects

17.1 About the solar system

• Galileo made two discoveries.

• Galileo argued that the phases of Venus could not be explained if Earth were at the center of the planets.

Page 7: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects

17.1 About the solar system• Second, Galileo saw

that there were four moons orbiting Jupiter.

• Galileo’s discoveries helped prove that Earth and the other planets orbit the sun, disproving the early theory that earth was the center of the universe.

Page 8: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects

17.1 What is the solar system?• Today, we define the solar system as the sun

and all objects that are gravitationally bound to the sun.

• The solar system is roughly divided into the inner planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars) and the outer planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune)

• The dwarf planet Pluto is the oldest known member of a smaller group of frozen worlds orbiting beyond Neptune.

Page 9: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects
Page 10: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects

17.1 Gravitational force

• Newton’s law of universal gravitation explains how the strength of the force depends on the mass of the objects and the distance between them.

Page 11: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects

17.1 Orbits

• An orbit is a regular, repeating path that an object in space follows around another object.

• An object in orbit is called a satellite.

Page 12: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects

17.1 Orbits• An orbit results from

the balance between inertia and gravitational force.

• Without the pull of gravity, a planet would travel off into space in a straight line.

Page 13: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects

17.1 Motion of the planets• The orbits of the

planets are slightly elliptical but almost circular.

• The Sun is at a point called the focus that is offset from the center of the orbit.

Page 14: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects

17.1 Motion of the planets• In addition to orbiting

the Sun, the planets also rotate.

• An axis is the imaginary line that passes through the center of a planet from pole to pole.

Page 15: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects

17.1 Comparing size and distance• The Sun is by far

the largest object in the solar system.

• One astronomical unit (AU) is equal to 150 million km, or the distance from Earth to the Sun.

Page 16: Astronomy Chapter Seventeen: The Solar System 17.1 About the Solar System 17.2 The Planets 17.3 Other Solar System Objects