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Bell work Have scientists ever brought extraterrestrial material to Earth? Scientists have studied rocks from Mars and other parts of the solar system.

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Presentation on theme: "Bell work Have scientists ever brought extraterrestrial material to Earth? Scientists have studied rocks from Mars and other parts of the solar system."— Presentation transcript:

1 Bell work Have scientists ever brought extraterrestrial material to Earth? Scientists have studied rocks from Mars and other parts of the solar system. How have scientists obtained these rocks? Record your answer in your science journal.

2 Comets, Meteors, and Asteroids

3 Today’s Objectives Explain why comets, asteroids, and meteoroids are important to the study of the formation of the solar system. Describe the similarities of and differences between asteroids and meteoroids. Explain how cosmic impacts may affect life on Earth.

4 Comets Small body of ice, rock and dust loosely packed together that orbits the sun A comet is a “dirty snowball” about the size of an earth mountain. (dirt and ice) Comets’ orbits are usually very long, narrow ellipses. They produce tails of gas and dust when they approach the sun. Look like “shooting stars” but can move much slower.

5 Comet Parts Tails Ion-electrically charged ions, always points away from the sun Dust- follows the orbit of the comet Gas-follows the orbit of the comet also Can extend millions of km

6 Comet Parts Nucleus Averages 3 miles in diameter, by can be between ½ and 100 km Solid, rocky, icy center Shows different features as it nears the sun Coma forms a large halo around the nucleus of a comet as it nears the sun The Coma’s halo is made of dust and gas

7 Structure of a Comet Ion Tail Dust Tail Coma To Sun

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9 Orbit Highly elongated Very elliptical

10 Oort Cloud Oort cloud- sphere that surrounds the solar system 1 light year away from the sun made of dust and gas

11 The Oort Cloud

12 Kuiper Belt- outside orbit of Neptune- made of dust and rocks- where most dwarf planets are found.

13 Comet names Comets are often named after the person who discovers them! Maybe the next one could be named after you!

14 Comet Halley

15 Comet Halley 1910 Pope Callixtus III excommunicated Halley's Comet in 1456 In 1910, charlatans sold "comet pills" Orbit

16 Halley’s Comet (1986)

17 Halley’s Comet…. Orbits every 76 years

18 Hyakutake

19 Winter and early spring of 1997
Comet: Hale-Bopp Winter and early spring of 1997 Next sighting: 4380

20 Hale-Bopp

21 Comet West

22 Today’s Objectives Explain why comets, asteroids, and meteoroids are important to the study of the formation of the solar system. Describe the similarities of and differences between asteroids and meteoroids. Explain how cosmic impacts may affect life on Earth.

23 Meteoroids, Meteorites, and Meteors
Meteoroid- small rocky body often made of rock, metal, or dust. Meteorite- meteoroid that hits the Earth Meteoroids survive as they pass through the atmosphere and hit Earth’s surface Meteor- meteoroid that burns up in the Earth’s atmosphere Shooting stars are not actually stars. These flashes of light across the sky are small bits of rock burning up in the Earth’s Atmosphere. They often move very fast across the sky. They are called “fireballs” when it creates a long streak of light as it gets close to the ground.

24 3 types Stony Metallic Stony-iron

25 The Cause of Meteor Showers
P55/Tempel-Tuttle

26 The 1833 storm

27 The 1966 storm

28 1997 Leonids from Orbit

29 Two Showers for Halley

30 Carbonaceous Chondrite
Sporadic Meteors Irons Stony-Irons Chondrites Carbonaceous Chondrite Achondrite

31 Barringer’s Crater An iron meteorite 100 feet across and 70,000 tons slamed into the Earth at about 43,000mph in the Arizona desert near Flagstaff 40,000 years ago. Barringer Crater is 4,100 feet wide and 571 feet deep.

32 Other Impact Craters

33 METEOROID: A piece of stone or metal that travels in outer space.
SUMMARY METEOROID: A piece of stone or metal that travels in outer space. METEOR: An object from space that becomes glowing hot when it passes into Earth's atmosphere. METEORITE: A piece of stone or metal from space that falls to Earth's surface.

34 Today’s Objectives Explain why comets, asteroids, and meteoroids are important to the study of the formation of the solar system. Describe the similarities of and differences between asteroids and meteoroids. Explain how cosmic impacts may affect life on Earth.

35 Asteroids Small rocky bodies in orbit around the sun. (larger than meteoroids) Have the same compositional matter as the Terrestrial planets Located between Mars and Jupiter in the Asteroid Belt. Ceres was the largest asteroid ever discovered Now it is classified as a Dwarf Planet!

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37 Asteroids Apollo Trojans

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39 Ida - Dactyl

40 Gaspra

41 Today’s Objectives Explain why comets, asteroids, and meteoroids are important to the study of the formation of the solar system. Describe the similarities of and differences between asteroids and meteoroids. Explain how cosmic impacts may affect life on Earth.


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