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 More than half of all stars are members of star systems ( groups of two or more stars). Our sun is not.  Star systems with two stars are called double.

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Presentation on theme: " More than half of all stars are members of star systems ( groups of two or more stars). Our sun is not.  Star systems with two stars are called double."— Presentation transcript:

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2  More than half of all stars are members of star systems ( groups of two or more stars). Our sun is not.  Star systems with two stars are called double stars or binary stars.  Star systems with three stars are called triple stars.

3  Often astronomers can detect the presence of a star in a binary system without seeing it, they can tell it is there by observing the effect of its gravity on the second star  Sometimes with binary stars, one star blocks the light from the other star and the system is called an eclipsing binary.

4 http://calgary.rasc.ca/images/Algol_Eclipsing.gif

5  Scientists have discovered planets around stars by observing how a star “wobbles” very slightly back and forth  Over 300 “extrasolar” planets have been found according to Space.com  Most of the extrasolar planets found so far are massive gas giants with large influence on their star’s gravity.

6 “First ever photo of an extrasolar planet, a Jupiter-sized gas giant.”

7  The so-called "habitable zone" around a star is a belt in which liquid water could exist on the surface in lakes, rivers or oceans. Too close to its stellar parent and a planet would be too hot, while an orbit too far out would yield only a frozen world, NASA scientists have said. Quote from http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/090416-kepler-first-images.html

8  Galaxies are giant structures that contain hundreds of billions of stars, Oh, by the way…There are billions of galaxies in the universe  Galaxies contain single stars, double stars, star systems and lots of gas and dust between the stars.  Astronomers classify most galaxies into three main categories: › spiral galaxies, › elliptical galaxies, › irregular galaxies

9  Spiral galaxies have arms that spiral outward, like pinwheels http://zoo1.galaxyzoo.org/images/ tutorial/example_face_on_spiral.jpg http://www.spacetoday.org/images/Hubble/ HubbleBeauty/NGC1512BarredSpiralGalaxy.jpg

10  Our solar system exists in the Milky Way galaxy, and is about 25,000 light-years away from the center of the Milky Way  Our solar system is about two-thirds of the way out on one of the spiral arms of the Milky Way  We can’t see the center of the Milky Way due to the massive cloud of gas and dust between the sun and the center

11 http://abyss.uoregon.edu/%7Ejs/images/milky_way_large.jpg

12 http://www.crystalinks.com/galaxymilkyway.jpg

13  Elliptical galaxies look like flattened balls  Have little gas and dust between the stars so new stars can not form › Ellliptical galaxies only contain old stars http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/ jpegMod/PIA08696_modest.jpg

14 http://zuserver2.star.ucl.ac.uk/%7Eidh/apod/image/0406/m87_cfht.jpg

15  Some galaxies don’t have a regular shape, they are called irregular galaxies  The Large Magellanic Cloud is an irregular galaxy http://www.nasa.gov/images/content/ 159426main_image_feature_666_ys_4.jpg

16 http://starchild.gsfc.nasa.gov/Images/StarChild/universe_level2/ngc6822.gif

17 http://www.astro.utu.fi/news/img/RGB_bird_idl600.jpeg


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