Chapter 12: The Solar System

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Solar System Chapter 12 Section 1 Pgs
Advertisements

An overview of the Solar System
Warm Up April 24, 2013 Read “The Girl Who Named Pluto.”
The Outer Planets Chap 16, Sec 4.
Solar System Outer Planets. The Outer Planets Our solar system’s outer planets are Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Pluto has been reclassified as.
THE OUTER PLANETS. The first four outer planets- Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune- are much larger and more massive than Earth, and they do not have.
THE OUTER PLANETS. The Gaseous Planets- Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune.
Planets in the Solar System Earth Science Chapter 3.
Chapter 7 The Outer Planets. What do you think? Is Jupiter a “failed star” or almost a star? What is Jupiter’s Great Red Spot? Does Jupiter have continents.
The Gas Giant Planets Chapter 29 Section 3
Name that Planet!. This planet has 2 moons, whose names are Phobos and Deimos.
The Inner Planets Mercury Closest planet to the sun Surface has many craters and looks like the moon Cliffs that may have formed from the iron rich.
Lesson 4, Chapter 3.  The four outer planets – Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are much larger and more massive than Earth and they do not have.
The Outer Planets Jupiter It is the 5 th planet from the sun, and the largest planet in the solar system Contains more mass than all the other.
The Planets of Our Solar System
Complete Section 3 Study Guide
The Outer Planets. Jupiter Jupiter – fifth planet from the sun, largest in the solar system – Atmosphere – primarily hydrogen and helium Below atmosphere,
SPACE! The first four planets… Unit 14/ Day 1. Terrestrial Planets The inner planets; highly dense and rocky planets nearest to the sun; Mercury, Venus,
An overview of the Solar System
Planets of the Solar system Section 4 Key Ideas Identify the basic characteristics that make the outer planets different from terrestrial planets. Compare.
The Outer Planets Section Standard e. Students know the appearance, general composition, relative position and size, an motion of objects.
Gas Giants Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune. The Asteroid Belt lies between Mars and Jupiter, separating the inner and outer planets.
Review: What did Kepler study? What is an ellipse? Why is Mars called the red planet? Why is Venus called Earth’s twin? What do the four terrestrial planets.
Earth Science An overview of the Solar System. The Sun The sun is the biggest, brightest, and hottest object in the solar system. The sun is the biggest,
Planets of the Solar System Characteristics/Composition /Position.
The Gas Giants The Planets and Other Cosmic Stuff Chapter 20.
Ch. 29 Sec. 3 Gas Giant Planets. Gas Giants Hydrogen, Helium, Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen Satellites and rings systems Very large in Size.
THE OUTER PLANETS.
The Inner & Outer Planets
Ch. 24 The Solar System Earth Science.
Chapter 24 Earth Science The Solar System.
Chapter 11 Section 3 Gas Giants.
Chapter 12: The Solar System
Outer Planets Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune.
Age of our solar system is 4.6 billion years old.
Solar System Notes.
Our Solar System.
Chapter 5 Jupiter and the rest of the planets
Reviewing the Inner Planets
Section 3: The Outer Planets
The Sun 99.8% of the mass of the solar system is in the Sun.
Full of ingredients to make your child a genius.
THE INNER PLANETS.
(8th) Chapter 14-4 Cornell Notes
Handout 2 (1-2) The Outer Planets.
Our Solar System.
The Outer Planets.
The outer planets.
An overview of the Solar System
Jovian Planets, Gas Giants
The Outer Planets.
Section 4 – pg 562 The Outer Planets
#2 List all the INNER planets
The Solar System Chapter 12 Section 1 Pgs
The Outer Planets p. 575.
An overview of the Solar System
Week 6 Notes The Outer Planets
The Outer Planets Gas Giants.
Section 3: The Outer Planets
The Solar System.
Chapter 8 Section 3: The Outer Planets
The Gas Giants...and Pluto
The Outer Planets Chapter Ringed, Gas giants except Pluto
THE OUTER PLANETS.
A Journey to Our Planetary Neighbors
Outer Planets 11-3.
An overview of the Solar System
The Outer Planets Chapter Ringed, Gas giants except Pluto
The Outer Planets of Our Solar System
An overview of the Solar System
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 12: The Solar System Section 3: The Outer Planets

A. Jupiter – fifth planet from the Sun, largest planet in the solar system

1. Atmosphere – primarily hydrogen and helium a. Below the atmosphere, liquid hydrogen and helium are suspected

b. Solid rocky core may exist below liquid level

c. The Great Red Spot is the most spectacular of Jupiter’s many constant high-pressure gas storms

2. Has at least 61 moons, four are relatively large and have atmospheres

a. Io – is very volcanically active; the closest large moon to Jupiter

b. Europa – composed mainly of rock; may have an ocean of water under a thick layer of ice

c. Ganymede – largest moon in solar system; even larger than planet Mercury

d. Callisto – cratered rock and ice crust may surround a salty ocean and rock core

B. Saturn – sixth planet from the Sun, second largest in the solar system, lowest density

1. Thick outer atmosphere of hydrogen, helium, ammonia, methane, and water vapor 2. Might have a small rocky core

3. Each large ring composed of thousands of ringlets of ice and rock particles

4. Has at least 31 moons a. Largest moon, Titan, is larger than the planet Mercury b. Thick clouds on Titan prevent scientists from seeing surface

C. Uranus – seventh planet from the Sun, large and gaseous

1. Has thin, dark rings 2. Atmosphere of hydrogen, helium, and methane

3. Methane makes the planet bluish-green in color 4. Axis of rotation nearly parallel to plane of orbit

D. Neptune – usually the eighth planet from the Sun, large and gaseous

1. Bluish-green colored atmosphere similar to that of Uranus 2. Storms on Neptune reveal an active and rapidly changing atmosphere “Small dark spot”, photographed by Voyager 2 in October, 1999. It has since vanished.

3. Has at least 11 moons, of which pinkish Triton is the largest

E. Pluto – dwarf planet, occasionally closer to the Sun than Neptune, one of the three dwarf planets

1. Has a thin atmosphere and a solid, rocky surface 2. Has three moons Now known to have 5 moons

3. The IAU defined the terms planet and dwarf planet in 2006.