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Laws of Motion and Energy

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Chapter Seven: Gravity and Space 7.1 Gravity 7.2 The Solar System 7.3 The Sun and the Stars Investigation 7B How big is the solar system? 7.3 Stars A star is ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Laws of Motion and Energy


1
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Laws of Motion and Energy
3
Chapter Seven Gravity and Space
  • 7.1 Gravity
  • 7.2 The Solar System
  • 7.3 The Sun and the Stars

4
Investigation 7B
The Sizes of the Solar System
  • How big is the solar system?

5
7.3 Stars
  • A star is essentially an enormous, hot ball of
    gas held together by gravity.
  • The density at the suns core is about 158.0
    g/cm3.

This is about 18 times the density of solid
copper!
6
7.3 Why stars shine
  • At high density and pressure, nuclear fusion
    occurs, releasing tremendous amounts of energy.
  • Fusion reactions in the sun combine hydrogen to
    make helium.

7
7.3 Anatomy of the sun
  • The corona is the outermost layer of the suns
    atmosphere, extending millions of kilometers
    beyond the sun.
  • Sunspots are areas of gas that are cooler than
    the gases around them.

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7.3 Types of stars
  • Stars come in a range of sizes and temperatures.
  • Blue giant stars are hot and much more massive
    than the sun.
  • Stars that are smaller than the sun come in two
    main categories, dwarfs and neutron stars.

10
7.3 Distances to the nearest stars
  • One light year is the distance that light travels
    through space in one year.
  • A light year is a unit of distance, not time.

11
7.3 Temperature and color
  • If you look closely at the stars on a clear
    night, you might see a slight reddish or bluish
    tint to some stars.
  • This is because stars surface temperatures are
    different.

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7.3 Temperature and color
  • Red stars are cooler than white stars, and blue
    stars are the hottest.
  • White light is a mixture of all colors at equal
    brightness.

14
7.3 Galaxies
  • A galaxy is a huge group of stars, dust, gas, and
    other objects bound together by gravitational
    forces.
  • The sun, along with an estimated 200 billion
    other stars, belongs to the Milky Way galaxy.

15
7.3 Galaxies
  • The disk of the Milky Way is a flattened,
    rotating system that contains young to
    middle-aged stars, along with gas and dust.

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7.3 Distances between galaxies
  • The distances between stars are 10,000 times
    greater than the distances between planets.
  • The distances between galaxies are a million
    times greater than the distances between stars.

17
7.3 Distances between galaxies
  • Figuring out the distance between galaxies is one
    of the more difficult tasks in astronomy.
  • A faint object in the night sky could be a dim
    object that is relatively nearby or a bright
    object that is far, far away.

18
7.3 Distances between galaxies
  • The most reliable method for estimating the
    distance to a galaxy is to find a star whose
    luminosity is known.
  • If the luminosity is known, the inverse square
    law can be used to find the distance from the
    observed brightness.

19
Astronomy Connection
Extraterrestrial Volcanoes
  • There are active volcanoes on Earth, but did you
    know that a moon of Jupiter is considered the
    most volcanically active place in the solar
    system?

20
Activity
Sunspots
  • Sunspots are large, dark regions that appear on
    the surface of the Sun.
  • In this activity, you will determine the diameter
    of the Sun and the number of sunspots on the Sun.
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