Title: The Inner and Outer Planets
1The Inner and Outer Planets
2Astronomical Unit
- 1 AU 149,597,870.691 kilometers
- (93,000,000 miles)
- Definition An Astronomical Unit is
approximately the mean distance between the Earth
and the Sun. - Why is it the mean distance?
- Answer Because orbits are elliptical
- Jupiter is 5.2 AUs away from the sun
3Mercury
- Smallest terrestrial planet closest to the sun
- No moons
- Surface consists of flat plains and craters
- Very little atmosphere
- Greatest temp. difference 860 F to 274F
4Venus
- Similar to Earth in Size
- Takes 8 months to rotate on its axis and 7.5
months to revolve around the sun. - Planet rotates from east to west.
5Earth
- Unique because it has liquid water (70)
- Has enough gravity to hold an atmosphere
- Atmosphere is made out of nitrogen, oxygen and
carbon dioxide. - Has one moon
6Mars
- Red because of the iron rich rocks on the surface
- Atmosphere is more than 95 CO2
- Surface temps. range from 140 to 20 C.
- There may have been flowing water
- Has seasons because of its tilted axis
- Has two moons
7The Outer Planets
- Known as the gas planets
- All the gas planets have rings
- Rings are mostly ice but are also composed of
rock and dust
8Jupiter
- Largest most massive planet
- Thick atmosphere of H and He
- Great red spot the size of Earth
- Prob. has a dense core of rock
- Atmospheric pressure at the core is 30 million X
that of Earth. - Many moons most famous are the Galileon moons (4)
9Saturn
- Thick atmosphere of H and He
- The density of Saturn is less than water!
- Rings made of chunks of rock and ice.
- Saturns largest moon is titian
10Uranus
- Blue green color because atmosphere is made up of
methane - Discovered in 1781 by William Herschel
- Axis is tilted at 90 deg. and rotates in about 17
hours - Has at least 27 moons
11Neptune
- Cold blue planet
- Discovered by mathematical prediction based on
the orbit of Uranus - Dark spots are prob. storms on the surface
- 13 moons
- Internal heat source. Slowly shrinking
12Pluto?(The roman god of the underworld)
- Three moons
- Revolves around the sun 1x every 248 Earth years
- Not considered a planet today
13So why isnt Pluto a planet?
- Is Pluto a planet? Does it qualify? For an object
to be a planet, it needs to meet these three
requirements defined by the IAU - It needs to be in orbit around the Sun Yes, so
maybe Pluto is a planet. - It needs to have enough gravity to pull itself
into a spherical shape Plutocheck - It needs to have cleared the neighborhood of
its orbit Uh oh. Heres the rule breaker.
According to this, Pluto is not a planet. - What does cleared its neighborhood mean? As
planets form, they become the dominant
gravitational body in their orbit in the Solar
System. As they interact with other, smaller
objects, they either consume them, or sling them
away with their gravity. Pluto is only 0.07 times
the mass of the other objects in its orbit. The
Earth, in comparison, has 1.7 million times the
mass of the other objects in its orbit. - Any object that doesnt meet this 3rd criteria is
considered a dwarf planet. And so, Pluto is a
dwarf planet. There are still many objects with
similar size and mass to Pluto jostling around in
its orbit. And until Pluto crashes into many of
them and gains mass, it will remain a dwarf
planet. Eris suffers from the same problem.
14Size comparison of planets
15The next slide shows The Relative Sizes of the
Largest Solar System Objects - in the following
order (to scale) Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus,
Neptune, Earth, Venus, Mars, Ganymede, Titan,
Mercury, Callisto, Io, the Moon, Europa, Triton,
Eris, Pluto
16Size comparison of planets
17Size comparison of planets compared to the Sun
18(No Transcript)
19100 Largest objects in the solar system