1 / 34

Distribution of Matter in Space

Distribution of Matter in Space. Section 1.3 Pages 384-391. Stars. A star is a hot , glowing ball of gas (mainly hydrogen) that gives off light energy . Very hot stars look blue , while cooler stars look red .

azia
Download Presentation

Distribution of Matter in Space

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Distribution of Matter in Space Section 1.3 Pages 384-391

  2. Stars • A star is a hot, glowing ball of gas (mainly hydrogen) that gives off light energy. • Very hot stars look blue, while cooler stars look red. • In the 1920's, EjnarHertzsprung and Henry Norris Russell compared the surface temperature of stars with its brightness (luminosity). • Stars fall into distinct groupings.

  3. Birth of Stars

  4. Birth of Stars

  5. Life Cycle of a Star

  6. Supernova • An enormous explosion that marks the death of a massive star. • Fusion has stopped and the star runs out of fuel. • Gravity causes the star to collapse upon its self. • The outer part of the star explodes with a shock wave.

  7. Black Holes • A highly dense remnant of a star in which gravity is so strong that not even light from radiation going on inside the remnant can escape. • Event horizon – point at which light cannot escape. • Invisible to telescopes. • This shows how the path of a beam of light bends in the vicinity of a non-rotating black hole.

  8. Star Groups • Constellations are the groupings of stars we see as patterns in the night sky. • There are 88 constellations and many are explained in Greek Mythology. • Asterisms are also groupings of stars but are not officially recognized as constellations.

  9. Galaxies • A galaxy is a grouping of millions or billions of stars, gas and dust. • Held together by gravity. • The Milky Way Galaxy is the galaxy our solar system is a part of. • It is shaped like a flattened pinwheel, with arms spiralling out from the center.

  10. Milky Way Galaxy

  11. Types of Galaxies • Spiral – long curved arms radiating out from a bright central core – older to younger at the arms • Elliptical – football or egg – mostly old stars • Irregular – no notable shape – smaller size – mixture of young and old stars

  12. Our Solar Neighbourhood Section 1.4 Pages 392-400

  13. The Sun • The Sun emits charged particles in all directions. • This solar wind bombards the Earth at 400km/s, but the magnetic field of the Earth protects us.

  14. Protoplanet hypothesis • 1. A cloud of gas & dust in space begin swirling • 2. Most of the matter (more than 90% of it) accumulates in the center - forming the Sun • 3. The remaining materials accumulate (forming planets) and circle the Sun

  15. The Planets: Mercury • Closest planet to the Sun • Surface similar to our moon • No atmosphere • High temperature – 400oC sunny side • - 180oC dark side

  16. The Planets: Venus • Similar in size, mass, and gravity to earth • High surface temperature – 450oC (melt lead) • 90 x atmospheric pressure to Earth • CO2cloud cover • Rotates opposite to other planets – east to west

  17. The Planets: Earth • Only planet where water exists in solid, liquid, and gas • Only planet to support life • Atmosphere provides protection from the Sun • 70% surface covered in water • Active volcanism

  18. The Planets: Mars • Red planet – orangish – caused by iron oxides on surface • Two polar ice caps (One of Co2 + H2O and one of CO2) • Extremely cold surface temperature • Varied surface topography • 2 moons

  19. The Planets: Jupiter • Largest of all planets • Twice the mass of all other planets combined • Composed of mainly hydrogen and helium • Great Red Spot – atmospheric storm • Three thin rings • 28 moons

  20. The Planets: Saturn • 19 moons • Second largest planet • 1000+ rings surround equator • Composed mostly of hydrogen and helium • High wind speeds over 1800 km/h due to fast rotation

  21. The Planets: Uranus • Unusual axis of rotation – tilted toward the plane of its orbit –making it appear to roll its orbit • Composed mostly of hydrogen and helium • Methane in atmosphere gives it its blue colour • Large ring system • 17 moons

  22. The Planets: Neptune • Composed mostly of hydrogen and helium, and methane • Methane in atmosphere gives it its blue colour • Little light reaches this planet • Fastest wind speed – 2500 km/h • Own ring system • 8 moons

  23. The Planets: Pluto • Cold frozen ball of methane • Disqualified as a Planet due to its obit around the sun at 17.2o– more elliptical • Rotates east to west rather than west to east • Some astronomers believe it and Charon (moon) are comets that have been captured by the gravity of the sun • Originated from the Kuiper Belt

  24. Other Celestial Bodies • Asteroids – rocky , metallic bodies ranging in size of a few meters to hundreds of kilometres • Comets – dirty snowballs – dust and ice and heat up when they come close to the sun, releasing gas • Comets have predictable paths – large ellipses

  25. Other Celestial Bodies • Meteoroids – small pieces of rock flying through space with not particular path • Meteor – a meteoroid that gets pulled into the atmosphere by gravity – heats up and gives off light • Meteorite – a meteor that hits the surface

  26. Hyper Links • Solar System • Space Videos National Geographic

  27. Describing the Position of Objects in Space Section 1.5 Pages 401-407

  28. Altitude • Altitude gives you the "how above the horizon it is” • The point straight overhead has an altitude of +90 degrees • Straight underneath, an altitude of -90 degrees. • Points on the horizon have 0 degree altitudes. • An object halfway up in the sky has an altitude of 45 degrees.

  29. Azimuth • Azimuth determines "which compass direction it can be found in the sky." • An azimuth of zero degrees puts the object in the North. • An azimuth of 90 degrees puts the object in the East. • An azimuth of 180 degrees puts the object in the South, and one of 270 degrees puts the object in the west. • Zenith is the position in the sky directly overhead.

  30. Motion of Objects in Space • The path in the sky along which the Sun takes is called the ecliptic. • The Celestial Sphere is the name given to the very large imaginary 'sphere of sky' surrounding the Earth.

  31. Assess Your Learning • Page 406 • Questions 2-3, 5-7, 10- 11, 13-15, 17 • Read Section 2 pages 408-433

More Related