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Chapter 19-3

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Chapter 19-3. Formation of the Solar System (Solar System Simulator: http://space.jpl.nasa.gov/ ). Successful models in science. Must account for and make sense of observations. Do we Have a Viable Theory?. It must be - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Chapter 19-3 Formation of the Solar System (Solar System Simulator: http://space.jpl.nasa.gov / )
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Page 1: Chapter 19-3

Chapter 19-3

Formation of the Solar System(Solar System Simulator:

http://space.jpl.nasa.gov/ )

Page 2: Chapter 19-3

Successful models in science

Must account for and make sense of observations

Page 3: Chapter 19-3

Do we Have a Viable Theory?

It must be 1. based on physical principles (conservation of

energy, momentum, the law of gravity, the law of motions, etc.),

2. able to explain all (at least most) the observable facts with reasonable accuracy, and

3. Able to explain other planetary systems.Testing Our Theory against other solar systems

1. Can we find protoplanetary disks?2. Can we find other solar system?3. Does our theory explain the other solar system?

Page 4: Chapter 19-3

How do we go about finding the answers?

1.Look for clues2.Come up with some

explanations3.See if our idea explains

everything (or most of it)4.Try again: if it doesn’t quite

work, go back to step 2.

Page 5: Chapter 19-3

Clues – What does the solar system look like? • Sun, 0 AU • Inner Planets

(Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars) ~ 1 AU

• Asteroid Belt, ~ 3 AU • Outer Planets

(Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, Uranus), ~ 5-40 AU

• Kuiper Belt, ~ 30 to 50 AU

• Oort Cloud, ~ 50,000 AU

NASA Figure

Cool link about solar system: • http://liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/academy/space/solarsystem/solarsystemjava.html

Page 6: Chapter 19-3

• All the planets orbit the Sun in the same direction

• The spin axes of most of the planets and the Sun are roughly aligned with the rotation axes of their orbits.

• Orientation of Venus, Uranus, and Pluto’s spin axes are not similar to that of the Sun and other planets.

Clues - The Orbits of the Planets

Page 7: Chapter 19-3

Clues - What do they look like?The Inner Planets

They are all…• rocky and

small!• No or few

moons• No rings

Page 8: Chapter 19-3

They are all…• gaseous and

BIG!• Rings• Many moons

Clues - The Jovian Planets

Page 9: Chapter 19-3

How did the solar system form

?National Geographic’s Naked Science: “Birth of the Solar System” – sun, fusion, nucleosynthesis

University of California: “Order from Chaos: The Birth of the Solar System”

Page 10: Chapter 19-3

Other Solar SystemsAs of this date, ___ planets have been discovered.

2 (1996)

4

6

31

61

96

117

121

161

209

271

332

374 (4/14/2010)

418 (4/27/2010)

Page 11: Chapter 19-3

“For then why may not every one of these Stars or Suns have as great a Retinue as our Sun, of planets, with their moons, to wait upon them? Nay, there’s Manifest reason why they should.” Physicist Christiaan Huygens, 1698

“There are countless suns and countless earths all rotating around their suns in exactly the same way as

the seven planets of our system . . . The countless worlds in the universe are no worse and no less

inhabited than our Earth.” Giordano Bruno, 1584; burned at the stake for heresy

Page 12: Chapter 19-3
Page 13: Chapter 19-3

• Oldest known:PSR B1620-26c (13 billion years)

• First Discovered:51 Pegasi b (1996)

• Largest core:HD 149026 b

• Most distant found:OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb (21,500 light years)

• May have liquid water:Gliese 581 c

• Largest diameter:TrES-4

• Smallest found:Gliese 436 c

Page 14: Chapter 19-3

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