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1.
HOW DOES EARTH MOVE?
SCIENCE PROJECT MAY 2018
Photo by
Jeremy Thomas
2.
AXIS
An axis is what all the planets in the solar system rotate on.
The axis is an imaginary line.
The North Pole is the northern end of the axis
The Southpole is the southern end of the axis.
Photo by
Kyle Glenn
3.
ROTATION
One whole spin on the axis of an object is called a rotation.
One full rotation = one day
Photo by
Curtis Gregory Perry
4.
ORBIT
Earth orbits around the sun
An orbit is the path an object takes around a star, planet, or moon.
Earth's rotation is elliptical or oval shaped.
Photo by
Steve Snodgrass
5.
REVOLUTION
One full orbit is a revolution
Earth's revolution lasts a few hours more than 365 days/one year.
Photo by
Mikey G Ottawa
6.
WHAT ARE THE INNER PLANETS?
Photo by
NASA
7.
MERCURY
Closest planet to the sun.
Slightly bigger than Earth's moon.
It is covered in craters.
Almost no atmosphere covers Mercury.
The first spacecraft to visit Mercury was the Mariner 10.
Mercury is hotter than the hottest place on Earth.
It is scorching hot during the day and cool at night.
Photo by
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center
8.
VENUS
Second planet from the sun.
It is the same size as Earth.
It rotates in the opposite direction of Earth.
Venus is hot and dry.
It's atmosphere is thick with swirling clouds.
Venus gets strong winds and lighting.
The clouds are hot and toxic.
The clouds reflect the sun light very well witch makes Venus one of the brightest objects in the sky.
Photo by
wiccked
9.
EARTH
Earth is the third planet from the sun.
It is the solar system's largest Rocky planet.
It is the only planet with liquid water on it's surface.
Earth is wrapped in 150 km of a thick gas atmosphere.
The atmosphere makes life possible.
Earth is the only known planet to support life.
Photo by
Kevin M. Gill
10.
EARTH'S MOON
Earth has one large moon.
Our moon has no atmosphere.
It has many craters formed by crashing meteorites and objects floating through space.
Photo by
Alexey Kljatov (ChaoticMind75)
11.
MARS
Mars is the fourth planet from the sun.
Mars has soil on its surface called iron oxide.
Iron oxide makes Mars appear red. This is why it is call the "Red Planet".
Mars has two small and deeply cratered moons.
Mars does not have enough oxygen for plants and animals.
Mars has a canyon that is TEN times the size of the Grand Canyon in Arizona.
Photo by
Kevin M. Gill
12.
WHAT ARE THE OUTER PLANETS?
Photo by
write_adam
13.
JUPITER
Jupiter is the fifth planet from the sun.
It is the largest planet in the solar system.
Jupiter is a Gas Giant.
Jupiter's atmosphere consists of hydrogen and helium.
The planet has many bands of color.
Jupiter's four largest moons are, Ganymede, Io, Europa, and Callisto.
Photo by
NASA Goddard Photo and Video
14.
SATURN
Saturn is the sixth planet from the sun.
Like Jupiter, Saturn's atmosphere contains hydrogen and helium.
Saturn has many rings.
The rings are made of tiny grains, boulders, ice, dust, and rock.
Photo by
chipdatajeffb
15.
URANUS
Uranus is the seventh planet from the sun.
You can't see Uranus very well without a telescope.
Uranus's atmosphere contains hydrogen, helium, and methane.
The planet rotates on its side and no one knows why.
Scientists think that a large object hit Uranus which caused it to spin.
Photo by
Lights In The Dark
16.
NEPTUNE
Neptune is the eighth planet from the sun.
The planet is too far to see without a telescope.
Neptune was discovered in 1846.
It takes the planet 100 Earth years to orbit the sun.
It is the smallest gas giant.
Neptune has at least thirteen moons.
Triton is Neptune's largest moon and the coldest object in the solar system.
Photo by
Hubble Heritage
17.
Source citation
Photo by
Aperture Vintage
18.
Pearson Internet Science. Scott Forseman Illinois 2016
Photo by
Stuck in Customs
Morgan N
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