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The Solar System

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The Solar System

Commonly Confused Terms

• Solar System

– Our star (Sun) and everything that orbits around

it (planets, asteroids, comets, etc.)

• Galaxy

– Huge collection of stars bound together by

gravity (the Sun is 1 star among 100-400 billion

stars in the Milky Way galaxy)

• Universe

– Everything (~100 billion galaxies)

What objects make up the

Solar System?

The following tour shows objects in the solar

system ordered by mass.

Sun

Has about

99.86% of the

MASS

in the

solar system

Courtesy of SOHO/EIT consortium. SOHO is a project of international cooperation between ESA and NASA.

Sunspots

Credit: Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences

Jupiter

has about

0.1% of the

MASS

in the

solar system

Everything else

together has

only about 0.04%

of the MASS

in the solar system

NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Jupiter

Jupiter has many

objects in orbit

around it

(current count = 67)

Composition:

89% Hydrogen

10% Helium

NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Jupiter

Most satellites

orbit far away

from Jupiter and

are probably

captured

asteroids

Credit: University of Hawaii, Institute for Astronomy

Saturn Composition:

96% Hydrogen

3% Helium

Credit: NASA, ESA and E. Karkoschka (Univesity of Arizona)

Neptune

Neptune has 14

known moons

Largest moon

Triton is in a

retrograde

orbit

Courtesy: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Uranus

Uranus has an

axial tilt of 98˚

Composition:

82% Hydrogen

15% Helium

2% Methane

Courtesy: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Earth

Temperature

and pressure

allow water

to exist as a

liquid at the

surface

Courtesy: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Venus

Venus has 82% of

the mass of Earth

and is covered with

white clouds of

sulfuric acid

Courtesy: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Venus Surface Temperature: 864˚ F

Credit: NASA/NSSDC

Mars

Mars

Courtesy: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Mercury

Although it is

smaller in size than

Ganymede and

Titan, Mercury has

more mass of both

of these moons

combined.

Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/

Carnegie Institution of Washington

Moons Seven moons have more mass than Pluto

Ganymede (Jupiter)

Titan (Saturn)

Callisto (Jupiter)

Io (Jupiter)

Moon (Earth)

Europa (Jupiter)

Triton (Neptune)

Courtesy: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Eris Eris is the largest dwarf

planet in the Solar

System. Eris has 1.27

times the mass of Pluto.

Credit: NASA ,ESA , and M. Brown (California Institute of Technology)

Pluto Pluto, the second

largest dwarf planet, is

one of the largest

objects in a belt of

objects that orbit the

Sun beyond Neptune.

Credit: Allen Stern (Southwest Research Institute), Mark Buie (Lowell Observatory), NASA and ESA

The Kuiper Belt

Thousands of icy objects orbit the Sun beyond Neptune in

a region commonly called the Kuiper Belt.

Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

______

________

Pluto Orbit

Neptune Orbit

Credit: NASA, ESA, and A. Field (STScI)

Eris

Dysnomia

Haumea

Makemake

Comets

Courtesy: NASA/JPL-Caltech

NASA/NSSDC/W. Liller

Astronomers think that

many comets originate

in the Kuiper Belt

Asteroids

Eros

Courtesy: NASA/JPL-Caltech