Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Our Solar System


After some recent teaching experiences and discussions, I've come to realize that many adults have forgotten the basics about our solar system. So today ADYK presents a Solar System "refresher" to help you recall those astronomy facts you learned back in elementary school.


Above is a collection of real telescope images of the planets in our solar system (NOT to scale!). This is what the planets look like when you use very high power telescopes or planet orbiting satellites to observe them.

Our solar system contains 8 planets (Pluto doesn't count anymore),  one star (the Sun) and two large asteroid belts. Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars and the four closest planets to the sun and are often called the terrestrial or rocky planets. They are basically giant chunks of rock in a roughly spherical shape. Mercury is made mostly of metals and is heavily cratered like the moon. Venus has a thick carbon dioxide atmosphere, and is essentially the poster child for what would happen if global warming got out of hand on earth. Earth is our home and is made of 70% salt water and has a rich Nitrogen atmosphere. Mars is the red planet where all the aliens live, supposedly. (*wink wink*). Beyond Mars sits the first asteroid belt, filled with oddly shaped rocks the size of people to the size of cities. Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune sit beyond the asteroid belt and are often called the gaseous or Jovian planets. Jupiter is the largest planet, about 10x the size of Earth, and has that big red spot. Saturn is the one with the prominent ring structure, though all Jovian planets have a slight ring structure around them. Uranus and Neptune are the blue planets, and are about 4x the size of Earth. Uranus is turned on it's side, meaning that its spin axis is tilted 90 degrees from being straight "up and down". Past the Jovian planets is the Kuiper belt, a giant ring of asteroids which defines the edge of the solar system. Pluto, it's moons, and over 70,000 similar objects orbit in this ring. Most everything there is small, cold, and icy.

There you go, elementary school astronomy class in one paragraph!