Earth Science Lesson Solar and Universe Concept Notes 1 8
Earth Science Lesson Solar and Universe Concept Notes 1 8
Earth Science Lesson Solar and Universe Concept Notes 1 8
CONCEPT NOTES 5
I. TOPIC: UNIVERSE AND THE SOLAR SYSTEM
(Large scale and Small scale properties of the Solar System)
II. LEARNING GOAL: The students should be able to:
a. Identify the large scale and small scale properties of the Solar System
III. CONCEPTS
Solar System
A. The solar system is located in the Milky Way galaxy huge disc- and spiral-shaped aggregation of
about at least 100 billion stars and other bodies;
B. Its spiral arms rotate around a globular cluster or bulge of many, many stars, at the center of which
lies a supermassive black hole;
C. This galaxy is about 100 million light years across (1 light year = 9.4607 × 1012 km;
D. The solar system revolves around the galactic center once in about 240 million years;
E. The Milky Way is part of the so-called Local Group of galaxies, which in turn is part of the Virgo
supercluster of galaxies;
F. Based on the assumption that they are remnants of the materials from which they were formed,
radioactive dating of meteorites, suggests that the Earth and solar system are 4.6 billion years old.
On the assumption that they are remnants of the materials from which they were formed.
Large Scale Features of the Solar System
1. Much of the mass of the Solar System is concentrated at the center (Sun) while angular
momentum is held by the outer planets.
2. Orbits of the planets elliptical and are on the same plane.
3. All planets revolve around the sun.
4. The periods of revolution of the planets increase with increasing distance from the Sun; the
innermost planet moves fastest, the outermost, the slowest;
5. All planets are located at regular intervals from the Sun.
CONCEPT NOTES 6
I. TOPIC: UNIVERSE AND THE SOLAR SYSTEM
(Origin of the Solar System)
II. LEARNING GOAL: The students should be able to:
a. Discuss the different hypotheses explaining the origin of the solar system.
III. CONCEPTS
Origin of the Solar System
Any acceptable scientific thought on the origin of the solar system has to be consistent with and
supported by information about it (e.g. large and small scale features, composition). There will be a
need to revise currently accepted ideas should data no longer support them.
Nebular Hypothesis
In the 1700s Emanuel Swedenborg, Immanuel Kant,
and Pierre-Simon Laplace independently thought of
a rotating gaseous cloud that cools and contracts in
the middle to form the sun and the rest into a disc
that become the planets. This nebular theory failed
to account for the distribution
of angular momentum in the solar system.
Encounter Hypotheses:
A. Buffon’s (1749) Sun-comet encounter that sent
matter to form planet;
B. James Jeans’ (1917) sun-star encounter that would have drawn from the sun matter that would
condense to planets,
C. T.C. Chamberlain and F. R. Moulton’s (1904) planetesimal hypothesis involving a star much bigger
than the Sun passing by the Sun and draws gaseous filaments from both out which planetisimals
were formed;
D. Ray Lyttleton’s(1940) sun’s companion star colliding with another to form a proto-planet that
breaks up to form Jupiter and Saturn.
E. Otto Schmidt’s accretion theory proposed that the Sun passed through a dense interstellar cloud
and emerged with a dusty, gaseous envelope that eventually became the planets. However, it
cannot explain how the planets and satellites were formed. The time required to form the planets
exceeds the age of the solar system.
F. M.M. Woolfson’s capture theory is a variation of James Jeans’ near-collision hypothesis. In this
scenario, the Sun drags from a near proto-star a filament of material which becomes the planets.
Collisions between proto-planets close to the Sun produced the terrestrial planets; condensations
in the filament produced the giant planets and their satellites. Different ages for the Sun and
planets is predicted by this theory.
Nobel Prize winner Harold Urey’s compositional studies on meteorites in the 1950s and other
scientists’ work on these objects led to the conclusion that meteorite constituents have changed very
little since the solar system’s early history and can give clues about their formation. The currently
accepted theory on the origin of the solar system relies much on information from meteorites.
A. About 4.6 billion years ago, in the Orion arm of the Milky Way galaxy, a slowly-rotating gas and dust
cloud dominated by hydrogen and helium starts to contract due to gravity
B. As most of the mass move to the center to eventually become a proto-Sun, the remaining materials
form a disc that will eventually become the planets and momentum is transferred outwards.
C. Due to collisions, fragments of dust and solid matter begin sticking to each other to form larger and
larger bodies from meter to kilometer in size. These proto-planets are accretions of frozen water,
ammonia, methane, silicon, aluminum, iron, and other metals in rock and mineral grains enveloped
in hydrogen and helium.
D. High-speed collisions with large objects destroys much of the mantle of Mercury, puts Venus in
retrograde rotation.
E. Collision of the Earth with large object produces the moon. This is supported by the composition of
the moon very similar to the Earth's Mantle.
F. When the proto-Sun is established as a star, its solar wind blasts hydrogen, helium, and volatiles
from the inner planets to beyond Mars to form the gas giants leaving behind a system we know
today.
CONCEPT NOTES 7
I. TOPIC: UNIVERSE AND THE SOLAR SYSTEM
(Recent advancement/information on the Solar System)
II. LEARNING GOAL: The students should be able to:
a. Become familiar with the most recent advancements/information on the solar system.
III. CONCEPTS
Recent advancement/information on the Solar System
1. Exploration of Mars
Since the 1960s, the Soviet Union and the U.S. have been sending unmanned probes to
the planet Mars with the primary purpose of testing the planet's habitability. The early efforts in
the exploration of Mars involved flybys through which spectacular photographs of the Martian
surface were taken. The first successful landing and operation on the surface of Mars occurred
in 1975 under the Viking program of NASA. Recently, NASA, using high resolution imagery of the
surface of Mars, presented evidence of seasonal flow liquid water (in the form of brine - salty
water) on the surface of Mars.
2. Rosetta's Comet
Rosetta is a space probe built by the European Space Agency and launched on 2 March
2004. One of its missions is to rendezvous with and attempt to land a probe (Philae) on a comet
in the Kuiper Belt. One of the purposes of the mission is to better understand comets and the
early solar systems. Philae landed successfully on comet (67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko) on 12
November 2014. Analysis of the water (ice) from the comet suggests that its isotopic
composition is different from water from Earth.
3. Pluto Flyby
On 14 July 2015, NASA's New Horizon spacecraft provided mankind the first close-up
view of the dwarf planet Pluto. Images captured from the flyby revealed a complex terrain - Ice
Mountains and vast crater free plains. The presence of crater free plains suggests recent (last
100 millions of years) of geologic activity.
CONCEPT NOTES 8
I. TOPIC: UNIVERSE AND THE SOLAR SYSTEM
II. LEARNING GOAL: The students should be able to:
a. Recognize the difference in the physical and chemical properties between the Earth and its
neighboring planes; and
b. Identify the factors that allow a planet to support life.
III. CONCEPTS
● Escape velocity - minimum speed an object needs to escape a planet's pull of gravity.
● Surface pressure - atmospheric pressure at a location on the surface of the planet. It is
proportional to the mass of air above the location.
● Temperature if no GHG - this would be the temperature of the planet without the warming
effect of greenhouse gases. Note that the temperature of the Earth would be ~ 18 0C lower
without greenhouse warming.
● Length of day - a function of rotational speed.
● The Earth's magnetic field is believed to be the consequence of the presence of a solid metallic
inner core and a liquid metallic outer core.
● The ability of a planet to retain its internal heat is proportional to its size. Mars may have lost
much of its internal heat very early in its evolution.
● A planet's temperature is a function of distance from the Sun but is modified by the amount of
greenhouse warming.