un:solar-system
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| - | ====== Solar system | + | ====== Solar System |
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| + | The solar system consists of the Sun and all the objects under its gravity. It includes eight planets, several dozen dwarf planets, hundreds of moons, asteroids, and comets. Each planet in this system is different, and there is also a wide variety among the asteroids and comets. The entire system is surrounded by a vast Oort Cloud made of billions of icy fragments. But beyond all this diversity, the underlying order of the solar system stands out. Most of its components revolve around the Sun in a thin disk and in nearly the same direction. For those that have both revolution and rotation, the directions of both motions are usually the same. This order suggests how our system formed 4.5 billion years ago from a giant cloud of gas and dust. The trace of that cloud' | ||
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| + | Near the center of the solar system is the Sun, whose mass is more than 700 times the combined mass of everything else in the system. Our star is basically a gaseous sphere composed of about 71% hydrogen and 27% helium. However, there are also small amounts of other chemical elements in gaseous form. | ||
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| + | Closest to the Sun are the four inner planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars), whose orbits are shown in the bottom right corner of the above figure. These are primarily made of rock and have either very thin or no atmospheres. The orbits of the four outer planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune) are shown in the bottom left, although Jupiter' | ||
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| + | There are also many dwarf planets in the solar system, the best example being Pluto, which is even smaller than our Moon. Pluto’s orbit extends far above and below the solar disk. Eris, which is larger than Pluto, is actually located closer to the Sun. Dwarf planets are nearly spherical like planets but have not cleared their orbits to become gravitationally dominant. | ||
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| + | Most planets have moons orbiting them, commonly referred to as moons after Earth' | ||
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| + | The solar system contains trillions of objects much smaller than planets and moons. Asteroids are mainly composed of rock and metal. Due to their small mass, they cannot become spherical. The largest asteroid, Vesta, is shaped like an egg and is about 500 km long—while Earth' | ||
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| + | Beyond Neptune lies the Kuiper Belt (bottom left of figure), which also contains some asteroids, but most of its objects are icy bodies—small chunks of ice. However, the greatest number of icy bodies is found in the Oort Cloud, whose scale is shown in the top panel of the figure. The Kuiper Belt lies only 50 AU from the Sun, but the outer edge of the Oort Cloud lies at 100,000 AU, or about 1 light-year. Between these two belts may lie nearly a trillion icy bodies, each averaging 10 km in size. When these bodies fall into highly elliptical orbits and approach the Sun, we see them as comets. The comet' | ||
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| + | The Sun’s solar wind cannot reach as far as the Oort Cloud. It stops where it is pushed back by the interstellar wind after crossing the Kuiper Belt—this boundary is called the heliopause. Just beyond the heliopause, the collision between the solar and stellar winds creates a bow shock in the direction the Sun moves around the center of the Milky Way, shown at the bottom left of the top panel. This marks the full extent of our heliosphere. | ||
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| + | ===== - Planets ===== | ||
| + | This table presents the average distance (in astronomical units, AU), number of moons, mass ($10^{24}$ kg), density (grams/cc), and observed and predicted temperatures of the eight planets in the solar system. Comparing these properties gives an overview of the entire system. | ||
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| + | ^ Name ^ Distance ^ Moons ^ Mass ^ Density ^ Observed $T$ ^ Predicted $T$ ^ | ||
| + | | [[Mercury]] | 0.39 | 0 | 0.33 | 5.4 | 100--725 | 451 | | ||
| + | | [[Venus]] | 0.72 | 0 | 4.87 | 5.2 | 733 | 260 | | ||
| + | | [[Earth]] | 1.00 | 1 | 5.97 | 5.5 | 288 | 255 | | ||
| + | | [[Mars]] | 1.52 | 2 | 0.64 | 3.9 | 215 | 222 | | ||
| + | | [[Jupiter]]] | 5.20 | 95 | 1898.6 | 1.3 | 124 | 104 | | ||
| + | | [[Saturn]] | 9.54 | 60 | 568.5 | 0.69 | 95 | 79 | | ||
| + | | [[Uranus]] | 19.2 | 27 | 86.8 | 1.32 | 59 | 58 | | ||
| + | | [[Neptune]] | 30.1 | 14 | 102.4 | 1.64 | 59 | 55 | | ||
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| + | From the distance column, we can see there is a large gap between Mars and Jupiter, which is where the asteroid belt orbits the Sun with its hundreds of thousands of asteroids. Aside from this gap, the distances between the planets are relatively regular. The inner rocky planets have few moons, but the outer giant planets have many—Jupiter alone has 95 known moons. Looking at density, we see the rocky four planets are four to five times denser than water, while the gas giants have densities around 1 gram/cc, with Saturn being notably less than water. | ||
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| + | The difference between observed and predicted temperatures is worth reflecting on. How planetary temperature is predicted is explained in the [[planet|Planet]] article. Mercury' | ||
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| + | Venus has a temperature far higher than predicted due to the intense [[greenhouse-effect|greenhouse effect]] of its thick atmosphere. Venus’s atmosphere has over 96% carbon dioxide, no oxygen, pressure 700 times that of Earth’s, and sulfuric acid rain falls from its skies. Earth’s surface temperature is also 33° higher than predicted due to the greenhouse effect. This effect made Earth habitable, but if CO₂ keeps rising, it will no longer be beneficial. That’s what's happening due to the industrial revolution over the past hundred years—temperature is rising and glaciers are melting. Uranus and Neptune have temperatures close to prediction. Jupiter and Saturn show some differences, | ||
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| + | Every planet has been visited by at least one satellite, spacecraft, or space probe. Many satellite data are available on [[https:// | ||
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| + | NASA’s [[https:// | ||
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| + | Only [[https:// | ||
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| + | ===== - Chemical Composition ===== | ||
| + | The chemical composition of the solar system is measured in two main ways: by analyzing the spectrum of light from the Sun’s photosphere, | ||
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| + | The pie chart above shows the percentage of elements in the solar system: over 98% is just hydrogen and helium. The elements making up the four inner planets account for less than 2% of the solar system’s mass. Among those, oxygen, carbon, neon, nitrogen, iron, silicon, and magnesium are most abundant. In the gas giants' | ||
un/solar-system.1727685129.txt.gz · Last modified: by asad
