The Earth & Universe

 

 

 

The Universe

          In the previous lesson we learned that the fusion of hydrogen into helium in the Sun generates light and heat that warm the Earth.  This is an understatement.  Many other elements are created in the stars.  The stars fuse nitrogen into silicon, oxygen into sulfur, aluminum into iron.  All of the matter in the universe was at one time created in a star.  So how do we fit into this cosmic creationism? 

 

The term universe encompasses everything in the heavens.  There are all sorts of objects that make up the universe: stars, planets, other objects and plain old empty space.  Stars, like our sun, are basically large chunks of matter.  But stars are so large that the pressure of all of their mass pressing in on itself fuses atoms together, releasing light and heat.  Stars tend to cluster together in groups called galaxies.  Our sun for example, is but one star in the milky way galaxy.  Even smaller in scale than a galaxy is a solar system.  Our solar system is comprised of one star (the sun) and nine planets circling around it.  Planets, like stars, are basically chunks of matter.  But relative to the size of a star, a planet is quite a small chunk.  For example, if the above animation of the Earth revolving around the Sun were drawn to scale and the Sun were drawn as pictured, the Earth would be the size of this dot  . and it would be located almost 5 m (16 feet) from your computer screen!

The Solar System

         Our solar system includes the sun and nine planets.  The picture above shows the order in which those planets orbit the sun (however the sizes and distances are not to scale).  Below are images of: the nine planets, the Sun and  Earth's satellite: the Moon (satellites orbit planets - planets orbit stars).  More information can be obtained on any of the planets (by way of Calvin Hamilton's 'Views of the Solar System') by clicking on the images.

                                                     

Some Images from Our Solar System (not to scale!)

Mercury
Venus
Earth
                      Mars
Jupiter
Saturn
                      Uranus
Neptune
Pluto
The Sun
The Moon

Describing the planets as 'chunks of matter' is an oversimplification.  While some of them, like the planet Mercury, are little more than big rocks, many are quite complex.  We owe our existence to the fact that the Earth is a complex system with multiple layers.  The planet itself has 3 layers: core, mantle and crust.  Earth's core is a dense ball of molten iron surrounded by a 'sea' of molten rock called the mantle.  However, except for during the occasional volcanic eruption (a volcano is caused by molten rock from the mantle rising to the Earth's surface), no one has ever actually seen either of these layers.  Everything that we do takes place in a relatively thin layer of solid rock called the crust.  The crust is composed of a series of thin 'plates' that float on the mantle.  Because these plates float on top of the molten mantle, they occasionally move and bump into each other.  This movement causes the surface of the Earth to shake in  what we call an earthquake. As you know, the Earth's surface is not all rock.  The hydrosphere is the layer of water that covers 75% of the Earth's surface.  And the atmosphere is the layer of air above the surface that contains the oxygen that supports life.

 
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