Astronomy Summary Notes
- Created by: mintyrawl
- Created on: 11-11-21 14:17
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Astronomy
Cosmic Scale
- We know the universe consists of trillions of galaxies.
- These galaxies are collections of billions of stars.
- Within galaxies there are Solar systems, ours is the Milky Way, and we revolve around the sun.
- Stars are massive spheres of gas large enough and hot enough to release energy by the process of nuclear fusion.
- Major) planets are objects that orbit a star and have a mass above a certain value.
- Minor planets (which includes asteroids) are objects that orbit a star and have a mass below that certain value.
- Comets are collections of ice and dust that have very elliptical orbits.
- Planets may be large enough to have smaller objects orbiting them. These are called satellites, or moons. The Earth’s Moon is an example of a natural satellite.
Gravity
- All objects with mass create a gravitational field. (If this mass is larger, the field will be larger.)
- Gravitational fields become weaker with distance. The closer an object is to the centre of the gravitational field the stronger the pull on it will be and vice versa.
- Therefore, the gravitational field on the Moon is weaker than the Earth because the Moon has a smaller mass than the Earth. The Sun has the strongest gravitational field in our solar system because it is the object with the highest mass.
- Gravitational forces cause moons, artificial satellites, planets and comets to orbit the earth and sun, respectively.
- Newton’s first law of motion described the fact that any object will continue moving at a steady speed in a straight line unless acted on by a resultant force. Therefore, an object is moving in a circle, a force must be acting on the object
- Gravitational forces are what act on planets and comets to keep them in orbit around a star, and what act on satellites to maintain their orbit around a planet.
Orbits
- We describe most orbits as circular, and this is often true for planets and satellites (as they have a constant speed.
- However, the orbits of…
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