what is 1 terametre in metres?
1 * 10^12 metres
what is a galaxy?
A cluster of billions of stars, held together by gravity.
what happens as the distance from the Sun increases?
what must happen for a planet to form?
what are moons?
natural satellites that orbit a planet
what are dwarf planets?
Celestial bodies that orbit the Sun and are spherical in shape but have not cleared their orbit of other debris.
what are asteroids?
Small rocky objects that orbit the Sun in highly elliptical orbits which may take millions of years to complete
name 2 asteroid belts in our solar system
what are comets?
Small celestial bodies made of ice, dust, and rocky material that orbit the Sun.
what happens as a comet approaches the sun?
The comet’s ice begins to vaporize, creating a glowing coma and tail.
how did the sun form?
what happens in nuclear fusion reactions in the sun’s core?
what do we mean when we say the sun is a star at equilibrium?
it is in a stable state where the inward force of gravity is balanced by the outward force of radiation pressure from the nuclear reactions - the gravitational collapse is balanced by the expansion due to fusion energy.
For an object to remain in a steady, circular orbit what must it be doing?
be travelling at the right speed
what will happen if a satellite is moving too quickly?
what will happen if a satellite is moving too slowly?
how does orbital motion create acceleration?
why do objects in small orbits travel faster than objects in large objects?
what is a polar orbit?
an orbit that passes over or near the Earth’s poles
what is a geostationary orbit?
Orbit in which a satellite orbits the Earth at the same rate as the Earth rotates (24 hours to orbit), allowing it to remain stationary relative to a fixed point on the Earth’s surface and appears to remain in the same part of the sky when viewed from the ground.
why must satellites in polar orbits travel at faster speeds than satellites in geostationary orbits?
The satellites travel very close to the Earth so must travel at very high speeds to maintain their orbit, whereas geostationary orbits are much higher so the satellites travel more slowly
what are satellites in polar orbits used for?
monitoring weather, military, taking pictures of the earth’s surface
what are satellites in geostationary orbits used for?
communications
summarise the life cycle of a star about the same size as the sun