Venus is one of the four terrestrial planets in our Solar System. One of the reasons that it is considered a terrestrial planet is because it has a rocky surface. This is because most of the surface seems to have been shaped by volcanic activity. Its crust is much older than Earth's crust. Due to its age, Venus has several volcanoes that are much larger than anything that we have on Earth. Another weird aspect of Venus, is that the majority of the craters are in a perfect condition. The craters on Earth for instance show signs of decay and decomposition. The reasoning behind this difference is that since Earth is made up of plates, these plates are constantly moving. This is not so on Venus.
I) Explain how we can deduce each of the properties and summarize the range of each
Even though the inner and outer planets are very similar, they also have quite a few differences.Even though the inner and outer planets may have the same orbit plane and they both do not use their own light they are also different in size and their composition.
There were five massive discoveries that the rover Curiosity made. In August 200 the rover landed on Mars and been exploring the red planet since, but the robot has racked up quite a string of accomplishments while been on the red planet. For examples, when the rover first touched down on the red planet, it had a dramatic “seven minutes terror” when it touched down. This showed a successfully demonstrated a new technique that would help land the large payload of deliveries with unprecedented precision and successfully helping to pave a way for human outposts on the Red Planet. The rover was launched in order to determine whether the Gale Crater landing site has ever been able to support microbial life, the car sized rover successfully answered that question within seven months into the 2
Exoplanets are interesting to us for a number of reasons. By locating and observing them, we are able to gather a variety of useful data that tells us details about the planet, and then compare and contrast them to other exoplanets, as well as our own planet Earth. These comparisons are our attempt at better understanding the formation history of rocky planets such as the one we live on today, and furthermore understand the future of rocky planets based on their internal composition and proximity to their host stars.
An exoplanet can be defined as a planet that orbits a star outside the solar system. One of the many exoplanets that could possibly be habitable in the near future are far away. For example, Kepler-186 is around 500 light years aways to put that in perspective that is around 5,878,625,373,183.607731 Miles away. That is why we know so little about these planets that could support life on them.
Liquid water is the most important factor for life, as we know it. Water is abundant in the galaxy, it is found in cold dense molecular stars as well as hot stellar atmospheres. Liquid water exists at a large range of pressures and temperature.
Thanks to a sighting via the US NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope (www.spitzer.caltech.edu) in a partnership with Poland’s Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment, or OGLE Telescope (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_Gravitational_Lensing_Experiment), a brand new Milky Way exoplanet has been found. The remote gas planet is at least 13,000 light years from Earth, making this adventure in planet finding one of the farthest known of its kind. These worlds are called exoplanets, which mean they circle a sun other than our own sun.
What do you think we would do if someone from anther planet landed in the U.S and claimed it as his territory because he had discovered it? How would you feel about this?
Planet Nine is a hypothetical large planet in the far outer Solar System, the gravitational effects of which would explain the improbable orbital configuration of a group of trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) that orbit mostly beyond the Kuiper belt.
One of the first things to determine when looking for life in space is whether or not water is present on the exoplanet. Liquid is a necessary medium for carbon-chains to eventually develop into life, and water is not only cosmically abundant, but is also a great facilitator for this process. The next is the presence of organic materials needed to construct complex organic molecules, such as carbon. Until we receive evidence heavily suggesting otherwise, the search for life in space should focus on carbon-based life, as it's the only sort that we are sure exists (as much as any of us can be sure of our own existence). The age and position of an exoplanet is also largely relevant to discovering life. It took approximately 1 billion years for
The reading on terrestrial planets from chapter 6 provides readers with a little insight on the similarities and differences between the planets. These planets include Earth, Venus, Mercury, and Mars. Although these planets have very different properties, they are connected due to their history. There are scientific laws that help people understand, compare, and contrast these planets, such as gravity, chemical composition, and temperature.
What role do impact craters play on Venus? Which planet is Earth most like? In what ways is this planet like Earth?
Years and years ago, there were only eight known planets that orbit our sun; Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Eight planets until that fateful day when Clyde W. Tombaugh discovered our ninth planet. Although, a little credit should be given to Percival Lowell, who first proposed the idea of the possible existence of an unknown ninth planet. Searching for more than a decade without success, Lowell calculated the approximate distance of the hypothesized ninth planet. According to www.history.com, the search for Pluto was resumed, in 1929, at the Lowell Observatory in Arizona using the calculations of Lowell and W.H. Pickering, another American astronomer, as a guide. Finally, on February 18, 1930, the use
Venus is the 2nd planet from the Sun. Venus' reflective nature and close proximity to Earth are major factors in it's being one of the brightest objects in the sky after the Sun and Earth's moon. It is often referred to as
The surface has volcanoes and smooth plains. " Much of the volcanic activity on Venus takes the form of Basaltic eruptions that inundate large ares, much as the mare volcanism flooded the impacted basins on the near side of the moon " (Morrison, 93,