Exploring Space
The Solar System

OUR SOLAR SYSTEM

Facts about the solar system

Facts: Our Solar System consists of 9 (known) planets, their moons, and the sun. All of these are nestled inside a galaxy called the "Milky Way", a cluster of over 200 billion stars.

 

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What is a Solar System?

A solar system is defined as a central sun with its associated planets, asteroids, meteors, satellites (i.e.,moons), and comets that are "captured" in its orbit. These various celestial bodies are trapped in a constant orbit around the sun by its tremendous gravitational pull. The paths that the planets take as they travel around the sun in the same direction - from west to east - is not truly circular, but more of an ellipse, or egg-shape path. Our solar system is nestled inside a very large galaxy of stars called the Milky Way. The outer limit of our solar system extends six billion kilometers from the sun.

Over 4.6 billion years ago our solar system was born when a nebula consisting of a dense nucleus, or protosun, surrounded by a thin shell of a gaseous matter and dust began to collapse in on itself. As the dense matter in the center of the solar system further condensed the extreme heat that was generated in the center began to burn the abundant hydrogen atoms in its core, becoming a self-sustaining nuclear-fusion reaction that grew to be our sun. As the dust in the nebula circulated the newly forming sun, it collapsed and clumped together to form larger chunks of space debris. Larger and larger pieces of space debris collided with each other to form the solid planets, and the gaseous matter condensed to form the gas planets.

The Nine Planets

We have nine major planets, with several of them having their own moons. How do we define the difference between a planet and a moon? A planet orbits the sun, and a moon orbits a planet. Technically, the moon also orbits the sun as it spins around its planet, but because it has its own suborbit of a planet we define it as a moon. Some of our planets have several moons. Scientists are still debating about whether our ninth and furthest planet, Pluto, is actually a planet, or a moon from a more distant planet that got caught in our solar system.

Here are the nine planets in our solar system, listed in order of their appearance from the sun. Mercury is the closest to the sun and Pluto is the furthest.

Read more about our Sun | The Moon | Earth | Space Science Resources

1.   Mercury

2.   Venus

3.  Earth

4.  Mars

5.   Jupiter

6.   Saturn

7.   Uranus

8.   Neptune

9.   Pluto

Are We Alone?

Ours is not the only solar system in the universe. Scientists have learned a lot about how our solar system was formed by studying other astronomical phenomena, like nebulas, that are in different stages of their life cycles. Because of significant advances in technology, scientists have been able to view other solar systems in the development process. Astronomers and planetary geologists have been scanning the universe with high-powered telescopes, such as the Hubble Space Telescope, and have found billions of other galaxies in our universe, each of which could potentially contain hundreds of separate solar systems. We have yet to learn if there are any planets in these other solar systems that support life - or maybe even intelligent life.

Here's a really exciting opportunity for YOU to be part of an Internet consortium of scientists who are scanning the skies for signs of intelligent life, just by using your home computer. Join the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (formally known as SETI) by going to the Berkeley website and downloading a program that analyzes radiotelescope data right on your home computer!

Who knows? You may actually be the first human on earth to detect signals from outer space which confirm that we are not alone.

 


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