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LOS

P L A N E TA S
J O H N N ATA N A D A H I R R O D R I G U E Z B E L E C H E
INDICE

01 03
02
QUE SON LOS
CURIOSIDADES
P L A N E TA S
DE QUE SE
COMPONEN

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01

Q U E S O N L O S P L A N E TA S
01
Q U E S O N L O S P L A N E TA S

Son cuerpos celestes que orbitan a una


estrella, los planetas se clasifican según de
que se componen:

4
02

DE QUE SE COMPONEN
03

CURIOSIDADES
03 CURIOSIDADES

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02. PLANETS

Mercury

The smallest planet in our solar system and


nearest to the Sun, Mercury is only
slightly larger than Earth's Moon.

From the surface of Mercury, the Sun would


appear more than three times as large as it
does when viewed from Earth, and the
sunlight would be as much as seven times
brighter. Despite its proximity to the Sun,
Mercury is not the hottest planet in our
solar system – that title belongs to nearby
Venus, thanks to its dense atmosphere.

Source: NASA SCIENCE | 8


solarsystem.nasa.gov
02. PLANETS

Ve n u s

Similar in size and structure to Earth,


Venus has been called Earth's twin. These
are not identical twins.

Venus has a thick, toxic atmosphere filled


with carbon dioxide and it’s perpetually
shrouded in thick, yellowish clouds of
mostly sulfuric acid that trap heat,
causing a runaway greenhouse effect. It’s
the hottest planet in our solar system,
even though Mercury is closer to the Sun.
Venus has crushing air pressure at its
surface is similar to the pressure you'd
encounter a mile below the ocean on Earth.

Source: NASA SCIENCE | 9


solarsystem.nasa.gov
02. PLANETS

Mars

Mars is the fourth planet from the Sun – a



dusty, cold, desert world with a very thin
atmosphere. Mars is also a dynamic planet
with seasons, polar ice caps, canyons,
extinct volcanoes, and evidence that it was
even more active in the past.

Mars is one of the most explored bodies in


our solar system, and it's the only planet
where we've sent rovers to roam the alien
landscape. Two NASA rovers and one lander are
currently exploring the surface of Mars. An
international fleet of eight orbiters are
studying the Red Planet from above.

Source: NASA SCIENCE | 10


solarsystem.nasa.gov
02. PLANETS

Jupiter

Jupiter has a long history surprising


scientists—all the way back to 1610 when
Galileo Galilei found the first moons beyond
Earth.

Fifth in line from the Sun, Jupiter is, by


far, the largest planet in the solar system.

Jupiter's familiar stripes and swirls are


actually cold, windy clouds of ammonia and
water, floating in an atmosphere of hydrogen
and helium. Jupiter’s iconic Great Red Spot
is a giant storm bigger than Earth that has
raged for hundreds of years.

Source: NASA SCIENCE | 11


solarsystem.nasa.gov
02. PLANETS

Saturn

Saturn is the sixth planet from the


Sun and the second largest planet in
our solar system.

Adorned with thousands of beautiful


ringlets, Saturn is unique among the
planets. It is not the only planet to
have rings—made of chunks of ice and
rock—but none are as spectacular or
as complicated as Saturn's.

Like fellow gas giant Jupiter, Saturn


is a massive ball made mostly of
hydrogen and helium.

Source: NASA SCIENCE | 12


solarsystem.nasa.gov
02. PLANETS

Uranus

The first planet found with the aid of a


telescope, Uranus was discovered in 1781 by
astronomer William Herschel, although he
originally thought it was either a comet or a
star.

It was two years later that the object was


universally accepted as a new planet, in part
because of observations by astronomer Johann
Elert Bode. Herschel tried unsuccessfully to
name his discovery Georgium Sidus after King
George III. Instead the scientific community
accepted Bode's suggestion to name it Uranus,
the Greek god of the sky, as suggested by
Bode.​
Source: NASA SCIENCE | 13
solarsystem.nasa.gov
02. PLANETS

Neptune

Dark, cold and whipped by supersonic winds,


ice giant Neptune is the eighth and most
distant planet in our solar system.

More than 30 times as far from the Sun as


Earth, Neptune is the only planet in our
solar system not visible to the naked eye and
the first predicted by mathematics before its
discovery.

NASA's Voyager 2 is the only spacecraft to


have visited Neptune up close. It flew past
in 1989 on its way out of the solar system.

Source: NASA SCIENCE | 14


solarsystem.nasa.gov
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EXTRA SLIDES
EXTRA INFO HERE
QUOTE


I think we have a good chance
of surviving long enough to
colonize the solar system.

S t e p h e n H a w k i n g

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V I D E O T I T L E

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SOURCE: Source name

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BACKGROUND

VI DE O
LOOP
THE SOLAR SYSTEM

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