Current Model of the Universe The moon When it is visible, the M______ is the biggest and The cycle repeats itself every 30 days ( monthly) b_________ object in the night sky. The moon does not make its own l_____ but acts like a giant mirror in the s____, reflecting sunlight down to you. This is the light you see. Sometimes you will see the M_______ full face (known as full moon) with its carters and ‘seas. At other times, you will only see h______ of it (a quarter m_______ or a slice of it (a crescent moon). These different views of the m______ are known as its p________. The S____ lights up half the M______ but we on E________ do not always see that half: what phase you see depends on how the M_______, S_____ and E________ are arranged in s______. Stars S________ are massive burning balls of h____________ gas. Hydrogen is explosive but the l_______ and h_______ that comes from hot stars is not from normal h____________explosions. It comes from n___________ explosions instead! A nuclear reaction (called a f__________ reaction) converts h_____________ into helium, releasing enormous amounts of e_________ as heat, light and r__________________ as it does so. The nearest star to E________ is the S_____, being ónly’150 million kilometers from us. At this distance, the l___________and h_________ from those n___________ explosions takes just over 8 m____________ to reach us. The other s___________ you see in the night sky are much further a_________. After the night S______, the next closest s_______ is Proxima Centauri. It is approximately 40 million million kilometers away and it takes 4.2 years for its l_________to reach us on E_________. The other s__________ you see are even further away- the light from some of them takes millions of y__________ to reach us! The Milky Way The M_______________ is the galaxy that contains our Solar S____________, with the name describing the galaxy's appearance from E____________. The Milky Way is a large barred spiral g____________. All the stars we see in the night s_______are in our own Milky W_______ Galaxy. A band of light runs across the night sky from one h______________ to the other. In ancient times, people thought that this looked like a road made of m________. That’s why it was named the M________Way. Scientists now know that this white band is the light from more than 200 b______________ stars. Most of these stars are too far away to be seen distinctly or individually from E__________, but their combined glow is one of the most s__________________ features of the night sky. Planets Planets are very different from s_________. There are no nuclear explosions on the p___________and so planets do not make their own l_________. Instead, they reflect light falling on them from the S______. This allows us to see them in the night s______. They’re seen as points of l___________ that look very much like real s_________. Although the p_____________ of the solar system are far from Earth, they are much closer to us than the S_________. Mercury, Venus, Earth and M________ are the closest planets to the S_______. These are known as terrestrial (meaning Earth-like) p______________. All these planets are rocky with a hard s________________. Mercury, V______________, and Mars are relatively close to Earth and are often seen in the night s_______ as a bright or colored point of l__________. M________________ and Venus are usually visible before dawn as morning ‘s___________ ‘or just before sunset as evening s__________. At these times, Venus is the b________________ in the sky. Mars appears as a red-colored s____________. The outer planets of Jupiter, Saturn, U_______________ and Neptune are huge balls of g__________ with a small and rocky c__________. For this reason, they are commonly known as the gas g____________. While Jupiter and Saturn can be seen as ‘stars’ with the naked eye, Neptune and Uranus can only be seen from E______________ using a t_______________. Other things you might see. Artificial satellites Artificial s___________________ orbit (travel around) Earth, looking like “stars’’ travelling slowly across the night s______________. They have been placed in orbit as space stations and for purposes such as c____________________ and for observing the weather on E_____________surface. The International Space Station (ISS) make sits own ___________ but this is too dull to be seen from E____________. You see satellites because they reflect s____________________back to you. Shooting Stars You may have seen something that looks like a s________ shooting across the night s______. Most fizzle out before they hit the horizon. These s______________ stars are space debris or r___________ burning up in our atmosphere as they plunge towards E____________. A small rock or p______________ of debris in space is called a m_______________. They can range in size from a g__________of sand to a rock 10 m__________ across. Occasionally, the path of a m__________________will bring it close enough to Earth for it to be pulled by Earth’s g____________. As the rock falls through the E__________ atmosphere, it reaches s___________ of more than 15 kilometers per s_____________! The meteoroid quickly compresses the a_______ in front of it, causing the air to h__________ up. This in turn h______________ up the rock, much like when your bicycle p____________ gets hot when you quickly pump up a t_____________. The enormous heat generated turns the m________________into a blazing fireball known as a meteor or shooting s_________. Most meteors are so s__________ that they burn up completely in the a______________________. Therefore, most shooting s___________ fizzle out before they reach the g________________. However, if a meteor is large then part of it might reach the g_____________ before it has completely b__________ up. The part that reaches the ground is called a m_____________. Most meteorites are s___________, but on very rare occasions E___________ is struck by a l____________ meteorite. Occasionally, these large meteorites are asteroids that have strayed from the asteroid belt. The b___________ is a band of rocky o____________ that orbit the S________ between Mars and J____________. The destruction the meteorite causes depends on its s_____________. Smaller meteorites form craters while larger ones can have devastating e____________. For example, there is a strong evidence that a m___________ meteorite impact caused the e_________________of the dinosaurs 65 m_________________ years ago. Comets C_______________ are part of the s__________ s___________ because they also travel around the S_______. Comets don’t appear often but when they do, they are among the most spectacular sights in the s_________. Comets are dirty snowballs made of i_____ mixed with c____________ dioxide and other s_________________. They have a head known as a c_________ and a long shining t____________. One of the most famous c______________ is Halley’s Comet. It reappears in the night s______ approximately every 76 y__________. Its most recent appearance was in ______________.