The document provides descriptions of various astronomical objects including galaxies, nebulae, comets, and other celestial bodies. It includes facts about the International Space Station, supernovae, black holes, and other cosmic phenomena. Images are accompanied by captions explaining features visible in each photograph.
This document discusses meteoroids, meteors, and meteorites. It begins by asking readers if they have seen a shooting star and clarifying that a shooting star is actually a meteor. It then defines meteoroids as broken up rocks and dust from comets, asteroids, the Moon or Mars. When meteoroid enters Earth's atmosphere, it heats up and burns, creating a meteor. Any fragment that survives this entry and reaches the ground is called a meteorite. The document differentiates these terms and shows where meteoroid, meteor and meteorite would be located. It includes a daily checkup quiz and assignment to research superstitious beliefs about space objects.
Meteors are bright streaks of light seen briefly in the sky, and meteorites are meteors that survive entry into the Earth's atmosphere and impact the surface. Millions of meteors enter the Earth's atmosphere daily but become visible only when friction with the atmosphere heats them, causing them to glow brightly for a short time as they streak across the sky.
There are three main types of meteorites: iron, stone, and stony-iron. A meteorite is a meteor that survives entry into the Earth's atmosphere and lands on the ground. Before entering the atmosphere, it is called a meteoroid, and as it burns up in the atmosphere it is a meteor. The largest meteorite found in America is the Willamette stone, discovered in Oregon. Certain museums, such as the Rice Museum in Hillsboro, have meteorite displays.
Meteoroids are solid objects that orbit the sun. When they enter the Earth's atmosphere, they heat up and produce bright streaks called meteors. Meteors originate from within our solar system, such as from the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Meteor showers occur when streams of meteoroids enter the atmosphere parallel to each other, radiating from a single point in the night sky. Common meteor showers include the Quadrantids in January, Lyrids in April, and Geminids in December.
The document provides descriptions of various astronomical objects including galaxies, nebulae, comets, and other celestial bodies. It includes facts about the International Space Station, supernovae, black holes, and other cosmic phenomena. Images are accompanied by captions explaining features visible in each photograph.
This document discusses meteoroids, meteors, and meteorites. It begins by asking readers if they have seen a shooting star and clarifying that a shooting star is actually a meteor. It then defines meteoroids as broken up rocks and dust from comets, asteroids, the Moon or Mars. When meteoroid enters Earth's atmosphere, it heats up and burns, creating a meteor. Any fragment that survives this entry and reaches the ground is called a meteorite. The document differentiates these terms and shows where meteoroid, meteor and meteorite would be located. It includes a daily checkup quiz and assignment to research superstitious beliefs about space objects.
Meteors are bright streaks of light seen briefly in the sky, and meteorites are meteors that survive entry into the Earth's atmosphere and impact the surface. Millions of meteors enter the Earth's atmosphere daily but become visible only when friction with the atmosphere heats them, causing them to glow brightly for a short time as they streak across the sky.
There are three main types of meteorites: iron, stone, and stony-iron. A meteorite is a meteor that survives entry into the Earth's atmosphere and lands on the ground. Before entering the atmosphere, it is called a meteoroid, and as it burns up in the atmosphere it is a meteor. The largest meteorite found in America is the Willamette stone, discovered in Oregon. Certain museums, such as the Rice Museum in Hillsboro, have meteorite displays.
Meteoroids are solid objects that orbit the sun. When they enter the Earth's atmosphere, they heat up and produce bright streaks called meteors. Meteors originate from within our solar system, such as from the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Meteor showers occur when streams of meteoroids enter the atmosphere parallel to each other, radiating from a single point in the night sky. Common meteor showers include the Quadrantids in January, Lyrids in April, and Geminids in December.
The sun has a core temperature of 27 million degrees Fahrenheit and is over 4.6 billion years old. It is located 91.4 million miles from Earth and accounts for more than 99% of the mass in the solar system. The sun is made up of clouds, dust, and gas and would take over 200 years to drive to at 55 miles per hour.
Venus has a dense atmosphere that makes it four-fifths less massive than Earth. It rotates eastward like Earth but on its axis rather than around the poles. The temperature on Venus reaches 870 degrees Fahrenheit due to its extreme greenhouse effect, and its surface is covered in volcanoes and rolling desert plains beneath perpetual swirling clouds of sulfuric acid.
The Moon is Earth's only natural satellite and is located approximately 2,160 miles away. It was first walked on by Neil Armstrong in 1968 during an Apollo mission. The temperature on the Moon's surface varies greatly from hundreds of degrees below zero to over 100 degrees. Ice and rocks cover the lunar surface.
Saturn is a gas giant with no solid surface. It has a hydrogen and helium atmosphere and takes over 10 Earth years to complete one Saturnian year. Saturn has over 60 moons and its diameter is around 75,000 miles.
Mercury is the planet closest to the sun, with an orbital period of 88 Earth days. It has no natural satellites and rotates once every 59 Earth days, with an average surface temperature of 809 degrees F and a diameter of 3,032 miles.
Neptune is the smallest gas giant that is 4 times larger than Earth. It has a year lasting 165 Earth years and its average temperature is -215 degrees Celsius. Neptune has 13 moons, dark rings, and its blue color comes from methane gas in its atmosphere which is composed mostly of helium, hydrogen, water and silicates.
Jupiter is the fifth planet from the sun. It has 63 moons and takes almost 12 Earth years to complete one orbit around the sun while rotating once every 9.8 hours. With an average temperature of 236°F, Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system.
Mars is the fourth planet from the Sun. It takes 687 Earth days for one year on Mars and 24 hours, 39 minutes and 35 seconds for one Martian day. The temperature on Mars ranges from 195 to 70 degrees Fahrenheit and it has two moons with an atmosphere containing much less oxygen than Earth.
Comets are icy, dusty objects that orbit the sun in elongated oval paths. They have tails that can stretch over 100 million miles and small nuclei only a few miles wide. Scientists learned about comets when five space rockets flew past one, and famous comets like Halley's Comet return periodically, passing by Earth every 76 years with dirty snowball-like fronts that sometimes have one or two tails.
Venus is Earth's twin planet and is the second planet from the sun. It is the hottest planet due to its dense carbon dioxide atmosphere and has no natural satellites. Venus was discovered in the 1600s and is brighter than any other planet or star except for the sun.
PROIECT DE PARTENERIAT TRANSFRONTALIER „Educație online fără hotare”DusikaLevinta1
Colaborarea la nivel transfrontalier prin împărtășirea opiniilor, practicilor, metodelor și strategiilor de lucru cu cadrele didactice Republica Moldova și România pentru îmbunătățirea procesului educațional cu finalități comune.
OBIECTIVE Contribuirea la dezvoltarea unei educații de calitate;
Încurajarea formării continue a cadrelor didactice și manageriale;
Facilitarea accesului transfrontalier la resurse educative;
Promovarea dimensiunii interculturale a educației;
Încurajarea inovărilor în elaborarea materialelor didactice;
Utilizarea noilor tehnologii în educație.
Poveștile pentru copii au un rol complex și benefic în dezvoltarea lor, le vor oferi nu doar divertisment, ci și oportunități de învățare și creștere personală.
PARTENERIAT TRANSFRONTALIER REPUBLICA MOLDOVA-ROMÂNIAFlorinaTrofin
olaborarea la nivel transfrontalier prin împărtășirea opiniilor, practicilor, metodelor și strategiilor de lucru cu cadrele didactice din Republica Moldova și România pentru îmbunătățirea procesului educațional cu finalități comune.
The sun has a core temperature of 27 million degrees Fahrenheit and is over 4.6 billion years old. It is located 91.4 million miles from Earth and accounts for more than 99% of the mass in the solar system. The sun is made up of clouds, dust, and gas and would take over 200 years to drive to at 55 miles per hour.
Venus has a dense atmosphere that makes it four-fifths less massive than Earth. It rotates eastward like Earth but on its axis rather than around the poles. The temperature on Venus reaches 870 degrees Fahrenheit due to its extreme greenhouse effect, and its surface is covered in volcanoes and rolling desert plains beneath perpetual swirling clouds of sulfuric acid.
The Moon is Earth's only natural satellite and is located approximately 2,160 miles away. It was first walked on by Neil Armstrong in 1968 during an Apollo mission. The temperature on the Moon's surface varies greatly from hundreds of degrees below zero to over 100 degrees. Ice and rocks cover the lunar surface.
Saturn is a gas giant with no solid surface. It has a hydrogen and helium atmosphere and takes over 10 Earth years to complete one Saturnian year. Saturn has over 60 moons and its diameter is around 75,000 miles.
Mercury is the planet closest to the sun, with an orbital period of 88 Earth days. It has no natural satellites and rotates once every 59 Earth days, with an average surface temperature of 809 degrees F and a diameter of 3,032 miles.
Neptune is the smallest gas giant that is 4 times larger than Earth. It has a year lasting 165 Earth years and its average temperature is -215 degrees Celsius. Neptune has 13 moons, dark rings, and its blue color comes from methane gas in its atmosphere which is composed mostly of helium, hydrogen, water and silicates.
Jupiter is the fifth planet from the sun. It has 63 moons and takes almost 12 Earth years to complete one orbit around the sun while rotating once every 9.8 hours. With an average temperature of 236°F, Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system.
Mars is the fourth planet from the Sun. It takes 687 Earth days for one year on Mars and 24 hours, 39 minutes and 35 seconds for one Martian day. The temperature on Mars ranges from 195 to 70 degrees Fahrenheit and it has two moons with an atmosphere containing much less oxygen than Earth.
Comets are icy, dusty objects that orbit the sun in elongated oval paths. They have tails that can stretch over 100 million miles and small nuclei only a few miles wide. Scientists learned about comets when five space rockets flew past one, and famous comets like Halley's Comet return periodically, passing by Earth every 76 years with dirty snowball-like fronts that sometimes have one or two tails.
Venus is Earth's twin planet and is the second planet from the sun. It is the hottest planet due to its dense carbon dioxide atmosphere and has no natural satellites. Venus was discovered in the 1600s and is brighter than any other planet or star except for the sun.
PROIECT DE PARTENERIAT TRANSFRONTALIER „Educație online fără hotare”DusikaLevinta1
Colaborarea la nivel transfrontalier prin împărtășirea opiniilor, practicilor, metodelor și strategiilor de lucru cu cadrele didactice Republica Moldova și România pentru îmbunătățirea procesului educațional cu finalități comune.
OBIECTIVE Contribuirea la dezvoltarea unei educații de calitate;
Încurajarea formării continue a cadrelor didactice și manageriale;
Facilitarea accesului transfrontalier la resurse educative;
Promovarea dimensiunii interculturale a educației;
Încurajarea inovărilor în elaborarea materialelor didactice;
Utilizarea noilor tehnologii în educație.
Poveștile pentru copii au un rol complex și benefic în dezvoltarea lor, le vor oferi nu doar divertisment, ci și oportunități de învățare și creștere personală.
PARTENERIAT TRANSFRONTALIER REPUBLICA MOLDOVA-ROMÂNIAFlorinaTrofin
olaborarea la nivel transfrontalier prin împărtășirea opiniilor, practicilor, metodelor și strategiilor de lucru cu cadrele didactice din Republica Moldova și România pentru îmbunătățirea procesului educațional cu finalități comune.