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  • ..., [[meteor]]s, and [[interplanetary dust cloud|interplanetary dust]]. The Solar System orbits the core of the Milky Way galaxy, along with billions of other star ...the Sun are divided into three classes: planets, dwarf planets, and small solar system bodies.
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  • #REDIRECT [[Solar System]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Solar System/Approval]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Solar System/Definition]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Solar System/Bibliography]]
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  • * [http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/index.cfm NASA's Solar System Exploration site] * [http://space.jpl.nasa.gov NASA's Solar System Simulator]
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Solar system]]. Needs checking by a human.
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  • #REDIRECT [[Solar System/Related Articles]]
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Page text matches

  • * [http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/index.cfm NASA's Solar System Exploration site] * [http://space.jpl.nasa.gov NASA's Solar System Simulator]
    878 bytes (127 words) - 15:34, 23 December 2007
  • * [http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/index.cfm NASA's Solar System Exploration site] * [http://space.jpl.nasa.gov NASA's Solar System Simulator]
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  • ...of which are on highly elliptical orbits, periodically visiting the inner solar system as comets.
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  • ...]] [[god]] [[Jupiter (mythology)|of the same name]]; largest planet in our solar system.
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  • #REDIRECT [[Solar System]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Solar System/Approval]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Solar System/Definition]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Solar System/Related Articles]]
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  • An [[asteroid]] within the [[solar system]].
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  • The [[star]] that defines our [[solar system]].
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  • The Milky Way galaxy which contains our solar system.
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  • *[http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Pluto Solar System Exploration - Planets - Pluto] - [[NASA]] website
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  • {{r|Solar system}} {{r|Small solar system bodies}}
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  • {{r|Solar system}} {{r|Small solar system bodies}}
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  • {{r|Solar system}} {{r|Small solar system bodies}}
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  • {{r|Solar system}} {{r|Small solar system bodies}}
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  • {{r|Solar system}} {{r|Small solar system bodies}}
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  • {{r|Solar system}} {{r|Small solar system bodies}}
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  • ...study of planets, moons, and planetary systems, in particular those of the Solar System.
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  • ...in the Coma Berenices constellation, and about 58,000 light-years from the Solar system.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>The second planet from the Sun in our solar system; named after the Roman goddess of love.
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  • The first planet from the Sun in our solar system; named after the Roman messenger of gods.
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  • The sixth planet from the Sun in our solar system; named after the Roman god of agriculture and harvest.
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  • The seventh planet from the Sun in our solar system; name after the Greek god of the sky.
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  • A satellite [[asteroid]] of the larger asteroid [[Didymos]] within the [[solar system]].
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  • Moon of [[Saturn]], the second-largest moon in the [[Solar System]]
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  • The eighth planet from the Sun in our solar system; named after the Roman god of the sea.
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  • ...ce from the Earth to the Sun used to provide relative distances within the solar system; value is approx. 150 million kms.
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  • The third [[planet]] from the [[Sun]] in our [[solar system]]; the only place in the [[universe]] known by [[humanity]] to harbor [[lif
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  • The fourth [[planet]] from the [[Sun]] in our [[solar system]]; named after the [[Mars (mythology)|Roman god of war]]; also known as the
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  • Solar System object, such as a small comet or asteroid, whose orbit brings it into close
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  • Book by T. S. Kuhn that gives the development of views on the Solar system and the motion of the planets from antiquity until Newton (end 17th century
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  • Planet that is primarily composed of silicate rocks, within the solar system the terrestrial planets are any of the four planets, Mercury, Venus, Earth,
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  • ...system]]. The two asteroids comprise a binary asteroid system within the [[solar system]], with Dimorphos accounting for roughly 1% of the mass of the system. Dim | title = Didymos via NASA Science SOLAR SYSTEM EXPLORATION
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  • ...pler (1571–1630), and used by him to describe the motion of planets in the Solar System, and the motion of any two bodies orbiting each other.
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  • | title = The Solar System Beyond The Planets While other primordial material in the early [[Solar System]] clumped together to form planets, it is likely that Jupiter's strong [[gr
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  • ...ion was to help establish the composition and the formation process of the Solar System by collecting direct samples of the solar nebula. One current theory on the development of the Solar System is that planets are formed from a result of collisions of material from the
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  • {{r|Solar system}}
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  • | title = Solar System Exploration: Planets: Comets: Overview
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  • The area beyond Neptune, often called the outer solar system or the "[[trans-Neptunian objects|trans-Neptunian region]]", is still large ...bodies orbit the Sun within a thick band around the ecliptic plane of the solar system. For this reason it is largely believed that they comprise a ring orbiting
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  • ...lite asteroid [[Dimorphos]] comprise a binary asteroid system within the [[solar system]]. Didymos was discovered in 1996, and is estimated to contain roughly 99% | title = Didymos via NASA Science SOLAR SYSTEM EXPLORATION
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  • {{r|Solar system}}
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  • ...ns involve either two objects in the [[Solar System]] or one object in the Solar System and a more distant object, such as a [[star]]. A conjunction is an apparent
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  • In our [[solar system]] there are few known '''volcanically active worlds''' - bodies where openi ...2006.</ref> Enceladus would be added to the growing list of places in the solar system that might be home to some form of [[life]]. To try to resolve these matter
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  • ...e. [[Earth]]'s highest mountain is [[Mount Everest]]; the highest in the [[solar system]] is [[Olympus Mons]] on [[Mars]].
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  • ==Other atmospheres in the Solar System== ...clear 5 billion years ago and blew much of the hydrogen out of the inner [[solar system]]. Saturn's moon [[Titan]] also has an atmosphere, which contains large vol
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  • '''Planetology''' is the study of other planets, those in our solar system and those beyond it. It is also referred to as '''planetary science'''. Giv ...ti-spectrum telescopy overall and robotic space craft in particular in the solar system.
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  • ...t]] closest to our Sun, and it is the smallest of the eight planets in our solar system, with only a 0.055 Earth mass (3.30e23 kg) and a diameter of 4,880 km. ...gov/vision/universe/solarsystem/planetsf-20060824.html Honey, I Shrunk the Solar System] NASA. “The International Astronomical Union has decided that, to be call
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  • ...times, it has even been extended to include the other [[planet]]s of the [[Solar System]].
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  • ...f rock (as opposed to gas or ice). The other terrestrial planets in the [[Solar System]] are [[Mercury]], [[Venus]], [[Mars]] and the [[dwarf planet]] [[Ceres]]. Outside the Solar System, Earth-like [[planet|planets]] might harbor [[life]] as we know it. They wi
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  • ...et)|Earth]] to the [[Sun]] used to provide relative distances within the [[solar system]]. ...as planets, dwarf planets, comets, and asteroids. For objects outside the solar system, it is more convenient to use [[light year]]s or [[parsec]]s. (A light year
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  • ...f>''NASA'': '[http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Pluto Solar System Exploration - Planets - Pluto]'.</ref> ...stem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Pluto&Display=Facts&System=Metric Solar System Exploration - Planets - Pluto - Facts & Figures]'.</ref>
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Solar system]]. Needs checking by a human.
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  • ...or [[yellow]] in [[color|colour]]. It is moving rapidly relative to the [[Solar System]], as part of the [[Arcturus stream]] with 52 other stars, and in about 4,0
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  • ...o the same position relative to the sun as seen by an observer outside the solar system. The sidereal year is 365.256 363 051 days (365d 6h 9min 9s) long.
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  • ...but too small to clear their orbital path of other celestial bodies. Our [[Solar System]] has five celestial bodies recognized as dwarf planets by the Internationa ...profile.cfm?Object=Dwarf&Display=OverviewLong What defines a planet?] NASA Solar system exploration</ref>
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  • ...piter''' is the fifth [[planet]] from the [[Sun]] and the largest in the [[Solar system]]. It is a [[gas giant]] (also known as the Jovian planet). ...gov/vision/universe/solarsystem/planetsf-20060824.html Honey, I Shrunk the Solar System] NASA. “The International Astronomical Union has decided that, to be call
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  • ...h [[planet]], in order of distance from the [[Sun]], in our [[Solar system|solar system]]. It was the first planet, not known to the ancients, to be discovered whe One of the 4 planets of the outer Solar system, Uranus, like [[Neptune_(planet)|Neptune]], is classified as an icy giant (
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  • ...2006.</ref> Enceladus would be added to the growing list of places in the solar system that might be home to some form of life. To try to resolve these matters, '
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  • ...[[science|scientific]] view is that Earth and every other object in the [[solar system]] descend from a great cloud of interstellar [[gas]] and dust that condense
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  • ...ature where it make sense to express them in light weeks. Distances in our solar system are normally expressed in [[light second]]s up to [[light day]]s. Distances
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  • ...ture where it make sense to express them in light months. Distances in our solar system are normally expressed in [[light second]]s up to [[light day]]s. Distances
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  • '''Neptune''' is the eighth [[planet]] from the [[Sun]] in our [[Solar system|solar system]]. Along with [[Uranus_(planet)|Uranus]], it is classified as an icy giant. ...gov/vision/universe/solarsystem/planetsf-20060824.html Honey, I Shrunk the Solar System] NASA. “The International Astronomical Union has decided that, to be call
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  • ...o the same position relative to the sun as seen by an observer outside the solar system. The sidereal year is 365.256 363 051 days (365d 6h 9min 9s) long.
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  • | title = ‘Mini-Neptunes’ beyond solar system may soon yield signs of life | quote = Not present in our own solar system, these worlds are known as Hycean planets. They are typically up to 2.5 tim
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  • ...tion.html | accessdate = 2006-05-25 }}</ref> There are eight bodies in the Solar System that meet this definition: [[Mercury_(planet)|Mercury]], [[Venus_(planet)|V ...ther bodies orbiting the Sun are generically called "[[small bodies of the Solar System]]."
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  • *[[Solar system]]
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  • ...y is acting on Earth at all times. The Sun, moon, and other planets in our solar system all have a force of attraction. The equilateral bulge is proof of this, alo ...(0 to .05) results from gravitational attractions from the planets in our solar system. The current effect this has on solar radiation is only .2% although this i
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  • 99.8% of the mass of the solar system; about 333,000 times that of Earth
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  • ...s the [[zenith]]. The observer observes a planet (or another object in our solar system) under an angle &alpha; with the zenith, this angle is the ''topocentric z
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  • ...hot stars, stars with circumstellar material, interacting binaries, novae, solar system objects, and active galaxies. The data gathered have allowed astronomers to
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  • * The diameter of our [[Solar System]] is about 150 [[light hour]]s or about 6 [[light day]]s.
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  • ...is larger than any other satellite orbiting the other [[planet]]s of the [[Solar System]]. Tidal locking is a common occurrence between other bodies in the solar system. For example, the [[dwarf planet]] [[Pluto]] and its moon [[Charon]] are ti
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  • ...er Andrew Jackson "[[Slide rule|Slipstick]]" Libby, the Families leave the Solar System with the deposed Ford. The first planet they discover has humanoid inhabita The Families, returning to the [[Solar System]] 74 years after their original departure because of [[time dilation]], dis
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  • ...go. These stars are rapidly orbiting the black hole just as planets in our solar system revolve around the Sun. Calculations for the stars' speeds are derived by m
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  • ...will provide insights into the evolutionary unfolding of our universe, our solar system, our biota, and our humanity.
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  • ...races the search for potentially inhabited [[planet|planets]] beyond the [[Solar System]], the exploration of [[Mars]] and the outer planets, laboratory and field ...table environments, prebiotic chemistry and signs of life elsewhere in our Solar System;
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  • ...net]]s, [[moon]]s, and [[planetary system]]s, in particular those of the [[Solar System]] and how they were created. It studies objects ranging in size from very s
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  • ...anet [[Jupiter (planet)|Jupiter]]), the second-largest [[planet]] in the [[solar system]] after [[Jupiter]]. Saturn has a prominent system of [[Rings of Saturn|rin ...ets are also oblate, but to a lesser degree. Saturn is the only one of the Solar System's planets that is less dense than water, with an average specific density o
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  • ...on of the electromagnetic spectrum. The JCMT is employed in studies of the Solar System, interstellar gas and dust as well as distant galaxies.<ref>[http://www.jac
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  • ...ive, positively charged nucleus. However, as is true to some extent in our solar system, the electron orbits are not limited to an orbital plane.
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  • ...onsidering that it is several times the average lifespan of a sun like our solar system's, the very same celestial body by which we measure time. The sun is estima
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  • ...r be known as the Koprulu Sector, located 60,000 light years away from the Solar System. The planets where they make descent are Umoja, Moria, and Tarsonis. One of
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  • ...persuade Tycho to adopt the [[heliocentrism|heliocentric model]] of the [[solar system]]. Tycho believed in a modified [[geocentric model]] known as the [[Tychoni ...l support for the [[Copernicus|Copernican]] [[heliocentric theory]] of the solar system.
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  • ...]] of the Milky Way, if it were reduced to 130 km (80 mi) in diameter, the Solar System would be a mere 2 mm (0.08 inches) in width. The Galactic Halo extends outw ...roportional only to the length of the path traveled. This is unlike in the Solar System where different orbits are also expected to have significantly different ve
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  • ..., [[meteor]]s, and [[interplanetary dust cloud|interplanetary dust]]. The Solar System orbits the core of the Milky Way galaxy, along with billions of other star ...the Sun are divided into three classes: planets, dwarf planets, and small solar system bodies.
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  • The interstellar matter closer to our solar system includes matter created after the original nebula from which our sun was fo
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  • ...it]] the center of the galaxy similar to the way in which planets in the [[solar system]] orbit the sun, that is, according to [[Newtonian mechanics]]. Based on th
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  • ...ut a genetic code, where code originally meant a cipher; we talk about the solar system model of the atom as though the atom were like a sun and moon and planets.
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  • ...ed to describe the study of other worlds, such as the [[planets]] of the [[solar system]], and even beyond. The study of systems larger than the earth itself usual
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  • ...cope, which revealed that the Sun, and not the Earth, is the center of the solar system.<ref>Fisher, Gordon: ''Marriage and Divorce of Astronomy and Astrology,''
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  • Three astronomical laws pertaining to our [[solar system]] bear Kepler's name. The first and second law were published in his book
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  • ...their wide general application, are preferred over the more specific “the solar system has seven planets”.
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  • | One solar system, or users with very long delay time (e.g., reindeer herders who communicate
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  • ...ion, and the AU is commonly used for distances to other objects within the solar system as well. Still larger distances are better represented by using light-years | Dark matter, near solar system
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  • ...icolaus Copernicus|Copernicus]] proposed a [[heliocentric model]] of the [[Solar System]]. His work was defended, expanded upon, and corrected by [[Galileo Galilei * Since the late 1960s, our knowledge of the solar system has benefited from space missions that directly explored celestial bodies.
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  • 1. Build rockets and spacecraft that will enable us to explore the solar system **Launches robotic spacecraft. Robotic spacecraft will further explore the solar system.
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  • ...e a model that describes a real network as well as epicycles described the solar system.
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  • '''Mars''' is the fourth [[planet]] from the [[Sun]] in our [[solar system]] and is named after [[Mars (mythology)|Mars]], the [[Roman mythology|Roman ...ountain]] in the solar system, [[Olympus Mons]], the largest canyon in the solar system, [[Valles Marineris]], and [[polar ice caps]]. It had liquid water on its
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  • ...implications for the origin and evolution of life on Earth and within our solar system. Here, I summarize our current understanding of the physics of impacts, spa
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  • ...lcanic in origin.<ref name="Frankel">Frankel C. (1996), ''Volcanoes of the solar system'', Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, New York</ref> ...directly determine the size of the [[astronomical unit]], and hence of the solar system. [[Captain Cook]]'s exploration of the east coast of Australia came after h
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  • ...ury is also the name of the [[Mercury (planet)|innermost planet]] of the [[solar system]], which revolves around the sun faster than any other, hence the image of
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  • ...mber of the JMC's gigantic ship ''Red Dwarf'', a vessel sent through the [[solar system]] on a mining expedition. His room-mate is [[Red Dwarf (science fiction ser
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  • ...element [[neptunium]] just as Pluto came after Neptune as a planet in our Solar System before Pluto's reclassification to dwarf planet in 2006.
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  • ...he National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Office of Space Science, Solar System Exploration Division.
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  • ...l bore expected hallmarks of potential non-[[earth|terrestrial]] and non-[[Solar System]] origin. It lasted for the full 72-[[second]] duration that Big Ear observ
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  • ...ogy (the surface as well as interior processes) of all solid bodies in the solar system, including the major planets and their satellites, asteroids, comets, and m
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  • ...e number of stars, held together by [[gravitational force]]s akin to the [[solar system]] but on much larger scales. The resulting disk of stars would be seen as a
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  • 11 KB (1,708 words) - 19:29, 7 October 2009
  • ...earth and other planets. The primary focus has been on the planets of this solar system but as new planets are discovered, there is a growing amount of data on pla ...t led to the discovery of '''Solar Motion''' in 1783, determining that our solar system is moving towards the star '''Lambda Herculis'''. He also introduced the te
    51 KB (8,075 words) - 05:28, 17 October 2013
  • It's possible to work outwards, past the earth, past the solar system, past the universe, to the edge of the galaxy, and reason that since everyt ...liards table is in, connected to the outdoors, to the planet Earth, to the solar system and universe, and to all physical things everywhere&ndash;&ndash;in the sam
    63 KB (10,232 words) - 16:14, 25 March 2010
  • ...alesced and merged. Later, clusters of galaxies formed and eventually, the Solar System and Sun formed about 4.6 billion years ago.
    17 KB (2,731 words) - 19:52, 26 October 2020
  • ..., at that time, plausible though controversial model for the origin of the solar system.
    22 KB (3,306 words) - 21:10, 17 April 2014
  • ...period of time the earth was forming literally from a gaseous cloud as the solar system and the sun were forming. The only rocks on earth that date from that perio
    42 KB (5,498 words) - 18:08, 10 October 2013
  • ...which provide hot water in the summer when the fire isn't lit. A separate solar system provides electricity for the house lights and can power the computer in bri
    25 KB (3,600 words) - 14:27, 31 March 2024
  • ...therford postulated that the structure of an atom more closely resembled a solar system with the nucleus at the center and [[electron]]s orbiting around it. Unfor
    18 KB (2,789 words) - 20:34, 27 October 2020
  • ...ence had accumulated suggesting that the sun was in fact the center of the solar system, the whole infrastructure of theories broke down, leading the way to accept
    60 KB (9,261 words) - 15:41, 23 September 2013
  • ...tempt to give a completely mechanistic explanation of the formation of the solar system and more generally of the whole universe on Newtonian principles. Kant leav
    25 KB (4,036 words) - 16:09, 26 November 2008
  • ...nging the example to the similar, and historically accurate, notion of the solar system revolving around the earth. —[[User:Eric Winesett|Eric Winesett]] 09:33,
    56 KB (8,977 words) - 15:00, 20 March 2024
  • ...ence had accumulated suggesting that the sun was in fact the center of the solar system, the whole infrastructure of theories broke down, leading the way to accept
    64 KB (9,985 words) - 12:27, 24 March 2022
  • ...they represent samples from a very early period in the evolution of the [[Solar System]] that is largely missing from Earth. One important rock found during the A
    31 KB (4,868 words) - 10:47, 9 September 2023
  • ...es, Robert. ''The Superpower Space Race: An Explosive Rivalry through the Solar System.'' 1994. 437 pp.
    38 KB (5,175 words) - 21:33, 11 September 2009
  • ...of the trajectories of moving masses, including the masses comprising the solar system; allowing calculation of the strength of the mutual attraction of masses an
    94 KB (13,588 words) - 18:21, 24 November 2013
  • ...(1473-1543) established, at long last, the heliocentric theory putting the solar system in orbit around the sun and thereby resolving many of the problems that Pto
    46 KB (7,449 words) - 19:49, 26 October 2020