![]() MeteorsĪsk the students if they have ever heard of shooting stars, or if anyone has ever seen one. Show them how the comet has now melted and that the small rock fragments inside it have become meteoroids. Explain that many meteoroids are simply small pieces left over from the formation of the Solar System, which did not get formed into planets.Įnsuring that the students are wearing safety goggles and have been warned of the dangers of sharp fragments, ask them to knock the ‘asteroid’ rocks together to see how meteoroids are formed from asteroids. (Image note: The coloured blobs are stars – the different colours are because of the way the image was taken)Įxplain what a meteoroid is. You may wish to demonstrate how the tail is formed by slowly sliding it across a warm desk and looking at the tail that forms. ![]() Explain what a comet is using the background information and the image (Comet ISON). ![]() Pass the comets around the class so the students can see what it is made of. Explain what an asteroid is using the background information and the following image (Asteroid Gaspra). Pass around the rocks, explaining that they symbolise asteroids. Tell the students that the main topic of the lesson is Meteors/Shooting Stars. Meteoroids, Asteroids and CometsĪsk the students to name the objects that may be found in the Solar System and list them on a board. The students should complete their worksheets by answering each question. This should then be frozen before the activity starts. The discovery of a 180-km wide crater in Mexico is suggested to be responsible for the extinction of dinosaurs over 66 million years ago.įor the comet demonstration, students will need to mix small pieces of gravel and/or sand with water in a cup (or another suitable mould). These range in diameter from a few tens of meters up to about 300 km, and they range in age from the recent times to more than two billion years. Although majority of the meteorites are very small, their size can range from about a fraction of a gram (the size of a pebble) to 100 kilograms or more (the size of a huge, life-destroying boulder).Īlthough active processes on Earth’s surface quickly destroy the impact craters formed by meteorites, about 190 terrestrial impact craters have been identified so far. If any part of a meteoroid survives the fall through the atmosphere and lands on Earth, it is called a meteorite. They occur when the Earth’s atmosphere passes through a stream of small particles left behind in the comet’s tail. Huge meteor showers, caused by many meteoroids entering the atmosphere in one go, are caused by comets. Others are fragments of asteroids, broken off in collisions. Many are left over from the dust that formed the Solar System. These meteors come from meteoroids, there are three main sources of meteoroids. Most meteoroids that enter the Earth's atmosphere are so small that they vaporise completely and never reach the planet's surface. They are called meteoroids, and according to the International Astronomical Union, they are larger than a micron (a thousandth of a millimetre) and smaller than a meter in diameter.Ī meteor is the flash of light that we see in the night sky when a small chunk of interplanetary debris burns up as it passes through our atmosphere, also known as a shooting star. The space between our planets is populated by billions of smaller particles, which orbit around the Sun. As they near the Sun, the ice on the surface begins to melt, giving them a huge characteristic tail of water, steam and dust. Comets are made up of rocks, cemented together by ice. ![]() They have elliptical (oval shaped) orbits, which bring lead from the outer reaches of the Solar System close to the Sun and then back out again. ![]() Because of the gravitational interactions with both Jupiter and the Sun, these asteroids never managed to assemble, stick together and form a planet like the Earth.Ĭomets orbit the Sun in a much different way. Most asteroids orbit the Sun in a ring located between Mars and Jupiter however, some orbit in other places. The Solar System not only consists of planets and satellites but also many other objects such as asteroids, comets and meteoroids.Īsteroids are celestial bodies orbiting the Sun, and they are made of rock or metal (mostly iron) or a combination of the two. ![]()
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