My class visited the American Museum of Natural History on Monday, October 26th. We first went to the Hall of Meteorites where the museum has three pieces of an actual meteorite that fell in Greenland. I learned that the biggest piece, named Ahnighto is so massive that it sits on iron posts that go down all the way to the bedrock deep beneath the museum. I also learned that when meteorites hit the Earth they tell us about the start of the solar system because they have gone unchanged for the past 4.6 billion years. Those not big enough to get through the Earth's atmosphere burn up and we see them as "shooting stars."
Next we went to the Rose Center. We saw the Big Bang movie where I learned that the universe was much hotter, smaller and denser than it is today. It actually is expanding right now. Afterward, we went to see Journey to the Stars, a movie about the sun and the history of stars. I already knew that stars have great mass and gravity, they have great pressure, heat and density inside so fusion between Hydrogen atoms occurs which produces Helium, heat and light.
All stars do this. What I learned was that the sun is an average star: average size, average temperature, average life span. Hopefully, when the sun dies it will not explode in a supernova; only 1% of stars do this.
I still have some questions. Why can supernovas produce the heavy elements when they are expanding? Don't they have to have greater pressure than stars? And why didn't the sun pull in all the matter in the solar system when it first formed? Why was there enough matter left to make all the planets?
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Early Impact!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)