Is 1
Is 1
Is 1
•The Sun
•The Earth
•the Moon
EARTH
3rd planet from the Sun in
the Solar System
Shape is oblate-spheroid
(with equatorial bulge)
about ¾ is the surface is
covered with water
earth’s rotation: 24 h
earth’s revolution: 365.25
days
How does the Earth
rotate on its own
axis while revolving
around the Sun?
Earth Rotation
Rotation - the turning, or spinning, of a body on its axis.
Coriolis effect
Measurement of Earth’s Rotation
• SOLAR DAY
- The time period from one noon to
the next
• SIDEREAL DAY
- the time it takes for Earth to make
one complete rotation (360º) with
respect to a star other than the sun—
23 hours, 56 minutes, 4 seconds.
Earth’s Revolution
- REVOLUTION - the motion of a body along a
path around some point in space.
Ex. Earth’s revolution in its elliptical path around the Sun
• Aphelion
- the point in the Earth’s orbit farthest from the
Sun
• Periphelion
- the point in the Earth’s orbit closest
from the Sun
Aphelion & Perihelion
.
Earth’s Titled Axis
Earth’s Seasons
Solstices & Equinoxes for Manila
Moon’s Revolution
Moon’s path around the Earth is elliptical
• Apogee
- the point in the moon’s orbit farthest from
the Earth
• Perigee
- the point in the moon’s orbit closest from the
Earth
Will you become
weighless when you
go to the surface of
the moon?
YES, since the Pull of gravity is 1/6
the pull of gravity on the surface of
the Earth
Earth’s Moon
has 1/6 times the
gravitational pull of the
Earth
Lunar surface has dark
regions (maria), highlands,
and craters.
Impact theory
• impact caused materials from the incoming
body and Earth’s outer layers to be ejected
into space, where over time they merged to
form the Moon
• Moon’s crust is so similar to Earth’s crust in
chemical composition
Phases of the Moon
• NEW MOON - the Moon is between Earth and
the Sun, the side that is illuminated is not
visible
Hydrosphere
Biosphere
Atmosphere
Lithosphere
Hydrosphere
Biosphere
Atmosphere
contains all of the
planet's air.
Weathering
Weathering
• is the process in which materials
on or near Earth’s surface break
down and change
• Kinds:
Mechanical Weathering
Chemical Weathering
Mechanical/ Physical Weathering
• rocks and minerals break down into smaller
pieces.
• does not involve any change in a rock’s
composition, only changes in the size and
shape of the rock.
Effect of Temperature
Effect of Pressure
What is the physics
behind frost-
wedging?
A Horizon
a layer of weathered
rock combined with a
rich concentration of
dark brown organic
material
B-horizon
Soil Profile (zone of accumulation)
- is a red layer that has been
enriched over time by clay
and minerals deposited by
water flowing from the
layers above, or percolating
upward from layers below.
C-horizon
- contains little or no organic
matter, and is often made
of broken-down bedrock.
What are most
important factors in
soil formation?
• Flows - In
some mass
movements,
Earth
materials
flow as if
they were a
thick liquid
KINDS of MASS MOVEMENT
•-
Vibrations from a
single skier can
trigger an
avalanche.