Stars and The Solar System: CBSE Class 8
Stars and The Solar System: CBSE Class 8
Stars and The Solar System: CBSE Class 8
SYSTEM
CBSE Class 8
Celestial Bodies
The various shapes of the bright part of the moon as seen during a month are called phases
of the moon.
Phases of the moon play an important role in our social life.
Almost all festivals in India are celebrated according to the phases of the moon.
The time period between one full moon to the next full moon is slightly longer than 29
days. In many calendars this period is called a month.
Why do phases of moon occur ?
-> We see the moon because the sunlight falling on it gets reflected towards us. gets
reflected towards us (Fig. 17.3). We, therefore, see only that part of the moon, from which
the light of the Sun is reflected towards us.
The moon’s surface is dusty and barren.
There are many craters of different sizes.
It also has a large number of steep and high mountains. Some of these
are as high as the highest mountains on the Earth.
The moon has no atmosphere. It has no water.
On July 21, 1969 the American astronaut, Neil Armstrong, landed on
the moon for the first time. He was followed by Edwin Aldrin.
Phases of Moon
Stars
The Sun and the celestial bodies which revolve around it form the solar system.
It consists of large number of bodies such as planets, comets, asteroids and meteors.
The gravitational attraction between the Sun and these objects keeps them revolving
around it.
The eight planets that revolve around the sun in their order of distance from the Sun are:
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
The Sun
The planets look like stars, but they do not have light of their own.
They merely reflect the sunlight that falls on them.
The planets keep changing their positions with respect to the stars.
A planet has a definite path in which it revolves around the Sun. This path is
called an orbit.
The time taken by a planet to complete one revolution is called its period of
revolution.
The period of revolution increases as the distance of the planet increases from the
sun.
Besides revolving around the Sun, a planet also rotates on its own axis
like a top.
The time taken by a planet to complete one rotation is called its period
of rotation.
Any celestial body revolving around another celestial body is called
its satellite.
Moon is a satellite of the Earth.
There are many man-made satellites revolving round the Earth. These
are called artificial satellites.
Mercury(Budh)
The planet mercury is nearest to the Sun.
It is the smallest planet of our solar system.
Because Mercury is very close to the Sun, it is very difficult to observe it, as most of the
time it is hidden in the glare of the Sun.
Mercury has no satellite of its own.
Venus
The Earth is the only planet in the solar system on which life is known to exist.
Some special environmental conditions are responsible for the existence and continuation
of life on the Earth.
From space, the Earth appears bluegreen due to the reflection of light from water and
landmass on its surface.
The axis of rotation of the Earth is not perpendicular to the plane of its orbit. The tilt is
responsible for the change of seasons on the Earth.
The Earth has only one moon.
Mars
Neptune is the eighth and farthest-known planet from the Sun. In the Solar System
Outer and Inner Planets
The first four planets, Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars are much nearer the Sun than the
other four planets. They are called the inner planets.
The inner planets have very few moons.
The planets outside the orbit of Mars, namely Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune are
much farther off than the inner planets. They are called the outer planets.
They have a ring system around them.
The outer planets have large number of moons.
Other Members of the Solar System
Asteroids are small, rocky objects that orbit the sun. There are lots of asteroids in our solar
system. Most of them live in the main asteroid belt—a region between the orbits of Mars
and Jupiter.
A Comet appears generally as a bright head with a long tail. They revolve in highly
elliptical paths around the sun with much high period of revolution. The length of the tail
grows in size as it approaches the sun. The tail of a comet is always directed away from the
sun .
Many comets are known to appear periodically. One such comet is Halley’s comet, which
appears after nearly every 76 years. It was last seen in 1986.
A meteor is usually a small object that occasionally enters the earth’s atmosphere. At that
time it has a very high speed. The friction due to the atmosphere heats it up. It glows and
evaporates quickly. Metors also called as shooting stars.
Some meteors are large and so they can reach the Earth before they evaporate completely.
The body that reaches the Earth is called a meteorite.
Artificial satellites are man-made. They are launched from the Earth. They revolve around
the Earth much closer than earth’s natural satellite, the moon. They are used for forecasting
weather, transmitting television and radio signals. They are also used for telecommunication
and remote sensing.
India has built and launched several artificial satellites. Aryabhata was the first Indian
satellite. Some other Indian satellites are INSAT, IRS, Kalpana-1, EDUSAT, etc.
Asteroid Comet
Meteor