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  • The Planets

    The nine planets that orbit the sun are (in order from the Sun): Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter (the biggest planet in our Solar System), Saturn (with large, orbiting rings), Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto (a dwarf planet or plutoid). A belt of asteroids (minor planets made of rock and metal) orbits between Mars and Jupiter. These objects all orbit the sun in roughly circular orbits that lie in the same plane, the ecliptic (Pluto is an exception; it has an elliptical orbit tilted over 17° from the ecliptic). The inner planets (those planets that orbit close to the Sun) are quite different from the outer planets (those planets that orbit far from the Sun).

    • The inner planets are: Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars. They are relatively small, composed mostly of rock, and have few or no moons.
    • The outer planets include: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto. They are mostly huge, mostly gaseous, ringed, and have many moons (again, the exception is Pluto which is small, rocky, has one large moon and two small moons, and is considered to be a dwarf planet or plutoid).

    guides this is a little reading about planets please read and in your note book make questions about the reading must be 5 questions thanks miss juliana

    guys please read the 2 activities energy and solar system thanks make a resume of this

    Carbon and climate change

    To slow down climate change, all countries in Europe have agreed to reduce energy use to decrease the amount of carbon dioxide they produce. They will also increase use of renewable energy sources.

    To find out more about climate change and how you can help reduce carbon emissions, visit our transport, web links, photo gallery and video pages. Pleaseread the article for Monday thanks miss Juliana

    Make Fresh Water with the Help of the Sun!

    Fresh water is vital to our survival.  The body needs it every day to stay healthy.  What would you do if you were surrounded by salt water without fresh water to drink?  How do we make salt water safe to consume?  It’s easier than you think.  This activity will teach your 5th grader how to distill (to purify a liquid by heat and condensation) salt water so that it is safe to drink and more importantly, it will build upon his developing 5th grade science skills.

    What You Need:

    • Large bowl
    • Short glass or cup
    • Tape
    • Plastic Wrap
    • Small rock
    • Picture of water
    • Salt
    • Long spoon for stirring

    What You Do:

    1. First make salt water by adding some salt to your water.  Stir until the salt dissolves.
    2. Pour about 2 inches of water into your bowl.
    3. Take your empty glass and put it into the center of the bowl.  The top of the glass should be shorter than the bowl but higher than the salt water.
    4. Put plastic wrap over the bowl.  You may need to use tape to get the plastic wrap to seal tight.
    5. Place your rock over the center of your glass so that it weighs down the plastic wrap a little bit, directly over the center of the glass in the bowl.  Now you have made what is called a still.
    6. Place your solar still in the sun for a few hours or all day long.  Check on it throughout the day.  Note how the water is condensing on the plastic wrap and dripping into the glass.  The heat from the sun is evaporating the water up into the air in the bowl.  The water then condenses on the plastic wrap, collecting and pooling where the rock is weighing the wrap down.  When the water turns into vapor it leaves the salt behind.  The result is pure water and this is what is collected in the glass.
    7. When you want to test your water, take the plastic wrap off and taste your water in the glass.  It’s no longer salty!  This process of salt distilling is called desalination.

    Did You Know?

    The biggest desalination plant in the world is in the Middle East, where fresh water is very hard to find.  The United States also has plants but they operate on a much smaller scale because the process is expensive.  A by-product (what’s left over) of desalination is table salt.

     

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    song 1

    Matter song  1 Listen to the song  miss juliana

    Guide activity

    Guide  1 Answer the questions and print and pasteon the note book..

    What happened to the bone ?

    What happened  to the ice cream?

    Write the states of the matter and draw it ?

    Describe on your own words about the activity?

    take care  Miss juliana

    matter game

    Hi i am sending a game for the weekend refers to matter is a game enjoit on mody i wil recive the coments the game includes a little questionary, you must print and do it matter for kids

    States of matter

     Hol.

    States of matter

    Bill Nye the Science Guy - Phases of Matter 1/3

    Bill Nye the Science Guy - Phases of Matter 2/3

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