← Back to Space Physics

⚑ Our Solar System and Gravity

Spec 6.8.1 (physics only) πŸ“— Foundation
πŸ“– In-Depth Theory

The Solar System

Our SOLAR SYSTEM consists of:
The SUN β€” a star at the centre; contains ~99.8% of the total mass of the Solar System.
EIGHT PLANETS β€” orbit the Sun in approximately circular or elliptical orbits.
DWARF PLANETS β€” e.g. Pluto, Ceres β€” smaller bodies.
MOONS β€” natural satellites orbiting planets.
ASTEROID BELT β€” rocky bodies between Mars and Jupiter.
COMETS β€” icy bodies with highly elliptical orbits.
PLANETS (in order from the Sun):
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars | Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune.
Memory: 'My Very Excellent Mother Just Served Us Noodles'
SCALE:
Earth–Sun distance: 1 AU = 1.5 Γ— 10ΒΉΒΉ m.
Nearest star (Proxima Centauri): ~4.25 light-years.
Our galaxy (Milky Way): ~100,000 light-years across.
1 light-year = 9.46 Γ— 10¹⁡ m.

Orbital Motion and Gravity

Planets, moons and satellites stay in orbit due to GRAVITY.
GRAVITATIONAL FORCE:
All masses attract each other via gravity (a non-contact force).
The Sun's gravity keeps planets in orbit.
Earth's gravity keeps the Moon in orbit.
Gravity acts as the CENTRIPETAL FORCE for circular orbits β€” always directed towards the centre.
ORBITAL SPEED AND DISTANCE:
Planets closer to the Sun move FASTER β€” they need more speed to balance the stronger gravitational pull.
Planets further from the Sun move SLOWER β€” in larger orbits.
NATURAL SATELLITES:
Moon: natural satellite of Earth. Orbital period: ~27 days.
Moons of other planets: hundreds known.
ARTIFICIAL SATELLITES:
High Earth orbit (geostationary): 35,786 km, 24-hour period. Appears stationary. Used for: communications, weather.
Low Earth orbit (LEO): 200–2000 km, ~90 min period. Used for: ISS, Earth observation, GPS.
Higher orbit = slower speed, longer period.

Beyond the Solar System

STARS:
The Sun is a star β€” a large ball of plasma undergoing nuclear fusion.
Stars are grouped into GALAXIES.
Milky Way: our galaxy, ~200–400 billion stars.
Nearest galaxy to us: Andromeda (~2.5 million light-years).
UNIVERSE:
Contains ~2 trillion galaxies β€” observable universe ~93 billion light-years in diameter.
Age of universe: ~13.8 billion years.
DISTANCE MEASUREMENT:
Astronomical Unit (AU): average Earth-Sun distance β€” used within solar system.
Light-year: distance light travels in one year β€” used for interstellar distances.
Parsec: 3.26 light-years β€” used by professional astronomers.
SPACE EXPLORATION:
Probes: Voyager 1 and 2, New Horizons, Mars rovers.
Telescopes: Hubble (visible), James Webb (infrared), Chandra (X-ray).
Human spaceflight: ISS β€” continuous human presence since 2000.
⚠️ Common Mistake

Geostationary orbits are above the EQUATOR and have a period of exactly 24 hours β€” they appear stationary from Earth. LEO satellites have much shorter periods (90 minutes). The Sun is NOT at the exact centre of planetary orbits β€” orbits are slightly elliptical, with the Sun at one focus.

πŸ“Œ Key Note

Solar System: Sun + 8 planets + moons, asteroids, comets. Gravity provides centripetal force for orbits. Closer orbit = faster speed. Geostationary: 36,000 km, 24-hour period, stationary above equator. LEO: 200–2000 km, 90-min period. 1 light-year = 9.46 Γ— 10¹⁡ m.

🎯 Matching Activity β€” Solar System

Match each body to its description. β€” drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.

Geostationary satellite
Drop here
Low Earth orbit (LEO)
Drop here
Asteroid belt
Drop here
Light-year
Drop here
36,000 km altitude, 24-hour period, appears stationary β€” used for communications
Rocky bodies between Mars and Jupiter β€” remnants from Solar System formation
200–2000 km altitude, ~90 min period β€” used for ISS, Earth observation
Distance light travels in one year β€” 9.46 Γ— 10¹⁡ m β€” used for interstellar distances
πŸ”¬ Triple Science Only

Space physics (physics only) β€” entire topic not in Combined Science.

🎯 Test Yourself
Question 1 of 2
1. Why do planets closer to the Sun orbit faster than those further away?
2. What is the advantage of geostationary satellites over low Earth orbit satellites for communications?
⭐ How Well Do You Understand This Topic?

Be honest with yourself β€” this helps you know what to revise!

Don't get it Getting there Nailed it!
πŸ€– Ask Mr Badmus AI

Stuck? Just ask! πŸ’¬

I'll use FIFA for calculations and flag Higher/Triple content clearly.

πŸ“‹ All Space Physics subtopics

Mr. Badmus AI

GCSE Science Tutor

preview