Your Cosmic Address
Earth's Position in Space
Learning Objectives
Describe Earth's position within the solar system, galaxy, and universe
Compare and contrast the planets in our solar system
Explain why Earth is uniquely suited to support life (Goldilocks Zone)
Your Cosmic Address
~5 minutesYour Cosmic Address
If an alien civilization wanted to send you a letter, what address would you give them? Certainly more than your street address! You'd need to help them locate Earth in the vastness of space.
Let's build your complete cosmic address—starting at home and zooming out to the largest structures in the universe.
Your Complete Cosmic Address: 1. Your Home (street address) 2. City, State, Country 3. Earth (third planet from the Sun) 4. The Solar System (our Sun and everything orbiting it) 5. The Milky Way Galaxy (our home galaxy) 6. The Local Group (cluster of ~80 galaxies) 7. The Observable Universe (billions of galaxies)
Essential Question: What makes Earth special in our solar system?
The Mind-Blowing Scale of Space
~10 minutesThe Mind-Blowing Scale of Space
Understanding Cosmic Distances
Space is so vast that regular distance measurements don't work well. Scientists use light-years—the distance light travels in one year (about 9.5 trillion kilometers).
How Long Light Takes to Reach Us:
| From | Time |
|---|---|
| The Moon | 1.3 seconds |
| The Sun | 8 minutes |
| Mars (closest approach) | 3 minutes |
| Jupiter | 35-52 minutes |
| Nearest star (Proxima Centauri) | 4.24 years |
| Center of Milky Way | 26,000 years |
| Nearest major galaxy (Andromeda) | 2.5 million years |
| Edge of observable universe | 13.8 billion years |
Our home galaxy contains 100-400 BILLION stars. Our Sun is just one of them, located in one of the spiral arms, about 26,000 light-years from the galactic center.
If you could count one star per second, it would take you over 3,000 years to count them all!
Our Solar System
~15 minutesOur Solar System
The Sun: Our Star
Our solar system formed about 4.6 billion years ago from a massive cloud of gas and dust. At the center is the Sun, a medium-sized star that:
• Contains 99.8% of all the mass in our solar system
• Provides the light and heat that makes life possible on Earth
• Is about 109 times wider than Earth
• Has surface temperatures of about 5,500°C
The Eight Planets
Memorize their order with this mnemonic: My Very Eager Mother Just Served Us Nachos (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune)
Two Types of Planets
Terrestrial (Rocky) Planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars
• Small and dense with solid rocky surfaces
• Few or no moons
• Closer to the Sun
Giant Planets: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune
• Large and less dense
• No solid surface (thick atmospheres)
• Many moons and ring systems
• Farther from the Sun
Jupiter and Saturn are gas giants (mostly hydrogen and helium). Uranus and Neptune are ice giants (icy materials with smaller atmospheres).
Planet Data Table
| Planet | Type | Distance from Sun | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mercury | Rocky | 58 million km | Extreme temperatures; heavily cratered; no atmosphere |
| Venus | Rocky | 108 million km | Hottest planet (462°C); thick toxic atmosphere; rotates backward |
| Earth | Rocky | 150 million km | Liquid water; breathable atmosphere; life |
| Mars | Rocky | 228 million km | 'Red Planet'; thin atmosphere; largest volcano (Olympus Mons) |
| Jupiter | Gas Giant | 778 million km | Largest planet; Great Red Spot storm; 95 moons |
| Saturn | Gas Giant | 1.4 billion km | Spectacular rings; 146 moons; less dense than water |
| Uranus | Ice Giant | 2.9 billion km | Rotates on its side; blue-green color; 28 moons |
| Neptune | Ice Giant | 4.5 billion km | Strongest winds; deep blue; 16 moons |
If the Sun were a basketball (24 cm diameter):
• Mercury would be a pinhead 10 meters away
• Earth would be a peppercorn 26 meters away
• Jupiter would be a marble 134 meters away
• Neptune would be a small pea 780 meters away!
Most of space is... empty space.
The Goldilocks Zone
~15 minutesThe Goldilocks Zone
Why Earth is 'Just Right'
In the fairy tale "Goldilocks and the Three Bears," Goldilocks wanted porridge that was not too hot, not too cold, but just right. Scientists use this same concept to describe Earth's position.
The habitable zone (or Goldilocks Zone) is the region around a star where temperatures allow liquid water to exist on a planet's surface.
- Too close to the Sun: Water boils away (Venus)
• Too far from the Sun: Water freezes solid (Mars and beyond)
• Just right: Water can exist as a liquid (Earth!)
Earth sits comfortably within our Sun's habitable zone.
What Makes Earth Special?
1. Liquid Water
• Earth is at the right distance for water to exist as liquid
• Water is essential for all known life
• No other planet has stable liquid water on its surface
2. Breathable Atmosphere
• 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, 1% other gases
• Protects us from harmful radiation
• Greenhouse effect keeps temperatures moderate
• Thick enough to maintain air pressure
3. Magnetic Field
• Earth's spinning iron core creates a magnetic field
• This deflects harmful solar radiation
• Without it, solar wind would strip away our atmosphere
4. Right Size and Gravity
• Large enough to hold an atmosphere
• Small enough that gravity doesn't crush us
• Allows plate tectonics to regulate climate
Why Other Planets Can't Support Life (As We Know It)
| Planet | Why It Can't Support Life |
|---|---|
| Mercury | No atmosphere; extreme temperature swings (-180°C to 430°C) |
| Venus | Too hot (462°C); crushing atmospheric pressure; toxic clouds |
| Mars | Too cold; atmosphere is 1% of Earth's; no magnetic field |
| Jupiter | No solid surface; crushing pressure; intense radiation |
| Saturn | No solid surface; extremely cold; no protection from Sun |
| Uranus/Neptune | Frigid temperatures; no solid surface; far from Sun |
• Europa (Jupiter): May have liquid ocean under ice
• Enceladus (Saturn): Has water geysers from subsurface ocean
• Titan (Saturn): Has thick atmosphere and liquid lakes (but of methane, not water)
Summary
~5 minutesSummary
Key Concepts Review
Your Cosmic Address (small to large): Earth → Solar System → Milky Way Galaxy → Local Group → Observable Universe
The Solar System:
• Sun at center (99.8% of mass)
• 8 planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune
• 4 rocky planets (inner), 4 giant planets (outer)
The Goldilocks Zone (Habitable Zone):
• Region around a star where liquid water can exist
• Earth is in this zone—not too hot, not too cold
Why Earth Supports Life:
• Liquid water on surface
• Breathable atmosphere (nitrogen/oxygen)
• Protective magnetic field
• Right size, gravity, and temperature range
Check Your Understanding
In order from smallest to largest, your cosmic address would be:
What is the name of Earth's galaxy?
About what percentage of our solar system's mass is contained in the Sun?
Which planet is the LARGEST in our solar system?
Which statement correctly describes a difference between rocky planets and gas giants?
Venus is HOTTER than Mercury even though Mercury is closer to the Sun. Why?
What is the 'Goldilocks Zone' (habitable zone)?
Earth's magnetic field is important for supporting life because it:
Match each planet with its correct classification:
Match each planet with the reason it CANNOT support life as we know it:
Match each feature with its description:
Which of the following are reasons why Earth can support life? (Select ALL that apply)
Select all that apply.
Place the planets in order from CLOSEST to the Sun to FARTHEST: