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The asteroid belt
(white) and Jupiter's trojan asteroids (green). |
Asteroids
An asteroid is a space rock. It is a small object in the
Solar System that travels around the Sun. It is like a
planet but smaller. They range from very small (smaller
than a car) to 600 miles (1000 km) across. A few
asteroids have asteroid moon.
The name "asteroid" means "like a star" in the ancient
Greek language. Asteroids may look like small stars in
the sky, but they really do move around the Sun, while
stars only seem to move because the Earth spins. Like
planets, asteroids do not make their own light. Because
of this, some people think "asteroids" is not a good
name, and think that the name "planetoid" ("like a
planet") would be a better name. |
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Giuseppe Piazzi found the first asteroid, in 1801. He
called it Ceres, and it is the biggest object in the
asteroid belt. Others, like Juno, Pallas, and Vesta were
found later. In the 1850s so many had been found, that
they were numbered by a Minor planet designation
starting with 1 Ceres. Today, astronomers using
computerized telescopes find thousands of asteroids
every month. Asteroid impact prediction is one of the
purposes. |
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Asteroids are the leftover rock and other material from
the formation of the Solar System. These rocks were too
small to come together to make a planet. Some are made
of carbon or metal. Depending on what's on the surface,
they are classified into various asteroid spectral types
including Type M (metal), Type S (stone), and Type C
(carbon). |
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Most asteroids in our Solar System are in the asteroid
belt between Mars and Jupiter. Many are not in the main
asteroid belt. The ones that come close to Earth are
called Near-Earth asteroids. Many scientists think
asteroids striking the Earth killed off all the
dinosaurs and caused some of the other extinction
events. |
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Kiddle:
Asteroids
Wikipedia: Asteroids |
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