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Summary PHYSICS C6 – THE SOLAR SYSTEM AND THE UNIVERSE

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''An extensive summary about the formation of the Solar System and all planets and other objects in our Solar System. I have created an overview of all the important concepts and explanations to help with studying or making a summary.''

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January 4, 2026
Number of pages
8
Written in
2025/2026
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PHYSICS H6 – THE SOLAR SYSTEM AND THE
UNIVERSE


TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Origin of the solar system


Important calculation method explained


Planets and other objects in our solar system


Planetary orbits


Orbit of the Earth


The Earth’s axis


Northern lights


Orbit of the Moon


Eclipses


Explanation of terms (overview)

, Origin of the solar system
The Sun and the planets and stars that orbit around it together form
the solar system.​
Important facts about stars and planets:

●​ they form from large clouds of gas​

●​ the planets all move in the same direction, following (almost)
circular orbits​


This happened as follows:​
About 4.6 billion years ago, a large, slowly rotating gas cloud collapsed
due to gravitational force (gravity), which caused the small gas particles
to attract each other. This created a large, flat, rotating disk in which the
Sun and the planets formed. See the image.

Because the Earth is not too close to and not too far from the Sun, we
have liquid water and life is possible on Earth (about 149.6 million
kilometers).


Important calculation method in physics
Very large numbers are often written as powers of 10.​
1,000,000 is written as 1 × 10⁶, which simply means a 1 followed by 6 zeros.

The distance from the Earth to the Sun is written as​
149.6 × 10⁶ km, which is equal to​
149.6 × 10⁹ m, or 1.496 × 10¹¹ m.

The distance from the Earth to the Sun is used as a unit: the
astronomical unit (au).​
1 au is equal to the distance from the Earth to the Sun:​
1 au = 1.496 × 10¹¹ m.​
The name comes from the English term astronomical unit.


Planets and other objects in our solar system
In our solar system there are 4 relatively small planets and 4 relatively
large planets.
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