(OSS) Our Galactic Address Lesson

Our Galactic Address

People have not always known about all the objects in our solar system. The ancient Greeks were aware of five of the planets. They did not know what these objects were; they just noticed that they moved differently than the stars. The celestial bodies seemed to wander around in the sky, changing their position against the background of stars. In fact, the word "planet" comes from a Greek word meaning "wanderer". They named these objects after gods from their mythology. The names we use now for the planets are the Roman equivalents of these Greek names: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn.

Today, we know that our solar system is just one tiny part of the universe as a whole. Neither Earth nor the Sun are at the center of the universe—in fact, the universe has no true center. However, the heliocentric model does accurately describe our solar system. In our modern view of the solar system, the Sun is at the center, and planets move in elliptical orbits around the Sun. The planets do not emit their own light, but instead reflect light from the Sun.

Since the time of Copernicus, Kepler, and Galileo, we have learned a lot more about our solar system. We have discovered two more planets (Uranus and Neptune), four dwarf planets (Ceres, Makemake, Pluto, and Eris), over 150 moons, and many, many asteroids and other small objects. We know our Solar System is located within the Milky Way Galaxy and that the Milky Way is part of a cluster of galaxies called The Local Group.

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