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Q: We have clouds on the earth. Do all planets have
clouds?
Q: How does a star die and how old are stars when they
die?
Q: How many stars are there?
Q: Mercury is really close to the sun. Is it always hot
there?
A: On the earth, the clouds are made of small drops of
water and ice that float* up in the atmosphere. On the other
planets, the clouds aren not made of water. They are made of
other things. Jupiter*, Saturn*, Uranus*, and Neptune* have
hydrogen* and helium* clouds. Venus* has very heavy carbon
dioxide* cloud cover. In fact, it is so heavy that it hides
the planet from our view.Mercury* doesn’t have clouds. Mars*
doesn’t have clouds either. The other planets are so far away
we don’t know whether or not they have clouds. But if they do,
they would be frozen solid because those planets are so cold.
A: At any one time, half of Mercury is hot and the other
part is colder than freezing. That’s because it doesn’t have
an atmosphere to hold the heat. So the part facing the sun is
hot, hot, hot and the side in darkness is colder than cold.
A: Scientists have calculated that there are over ONE
BILLION* to ONE TRILLION* stars in each galaxy. But there
isn’t just one galaxy in our universe - there are about TEN
BILLION. That means there are one trillion times 10 billion
stars in the universe. And that is a number even bigger than
what Bill Gates can imagine!
A: Some stars just get smaller and colder until they
finally die. Others explode* in what is called a supernova*.
It depends on how long the stars live — their individual
lifespan differs greatly. Scientists think that solar system’s
star (the sun) is 5 to 6 billion years old. They also figure
it won’t die for another 10 billion years.
(SD-Agencies)(Difficulty: senior)
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