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Impact Crater Lab

Impact Crater Lab. Impact Crater Lab. Place a sheet of butcher paper on the floor and your bin of flour in the center of the paper. Sprinkle a small amount of cinnamon over your flour to make a very thin layer. Hold your “meteoroid” 30 cm above the surface of the flour.

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Impact Crater Lab

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  1. Impact Crater Lab

  2. Impact Crater Lab • Place a sheet of butcher paper on the floor and your bin of flour in the center of the paper. • Sprinkle a small amount of cinnamon over your flour to make a very thin layer. • Hold your “meteoroid” 30 cm above the surface of the flour. • Drop the “meteoroid” into the flour. • Measure the diameter, depth, and length of the average ray in cm and record your data. • Repeat 3 more times. • Find the average of each measurment. • Level the flour and repeat the lab for 60 cm, 90 cm, and 2 m.

  3. Warnings! • Do not make a mess. Be responsible. • Do not throw your meteoroid. Gravity is the only force that should accelerate the meteoroid. • Use only a small amount of cinnamon between different height trials. Do not redo the cinnamon between trials for the same height. • Any horseplay will result in removal from the lab.

  4. Impact Crater Lab Place a sheet of butcher paper on the floor and your bin of flour in the center of the paper. Sprinkle a small amount of cinnamon over your flour to make a very thin layer. Hold your “meteoroid” 30 cm above the surface of the flour. Drop the “meteoroid” into the flour. Measure the diameter, depth, and length of the average ray in cm and record your data. Repeat 3 more times. Find the average of each measurment. Level the flour and repeat the lab for 60 cm, 90 cm, and 2 m.

  5. Impact Craters

  6. The Moon

  7. The Moon

  8. The Moon

  9. The Moon

  10. The Moon

  11. The Moon

  12. The Moon

  13. Slow Motion Milk Drop Experiment http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86zIqI3SVIY&feature=related

  14. Slow Motion Impact Crater Simulation http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XzIw0c_MjTc

  15. Aristarchus Crater on Moon

  16. Parts of the Crater

  17. Impact Crater Vocabulary • Floor: The bowl shaped or flat area • Central Uplift: Mountains formed due to the increase and rapid decrease in pressure during an impact • Wall: steep sides of the crater area • Raised Rim: Rock thrown out of the crater and deposited in a ring-shaped pile at the crater's edge during an impact • Ejecta: blanket of material surrounding the crater that is thrown out during the impact • Rays: The bright streaks starting from a crater and extending away for great distances

  18. Venusian Crater A B C

  19. Mercury Composite taken by Mariner 10 spacecraft in 1974

  20. Mercury

  21. Mercury

  22. Venus Photo taken by Pioneer Venus Probe in 1979

  23. Venus Radar image taken by Magellan spacecraft

  24. Venus

  25. Venus

  26. Earth

  27. Earth Vredefort Crater South Africa 2 bya 250 km across

  28. Earth Manicouagan Crater Quebec, Canada 212 mya 70 km across

  29. Earth Chixulub Crater Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico 65 mya 170 km across (possibly killed dinosaurs)

  30. Earth Clearwater Twin Craters Quebec, Canada 290 mya 32 km and 22 km across

  31. Earth Barringer Crater Arizona, USA 50,000 mya 1.2 km across

  32. Earth Wolfe Creek Crater Australia 300,000 tya 0.8 km across

  33. Earth Bosumtwi Crater Ghana, Africa 1.3 mya 10.5 km across

  34. Mars Photo taken by the Hubble Telescope

  35. Mars

  36. Mars

  37. Mars

  38. Mars

  39. Mars

  40. Jupiter Photo taken by Galileo Spacecraft in 1995

  41. Jupiter Impacts in 1995 by Shoemaker Levy Comet. Photo by Hubble telescope

  42. Jupiter’s Moons (63!) Ganymede

  43. Jupiter’s Moons Calisto

  44. Jupiter’s Moons Amalthea

  45. Saturn Photo taken by Hubble Telescope

  46. Saturn’s Moons (53!) Mimas

  47. Saturn’s Moons Enceladus

  48. Saturn’s Moons Titan (life?)

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