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Transcript
The Terrestrial Planets
• In order of distance
from the Sun:
–
–
–
–
• In order of decreasing
mass:
Mercury
Venus
Earth
Mars
–
–
–
–
Astronomy 291
Earth
Venus
Mars
Mercury
1
Mercury
• Smallest of the terrestrial planets (0.055
M⊕, only 4.4 times as massive as the
Moon).
Astronomy 291
2
Mercury
• Difficult to observe,
since never more than
30º from the Sun
– led to early mistakes
about its rotation
• Can sometimes be
observed in transit
across the face of the
Sun (at inferior
conjunction)
Astronomy 291
3
Transit of Mercury
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4
Rotation of Mercury
• Period of revolution: Prev = 88 days
• Period of rotation: Prot = 59 days
2
Prot = Prev
3
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5
Rotation of Mercury
• An example of commensurate periods.
– One period is a simple integer multiple (or
fraction of two integers) of the other.
– Commensurate periods arise from tidal friction.
– Moon is another example (Prot = Prev).
– This is also known as a resonance.
Astronomy 291
6
Rotation of Mercury
• Mercury has two permanent tidal bulges
– Fairly eccentric orbit, e = 0.21.
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7
Rotation of Mercury
day 29
day 15
day 0
day 44
day 88
day 74
day 59
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8
Rotation of Mercury
• One bulge
always points
towards Sun at
perihelion
• One solar day =
2Prev = 176 days
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9
Mercury
• High mean density
– 5400 kg m-3,
uncompressed
– massive Fe core
(mantle lost in
collision?)
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10
Mercury
• Surface is similar to
lunar farside, except:
Astronomy 291
11
Mercury
• Surface is similar to
lunar farside, except:
Scarp
– scarps, some 100’s of
kilometers long
• due to shrinkage of
planet by 1-3 km
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12
Mercury
• Surface is similar to
lunar farside, except:
– scarps, some 100’s of
kilometers long
• due to shrinkage of
planet by 1–3 km
– not saturated with
craters
• implies surface formed
later than the Moon’s
Astronomy 291
13
Mercury
• Has very thin atmosphere
– High temperature (T ≈ 700 K) precludes a
permanent atmosphere
– Transient atmosphere of solar-wind helium
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14
Mercury
• Has a weak magnetic
field
– Strength 10 times
weaker than Earth’s,
but detectable (the Fe
core is important)
– Can deflect the solar
wind
Astronomy 291
15
Venus
• Most brilliant object in the sky (except for
Sun and Moon).
• Easy to observe (greatest elongation ~47º).
• Very slow rotator
– Prot = 243 days (retrograde)
– no detectable magnetic field
Astronomy 291
16
Venus
• Shrouded in heavy
high-altitude clouds
• In terms of mass,
radius, and density,
Venus is a near-twin
of the Earth
Astronomy 291
17
Venus
• Atmosphere
– Very dense CO2 atmosphere
– Very high surface temperature (~750 K)
• without the dense atmosphere, the dayside temperature would
be about 460 K
• high temperature is due to the “Greenhouse Effect”
Astronomy 291
18
Astronomy 291
Temperature (K)
19
The Greenhouse Effect
• A greenhouse is a glass structure that retains
heat
– Glass is transparent to optical wavelengths, so
visible sunlight heats greenhouse
– Greenhouse interior cools by re-radiating as a
blackbody at the inside temperature (typically
about 300 K)
Astronomy 291
20
The Greenhouse Effect
• Glass is opaque in
the infrared, so heat
is trapped.
• Greenhouse heats
up until rate of
heating equals rate
of cooling.
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21
The Greenhouse Effect
• The Greenhouse
Effect works on Venus
because of the CO2
atmosphere
• CO2 is transparent to
optical light, but
strongly absorbs
infrared light.
Astronomy 291
22
Why Are Venus and Earth So
Different?
• Earth has liquid water
surface (~75%).
– Water dissolves CO2 out of
atmosphere
– Formation of solid carbonates
(e.g., limestone = CaCO3)
• Venus is too hot for liquid
water
– CO2 doesn’t dissolve out
– Atmosphere is 96% CO2
Astronomy 291
23
Why Are Venus and Earth So
Different?
• Earth’s atmosphere would be like the
atmosphere of Venus if the solid carbonates
were put back into the atmosphere.
• The atmosphere of Venus would be like that
of Earth if you could take the CO2 out of
the atmosphere.
Astronomy 291
24
Surface of
Venus
• Mapped by radar
Astronomy 291
25
Surface of
Venus
• Less surface
variation than on
Earth
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26
Surface of Venus
• Very large craters (small objects burn up in
dense atmosphere)
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27
Surface of Venus
• Large lava domes form where magma leaks
through surface cracks.
• Very large volcanoes form because of little
plate motion.
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28
Radar Construction of Maat Mons
(youngest surface feature)
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29
Mars
• Mars has superficial
similarities to Earth
– Equator inclined ~24º
to orbital plane.
• Mars has seasons, like
the Earth
– Length of solar day
~24h
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30
Mars
– Transparent
atmosphere with
clouds and dust storms
• But the surface pressure
of the Martian
atmosphere is 2% that
of the Earth, and is 95%
CO2
Astronomy 291
31
Mars
Mars was long suspected
of harboring life,
perhaps even intelligent
life.
Early observers reported
apparent “canals” that
connect darker features.
Sketch of Mars by
Percival Lowell
(early 1900s).
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32
Surface of Mars
• Cratered surface, modified by wind erosion.
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33
Surface of Mars
• Surface composition:
– About 44% silicon dioxide (sand)
– About 19% iron oxide (rust)
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34
Surface of Mars
• Large volcanoes, such
as Olympus Mons
– enormous shield
volcano ⇒ little plate
motion
– little cratering ⇒ fairly
young surface
– sharp cliffs at edge ⇒
wind erosion
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35
Olympus Mons
• Olympus Mons is 600 km across and 25 km
high
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36
• Olympus
Mons is much
larger than
similar
features on
Earth.
• Similar
features on
Earth sink
into crust.
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37
Surface of Mars
• Evidence of water flows (floods)
– water probably now in a permafrost below
surface
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38
Surface of Mars
• Some water flows
must have been
fairly massive
(e.g., tear-drop
shaped islands in
plains).
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39
Surface of Mars
• Valles Marineris
(“Valley of the
Mariners”, or
“The Grand
Canyon of Mars”)
Astronomy 291
40
Valles Marineris
• 5000 km long by 100 km wide, 6 km deep
– due to faulting and wind erosion (atmosphere is
denser in canyon)
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41
Valles Marineris
Landslide
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42
Martian Seasons
• Seasons on Mars are affected by the
planet’s large orbital eccentricity (e =
0.093).
Astronomy 291
43
Martian Seasons
winter in North
Sun
Mars at perihelion
summer in South
Mars at aphelion
Sun
summer in North
winter in South
Astronomy 291
44
Martian Seasons
• Seasons on Mars are affected by the
planet’s large orbital eccentricity (e =
0.093).
• Seasons are:
– moderated in the North
– enhanced in the South ⇒ strong surface winds
Astronomy 291
45
Seasonal Variations in Southern
Polar Cap
Astronomy 291
46
Martian Seasons
• Polar caps change with seasons
– change quickly, so must be thin
– in winter, cold enough to freeze CO2
• cap large, mostly CO2 frost
– in summer, CO2 melts
• cap small, probably mostly residual water
Edge of polar cap
shows multiple layers
At Martian atmospheric pressure, CO2 freezes at 150 K;
water freezes at 190 K.
Astronomy 291
47
Dust Storms
• Strong surface winds
produce large-scale
dust storms that on
occasion cover the
entire planet.
Astronomy 291
48
Martian Clouds
• Clouds are also
sometimes seen in the
atmosphere of Mars
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49
Condensation of the Atmosphere
• Frost can form in lowlying areas, just like
on Earth
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50
Satellites of Mars
• The Earth and Mars are the only terrestrial
planets with satellites.
• Mars has two very small satellites, which
are probably captured asteriods:
– Phobos (“Fear”)
• 20 × 23 × 28 km
– Deimos (“Terror”)
• 12 km (roughly spherical)
Astronomy 291
51
Deimos
Phobos
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52
The Jovian Planets
• Jupiter, Saturn,
Uranus, and Neptune
have all been visited
by the Voyager space
probes.
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53
Voyager
Trajectories
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54
The Jovian Planets
• Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are all
massive bodies
– formed in outer part of pre-solar nebula where
ices condense
– growth by accretion and coalescence
– reached large enough mass (> 15 M⊕) to attract
and retain H and He, the most abundant
elements
Astronomy 291
55
The Jovian Planets
• Jovian planets are
fluid bodies
– supported by balance
between pressure and
gravity ⇒ Hydrostatic
equilibrium
Astronomy 291
56
Jovian Interiors
Central Pressure
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57
Interiors of Jovian Planets
• Jupiter and Saturn are massive enough to
have metallic hydrogen zones
– electrons not bound to individual atoms
Astronomy 291
59
Phase Diagram for Hydrogen
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60
Astronomy 291
61
Radius of Jovian Planets
• Increasing the mass of
a Jovian planet mostly
results in compression
to higher density.
• Despite their gross
differences in mass,
the Jovian planets
have similar sizes.
Astronomy 291
62
Interiors of Jovian Planets
• Jovian planets have internal heat sources
– Jovian planets radiate more energy than they
absorb from the Sun.
– Heat generated by contraction is slowly
radiated away.
Astronomy 291
63
Jovian Planets
Stored Energy
Astronomy 291
64
Atmospheres of Jovian Planets
• Appearance of atmosphere depends on
temperatures at highest levels.
– Jupiter
– Saturn
Methane, frozen ammonia crystals
(in Saturn, the NH3 is deeper and
harder to see, giving it a uniformly
hazy appearance)
Astronomy 291
66
Jupiter
Galilean
satellite
Ganymede
Great Red
Spot
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67
Saturn
Astronomy 291
68
Atmospheres of Jovian Planets
• Uranus
• Neptune
Methane (CH4) only; NH3 completely
frozen out.
Uranus and Neptune have a greenish-blue appearance
because methane absorbs red light.
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69
The Outer Jovian Planets
Uranus
Neptune
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70
Atmospheres of Jovian Planets
• Rapid differential rotation of Jovian planets
stretches clouds into bands.
Earth
Astronomy 291
Jupiter
71
Rotation of Jupiter
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72
Atmospheres of Jovian Planets
• The different colored
bands in Jupiter’s
atmosphere show
convective motion.
– Zones: Higher, cooler,
lighter colors
– Belts: Lower, warmer,
darker colors
Astronomy 291
73
Jupiter’s Zones and Belts
Zones
Belts
Infrared (5μm)
Visible
Astronomy 291
74
Jupiter’s “Great Red
Spot”
• Large cyclonic storm,
first discovered by
Cassini (1665).
Astronomy 291
75
Uranus: The Largest Retrograde
Rotator
• Rotation axis
inclined by 98°
• Consequence:
Solar day at poles
is ½Prev = 48
years.
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76
Astronomy 291
77
Magnetic Fields
• All Jovian
planets have
strong
magnetic fields.
– massive
– rapid rotators
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78
Jupiter’s Magnetic Field
Magnetosphere
traps charged
particles from
volcanic eruptions
on Io.
Strong magnetic
field causes
a strong bow
shock in the
solar wind.
Astronomy 291
79
The Magnetic Field of Uranus
The magnetic axis of
Uranus is highly
inclined relative to
the rotation axis.
This is not understood.
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80
Jovian Magnetic Fields
• As with Earth, interaction with high-energy
solar particles can lead to aurorae.
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81
Radio Emission from Jovian
Planets
Cyclotron Emission
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82
Jovian Satellites
• Galilean satellites
probably formed like
miniature Solar
System.
• Smaller Jovian
satellites are
probably captured
asteroids.
– Note that the outer
four satellites have
high eccentricity,
retrograde orbits.
Astronomy 291
84
Planetary Satellites
• A few planets have satellites that are
terrestrial-planet size.
• Many satellites are small, irregular objects.
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85
Maximum Size of Irregular
Objects
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86
The Galilean Satellites
Astronomy 291
88
Galilean Satellites
Satellite
Io
Distance (in Density
-3
Jupiter radii) (g cm )
5.9
3.6
Europa
9.4
3.0
Ganymede
15.0
1.9
Callisto
26.4
1.9
Astronomy 291
89
Formation of Jupiter
• The trend in
density mimics the
trend seen in the
Solar System.
• Jupiter formed a
localized “warm
region” in which
the condensation
of ices was
suppressed.
Astronomy 291
90
Galilean Satellites
• Io
– Most geologically
active object in the
Solar System.
– 100 m of new surface
every million years.
– No cratering.
– Energy derived from
tidal forces.
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91
Volcanic
Eruption on
Io
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92
Io Surface Changes Over Five Months
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93
Galilean Satellites
• Ganymede and Calllisto: icy surfaces with
embedded hydrocarbons.
Callisto
Ganymede
Astronomy 291
94
Europa
• Europa is similar to
Ganymede and
Callisto, but with
fracture patterns
and flooding.
Astronomy 291
95
Europa
• Suspected of having
a subsurface water
ocean.
• This is currently
regarded as the
most promising site
to search for life
elsewhere in our
own Solar System.
An icy crater on Europa
Astronomy 291
96
Titan
• Saturn’s moon Titan is the
only satellite in the Solar
System with an
atmosphere.
• Probably has liquid N2
surface
• Atmospheric composition:
– 99% N2
– 1% CH4
“smoggy”
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97
Planetary Rings
• Rings are very thin.
– Saturn’s rings are less than 100 m thick, and
slightly corrugated (rather than completely flat).
Astronomy 291
98
Planetary Rings
• Saturn’s rings disappear once every 14.5 years when
Earth crosses the orbital plane of rings.
Astronomy 291
99
Planetary Rings and the Roche Limit
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100
Planetary Rings
• All Jovian planets have equatorial rings
inside the Roche limit.
• Reflected sunlight spectrum shows that the
rings are made of tiny particles in Keplerian
orbits:
Vorbital ∝ r
Astronomy 291
−1 / 2
101
Spectrograph
slit position
Red shift
Spectral
line
Blue shift
Solid-body
rotation
Astronomy 291
Keplerian orbits V ∝ r -1/2
102
Origin of the Rings
•
Rings might represent:
1) unformed bodies
2) broken-up (tidally disrupted) bodies
•
Current evidence favors second
explanation because rings are not expected
to be long-lived phenomenon.
Astronomy 291
103
Shepherd
Satellites
• Shepherd satellites are
small satellites within
the ring system that
keep the satellites
from diffusing away
from their original
orbits.
Rings of Uranus
Astronomy 291
104
Ring Destruction
• Large particles will undergo collisions that
grind them down.
• Small particles are removed by solar wind
and radiation pressure.
• Particles slowly diffuse away from their
initial orbits.
– This process can be controlled and avoided by
shepherd satellites.
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105
How Shepherd Satellites Work
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106
Detailed Structure of Saturn’s
Rings
Cassini division
Encke division
Astronomy 291
107
Ring Structure
• Ring structure can be very detailed.
• Structure is due to perturbations by
satellites.
– Particles in Cassini division in 2:1 resonance
with Mimas, the largest of the inner satellites of
Saturn.
Astronomy 291
108
Perturbing Ring Orbits
• A particle in resonance
with a satellite is
perturbed repeatedly at
the same place in its
orbit, gradually
making the orbit more
eccentric.
Astronomy 291
109
Perturbing Ring Orbits
• Particles in non-circular orbits are most
likely to undergo collisions, which will tend
to circularize their orbits at a new location.
• By this process, particles in resonant orbits
are gradually removed.
Astronomy 291
110
Sizes of Ring Particles
• Sizes are determined by scattering
characteristics
– Large particles are seen in backscattering
(essentially reflection).
– Small particles (compared to wavelengths of
light) are seen in forward scattering.
Astronomy 291
111
Sizes of Particles in Saturn’s Rings
• Sizes of particles in
Saturn’s ring range
from mm to several
meters (house-size).
• Composition seems to
be mostly water ice
(highly reflective).
Astronomy 291
112
Sizes of Ring Particles
• Uranus also has
large particles
(centimeter to
meter size), but
they are hard to see
because they are so
dark.
– Reflect only about
5% of visible light,
similar to coal!
Astronomy 291
113
Jovian Planet Rings in
Forward Scattering
Except for Saturn, Jovian rings
are best seen in forward
scattering.
Neptune
Jupiter
Uranus
Astronomy 291
114
Ring Particles
• Forward scattering
shows that much of
the ring material is
microscopic dust.
• Except for Saturn,
rings are dark.
– Mostly rocky or ice
with embedded
hydrocarbons.
Uranus in forward scattering
Astronomy 291
115
Spokes in Saturn’s Rings
• Persistent radial features called spokes are
sometimes seen in Saturn’s rings.
• These do not rotate in a Keplerian fashion.
• These are probably due to microscopic dust
particles that are electrically charged and
trapped by Saturn’s magnetic field.
Astronomy 291
116
Spokes in Saturn’s Rings
Astronomy 291
117
Origin of Spoke Material
• Origin of dust in spokes is unclear, but
thought to be due to meteoroids.
• Dust in spokes suggests that Saturn’s rings
are young; prolonged accumulation of dust
would make them dark.
Astronomy 291
118