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Reminders! Website: http://starsarestellar.blogspot.com/ Lectures 1-6 are available for download as study aids. Reading: You should have Chapters 1-5 read, and Chapters 6 and 7 by the end of this weekend. Homework: Homework #2 is due this Wednesday at the BEGINNING of class. Discussion: Next week, we will be reviewing for the midterm. Midterm!!! The midterm is Thursday, June 11th in class. Don’t be late! The test will cover Chapters 1-8. It will consist of 40 to 50 questions and you will have until 12 o’clock to complete it. The test is true-false and multiple choice. Make sure you have a SCAN-TRON 882 form and a #2 pencil. I will NOT have these available in class. Bring your student ID. The test is closed book, closed notes, and no calculators. There will be a sheet of equations available. A practice midterm is available. Take the practice test for 1.5 hours, and see how you do. If you have any questions, you can ask about them in discussion next week. Terrestrial Planets Today’s Lecture: • Solar System Formation (chapter 5, pages 105-108) • Terrestrial Planets (chapter 6, pages 110-151) Earth and Moon Mercury, Venus, and Mars The Solar System Top view of the solar system • All the planets orbit the Sun in the same direction. • Most of the planets rotate in the same direction too. Sun • And so does the Sun. • Orbits are all nearly in the same plane. Side view is a thin disk Origin of the Solar System “Nebular Hypothesis” (Kant, Laplace, 18th century) • Before the Sun was born, there was a gravitationally contracting, slowly spinning cloud of dust. • As it contracts due to gravity, is spins up to conserve angular momentum (figure skater effect) • Sun forms in the center, and the outer parts make a disk. • Planets form out of the disk. • Extra gas is blown away by the Sun’s winds. Terrestrial Planets • The inner planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars • All have a smaller radius than the Earth • Not very massive (less than Earth), but dense (>1 g/cm3, which is the density of water) • Close to the Sun and few moons • Rocky outer parts and iron cores. Earth: 3rd Rock from the Sun • Upper mantle and crust float on a soft, churning layer (a convecting layer) • This causes continental drift (plate tectonics) • Mountains, volcanoes, and earthquakes all occur at the plate boundaries. The Earth (cont.) • Earth’s atmosphere: 79% N2, 20% O2 (so much oxygen is due to life, photosynthesis). • The atmosphere is very thin < 100 km • Earth’s magnetic field looks like a giant bar magnet (dipole). Molten interior sustains a field which reverses every ~3 x 105 yrs Tides: Differential forces from the Moon (mostly) • The force by the Moon on the Earth is greatest on the near side and smallest on the far side. • This causes two high tides at each of these points. • There are TWO high tides per 24 hours! The Sun and Moon and Tides • What about the Sun? The Sun’s differential force is only 1/2 of the Moon’s because the Sun is so far away. Tides very high S, E, M aligned Tides not so high S, E, M perpendicular • In the past, the Moon rotated faster, but gradually lost its energy due to tidal friction. • Hence, the Moon’s rotation is now locked to its revolution: both periods are the same (“synchronous rotation”) • We always see the SAME SIDE OF THE MOON! We see one side of our Moon It’s orbit and rotation are in synch Moon Earth Non-synchronous rotation Moon Earth Synchronous rotation The faces of the Moon • The Moon is heavily cratered due to impacts. The most heavily cratered parts are the oldest. Maria • Lava flows produced maria (“seas”) which are seen as dark regions • Very little erosion on the Moon: can get relative ages of features (craters on maria must be younger than the maria) Craters The Moon’s Surface • Derive the absolute ages of rocks (since last molten) by radioactive dating (for example, Uranium) of Moon rocks brought back by astronauts (Apollo 11-17; 19691972) • Heavily cratered areas are 3.9-4.3 billion years old. • Maria areas are 3.1-3.9 billion years old. • There are few craters in the maria; thus, intense bombardment of the Moon happened very early after Solar System formation Formation of the Moon • The Earth-Moon system is almost like a “double planet” - the Moon is quite large compared to other Moons that we know about. • The composition of the Moon is very similar (but not exactly so) to the Earth. • The Moon probably coalesced from debris ejected by a collision of a Mars-sized object with the Eath, early in the history of the Solar System. Mercury: The Innermost Planet • Difficult to study: always near the Sun in our sky Mercury • Sets or rises within 1 to 2 hours of the Sun (near horizon so images blurred) • Rotation rate is known from Doppler effect with radar. Sun Venus Earth Mercury: The Innermost Planet • Day and night cycle on Mercury = 176 days (88 days of sunshine, then 88 days of darkness!) • Almost no atmosphere Daytime T = 430 °C, night T = -170 °C!!! • Mariner 10 flew past 3 times (1974/1975) • Heavily cratered like the Moon • No evidence for plate tectonics • MESSENGER satellite is currently studying Mercury. Found evidence for water in the atmosphere and a liquid (molten) core. Venus: The Evening (or Morning) Star • Easy to see in the evening or early morning • Shrouded in highly reflective clouds • NASA “Magellan” spacecraft (1990-1993); detailed radar maps. Saw craters, volcanoes, and large plains. • Crust consists of only 1 thick plate. Mercury Sun Venus Earth Venus (cont.) • Thick atmosphere: 90 times the Earth’s surface pressure! • 96% CO2 and less than 4% N2 Earth 79% N2 and 20% O2 Earth’s CO2 is trapped in rocks and oceans • Temperature of surface is 480 degrees Celsius. It is the hottest planet, due to the “greenhouse effect.” • As CO2 increases on the Earth, we similarly get a greenhouse effect, contributing to global warming Venus: the hottest planet atmosphere blocks infrared Surface heats up due to visible light. The surface then radiates in the infrared which is absorbed by the atmosphere (clouds) ---> temperature increases! Mars: The Red Planet • Orange (reddish) due to rust (iron oxide) • 2 tiny, irregular moons • Mars has polar ice caps (mostly CO2) that grow and shrink with the seasons Mercury Sun • Thin atmosphere (1% of Earth’s) 90% CO2. • Windy: major dust storms • T = -130 °C to 30 °C, but generally cold • No plate tectonics Venus Earth Mars Mars: Evidence for water • One of the first major discoveries: ancient river beds and flood plains! Water was probably abundant long ago; now locked in permafrost and polar caps. • Several recent spacecraft have indirectly detected water. • “Spirit” and “Opportunity” rovers (2004): additional evidence for the presence of liquid water long ago on the Martian surface. Mars: The Search for Life • 1976: Viking lander: tests for life were negative • 1996: Martain meteorite (found in Earth’s Antartic) shows possible signs of primitive life from 3.6 billion years ago • Tube-like structures (tiny bacteria?) and several lines of chemical evidence. No smoking gun evidence that this was primitive life, but it is very intriguing! • The ultraviolet light hitting Mars’ surface may breakdown any life on the surface, but may still exist below surface or long ago.