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Chapter 23: Planets and their Moons Artists concept of Saturn sized planet orbiting a distant star (detected by astronomers). Fig. 23-CO, p.548 The Solar System Formed about 4.6 billion years ago from diffuse cloud of dust and gas (exploding stars) rotating in space (under gravity). Cloud composed of about 92% hydrogen, 7.8% helium (all other elements only 0.2% of Solar System). Sun formed under gravity, hydrogen fused some converted to helium; fusion is source of Sun’s energy. Remaining matter formed disc-shaped rotating nebula that coalesced into planets. Early atmospheres (H and He) boiled off (escape velocity) or blown away by solar winds. Rock and metal left, terrestrial planets formed (solid rock with metallic cores). Planets in outer reaches of Solar System remained cool; they are larger and called Jovian planets. Retained H and He. The planets *Terrestrial planets: Mercury Venus Earth Mars *Jovian planets: Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune and…….Pluto (dwarf planet) Table 23-1, p.552 Mercury: a planet the size of the Moon Radius is 2,400 km. Closest to Sun. Orbits Sun in 88 Earth days; rotates 3 days in 2 years (176 days Mercury time) Temp ranges from 427 degrees C (melt lead) to -175 degrees C (freeze methane). No atmosphere; meteorite impact craters; interior has cooled. Ice at poles; no tilt in axis; magnetic field (why?). Fig. 23-1, p.553 Questions Describe implications of Mercury’s lack of both an atmosphere and hot interior. Describe implications of greenhouse gases and a cool interior on Venus. Describe implications of the Moon’s size relative to Earth; how does this account for geologic features found on Earth and on our Moon? Describe implications of Mars’ distance from the Sun (relative to Earth). Venus: the Greenhouse Planet *Closely resembles Earth in size, density and distance from Sun *Atmosphere is 90 times denser than Earth (1000 meters beneath the sea); 97% C02 *Why is the surface hotter than Mercury? *Few craters; landforms appear 300-500 million years old (catastrophic event?); today volcanic activity may have ceased; 60% of surface is flat, with mountain chains and canyons; Maat Mons (larger than Everest); Fig. 23-2, p.553 *Blob Tectonics? Surface too hot and plastic/or lithosphere too thick? The volcano Maat Mons on Venus, Lava flows in foreground. Image from Magellan Spacecraft. Fig. 23-3, p.554 Map of Venus Lowland in blue; highlands in yellow and red-brown. Fig. 23-4, p.554 The Moon 1600s Galileo named the plains maria (for seas) because he thought they were oceans. Heavily cratered. Fig. 23-5, p.555 *Shows cratered surface of the moon. *In some places there are craters within craters. Fig. 23-6, p.555 Six Apollo missions answered many scientific questions about the origin, structure and history of the Moon. Fig. 23-7, p.556 How did the Moon form? Most current hypothesis is that a large object, possibly larger than Mars, collided with Earth shortly after our planet formed. This vaporized silica-rich rocks, creating a cloud around the Earth that coalesced to form the Moon Fig. 23-8, p.557 This slide shows how the impact could have created vaporized rock that orbited the Earth and coalesced into the Moon about 4.5 billion years ago, similar to the solar nebula that created the planets. Fig. 23-8a, p.557 After the Moon formed, it was bombarded by meteorites that cratered the surface. This along with gravitational coalescence probably accounts for early melting of the Moon, which formed igneous rocks (e.g., basalt) found at the surface. Eventually the surface cooled; some of the oldest rocks (of the highlands) are 4.4 billion years old. Fig. 23-8b, p.557 Between 4.2 and 3.9 billion years ago swarms of meteorites bombarded the Moon again, and this, along with radioactive decay heating the interior of the Moon, resulted in magma erupting onto the surface and filling meteorite craters (and forming the maria that we see today). The Moon is much smaller than the Earth, so it cooled and has remained geologically inactive for the past 3.1 billion years. It might have a hot, molten core and water at the poles! Fig. 23-8c, p.557 Mars: A search for Lost Water Mix of old cratered terrain and younger, mountainous regions shown on the surface of Mars. Lava flows cover the plains. Fig. 23-9, p.558 Olympus Mons 25 km high and 500 km across, located on the Tharsis bulge which is the biggest volcanic plain; it is the largest volcano on Mars and in our Solar System (nearly 3 times higher than Mount Everest). Blob tectonics (similar to Venus) could account for its massive Fig. 23-10, p.558 size…how? More evidence for blob tectonics are tremendous parallel cracks split in the crust adjacent to the Tharsis bulge. There is no folding or offsetting of the cracks. Therefore, scientists suggest that a rising mantle plume formed the Tharsis bulge and its volcanoes (the cracks are from stretching during uplift of the crust). Fig. 23-11, p.559 Martian Atmosphere Today the atmosphere is frigid and dry. Surface temperatures average -60 degrees C (-76 degrees F) at the equator (ice doesn’t melt), and -120 degrees C at the poles (frozen CO2). The atmosphere is very thin compared to Earth. Evidence shows the climate on Mars was once much warmer and water flowed across the surface. Recent research found layered sedimentary rocks, iron-rich minerals, salts and ripple marks. Mars contains water – as ice – at poles, and in subsurface soils Valles Marineris A giant canyon was eroded by flowing water and is 10 times larger and 6 times wider than the Grand Canyon. Also find eroded crater walls, alluvial fans and extinct Fig. 23-12, p.560 stream and lake beds. Jupiter: A star that failed The largest planet in our Solar System (71,000 km or 45,000 miles radius). – Mostly Hydrogen and helium – Sea of liquid molecular H2 & He 12,000km deep – At the bottom, 30,000oC under 100 trillion times Earth normal pressure H2 dissociates into 2H and atoms compress Electrons become free to flow like metals on Earth – Liquid metallic hydrogen Fig. 23-14, p.563 – Generates Jupiter’s massive magnetic field Jupiter (cont) – Rocky core 10-20x Earth size – Atmosphere is verified H2, He, with NH4, H2O, CH4 – Great Red Spot – Earth would fit into it! Spot and bands have existed for centuries Galileo’s probe stopped transmitting at 130km in at 150oC (300oF) with 650km/hr winds at 22 bars Winds likely driven by heat from below Moons of Jupiter By 2003, 60 moons were known. Most are small. The four discovered by Galileo are largest and most widely studied. Io: innermost moon, about size of Earth’s Moon. Active volcanically. Gas and rock erupt to a height of 200 km. Galileo probe showed 100 volcanoes erupting simultaneously. Gravitational pull of Jupiter and other moons causes great rock distortion and frictional heating. The surface is smooth (no craters) from lava (see slide). Europa: similar to Earth. Interior composed of rock, much of surface covered by water, but water is frozen into ice crust. Galileo probe showed fractured, jumbled, chaotic terrain like Arctic ice on Earth (see slides). Ganymede and Callisto: see next slides on Ganymede; Callisto may have a subterranean ocean; its surface is heavily cratered (what does this imply?). Io (left); Europa (right); Voyager spacecraft image. Great Red Spot shown along with turbulent cloud system. Fig. 23-15, p.563 Volcanic explosion on Io (Voyager I image). Eruption on horizon is ejecting material to an altitude of about 200 km. Fig. 23-16, p.564 The jumbled terrain of Europa resembles Arctic ice break up during spring. Scientists estimate the ice is a few km thick, and is floating on subsurface water. Fig. 23-17, p.564 Smooth, circular region (center; left) formed when subsurface water rose to the surface of froze, covering older wrinkles and cracks in the crust of Europa. Water may be warmed by tidal effects. Could there be Fig. 23-18, p.564 life at the subterranean oceans? Ganymede has a magnetic field, possibly from a convecting metallic core surrounded by a silicate mantle and covered by water/ice. The surface is so cold it is brittle and acts like rock. Fig. 23-19, p.565 The surface of Ganymede is pockmarked by dense concentrations of impact craters (white spots) younger regions of fewer impact craters. Fig. 23-20, p.565 A close up of young terrain on Ganymede shows numerous grooves (> 1 km wide). These grooves may have formed by recent tectonic activity? Fig. 23-21, p.565 Saturn The Ringed Giant *2nd largest planet. *Lowest density of all planets (it would float on water). *Composed primarily of H and He, with a small core of rock/metal and atmosphere similar to Jupiter (dense clouds; great storms). Titan is largest of 31 moons that are known to orbit Saturn today. It is larger than Mercury, has an atmosphere (only moon known to have one probably because of its size and cold temperature) composed of nitrogen, methane and other gases. Temps avg. -180 degrees C, atmospheric pressure is 1.5 times greater than Earth’s surface. At these conditions, methane on Titan could act like water on Earth; there appears to be features caused by flowing liquids. Titan The Cassini-Huygens spacecraft was launched during 1997 to study Saturn and its moons. The Huygens probe (sent to study Saturn’s largest moon: Titan) separated from the spacecraft (which arrived at Saturn during July, 2004) and landed on Titan’s surface during January of 2005. Why study Titan? One reason is that methane and nitrogen likely react to form simple organic compounds. Assignment (don’t do unless specifically assigned) You are presenting a paper at a scientific seminar on Titan (Saturn’s largest moon). Some scientists believe “Titan more closely resembles the early Earth than Earth itself does today”. Your presentation must cover the latest findings from scientific research on Titan, and then address the statement above: from scientific data, discoveries, observations, etc., regarding Titan do you believe the above statement is accurate? Why or why not? Do you believe life (as we know it) could evolve on Titan? Why or why not? Your report must be a minimum of one page typewritten (single-spaced). http://www.esa.int/SPECIALS/CassiniHuygens/index.html (could start here). Rings of Saturn *Seven major rings with smaller ringlets *Thickness from 10-25 meters, but extremely wide (425,000 km from inner to outer edge). *Composed of dust, rock and ice; larger particles at inner rings, clay size at outer rings. *May be fragments of a moon that never coalesced, or remnants of a moon that formed and was ripped apart by Saturn’s gravitational field. Fig. 23-23, p.566 Voyager I and II planetary spacecraft provided valuable data on Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Fig. 23-24, p.567 Uranus and Neptune So distant, not known until the 1980s. Voyager II to Neptune after 12 years and 7.1 billion miles. Both planets: thick atmospheres of H and He; molecular H below this and interiors are methane, ammonia and water, with rock/metal cores. Both have magnetic fields tilted at 50-60 degrees from spin axis! Great storms rage on these planets (1,100 km/hr rip through Neptune’s atmosphere, clouds rise and fall; the Great Dark Spot is found on Neptune). Methane may decompose to C and H (from great pressure), and C may crystallize into diamond (releasing great energy). Uranus has rings and 22 moons; Neptune has rings and 11 moons. Triton (largest moon) is about 75 % rock and 25% ice with craters, mountains and plains (filled with ice or frozen methane). Fig. 23-25, p.568 Data shows Pluto is the smallest planet (reclassified as dwarf planet during 2006) in the Solar System (smaller than Earth’s Moon). It’s diameter and mass suggest it is made of rock and ice. Temp is about -220 degrees C, and surface may be frozen methane. Atmosphere is thin, composed of CO, N2 and CH4. Pluto and Charon (Pluto’s Moon) may be escaped moons from Neptune or Kuiper-belt objects? Fig. 23-26ab, p.568 Never visited by spacecraft, so how do we know Pluto’s properties? During 1978 Charon was discovered; by measuring Charon’s orbit, can calculate relative masses of each. From diameter and mass calculations, Pluto’s density is less that granite and greater than ice (so mixture of rock and ice). During 2005, astronomers detected two other moons orbiting Pluto. Also, Xena discovered (10th planet!)…it is 1.5 times larger than Pluto; Many astronomers feel Pluto should be a Kuiper-belt object. Fig. 23-26c, p.568 Asteroids, Comets and Meteoroids 23.8 Asteroids, comets, & meteoroids Asteroids – main belt between Mars and Jupiter – Ceres – the largest at 930km – Asteroids change orbit frequently – Some orbit close to, or cross paths with, Earth (may be reason for mass extinctions during history of Earth) – 1% chance Earth will be struck with a 10km asteroid in the next 1,000 years Comets below, ejecta plume from Deep Impact Probe colliding with comet Tempel 1 during 2005. Analysis of impact ejecta suggest comet surface is fine dust; organic compounds detected in near surface interior (basis for living organisms?) Comets – from the Greek for “long-haired” – long elliptical orbits – Spend most of their time past Pluto – Mostly a ball of water-ice and methane – No tail until it gets close enough to the sun Nucleus – the dense ball of the comet proper Coma – the bright surrounding ions Tail – the ions streaming away in the solar wind (can be millions of km long). Halley’s comet had a coma radius of 4500 km when it passed Earth during 1986. – Some contain organic compounds Comet Hale-Bopp was the brightest comet see from Earth in decades. It was brightest in March and April of 1997. Fig. 23-27, p.569 Fig. 23-28, p.570 Meteoroids Fragment of comet or asteroid that orbits the inner Solar System. Some can fall the Earth, friction with atmosphere produces fiery streak across the sky (most are about the size of a sand grain!). Larger ones reach the Earth. Most are stony (90% silica, 10% Fe and Ni, similar to mass ratio of rock to metal in the Earth’s mantle and core). May reflect primordial composition of the Solar system. Some have chondrules which contain organic molecules. Some are more metallic. We obtain knowledge of the Earth’s mantle and core from meteorites. Meteorite, believed to be a fragment of the asteroid Vesta. Ceres is the largest asteroid with a diameter of 930 km. Fig. 23-29, p.570