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					Earth-like Planets Part II Lecture 21 Topography of Mars  Northern lowlands and southern highlands (like our Moon : crustal dichotomy)  Southern highlands (oldest region on the Mars)  several billions old Topography of Venus  Excepting for a few localized highlands, the surface of Venus is flat! Why?  About 500 million years old or younger (few impact craters) Tectonics in Venus Flake Tectonics on Venus Plate Tectonics Flake Tectonics Due to a very thin crust Notable features on Mars Valles Marineris Volcanoes on Venus and Mars These volcanoes are due to hot-spot volcanism (similar to the Hawaiian islands) about 80% of the surface of Venus is covered with lava flows Olympus Mons : Largest Volcano in the Solar System  Like Hawaiian volcanoes, it is a shield volcano Comparison against tallest mountains in Mars, Venus, and Earth. Why the largest volcano on the smallest planet? Tectonics make it harder to produce larger volcanoes  Moving-crust above a hot spot makes a series of smaller volcanoes not a single larger one.  Lacking plate tectonics on Mars allows a buildup of the largest volcano over millions of years. Atmospheres of Venus and Mars  Venus : sulfuric acid rain evaporates before reaching the ground  Mars : dry ice (CO2) snows. Very thick atmo. Very thin atmo. Circulation pattern of Venus  Because of slow rotation, Venus has a simple 2-cell convection pattern. High altitude wind (i.e., Jet-stream of Earth)  Surface wind : 5km/h  high-altitude wind : 350km/h  causing V-shape feature Super-rotation of atmosphere Seaons on Mars : Martian north pole  Day (20C) and night (-140C) at equator  seasonal temperature changes at poles  Seasonal changes of polar ice (CO2) cause planet-wide seasonal winds.  e.g., in the northern hemisphere winter: CO2 wind from North to South Seasons on Mars Summer (Viking lander 1) Viking lander 2 Atmospheres of Earth  Earth Atmospheres of Venus Atmospheres of Mars  Mars : no-recycle, locked up atmosphere in permafrost Viking Landers 1979 Viking Lander 1 & 2 : 1979 • Two landers within two months landed at nearly opposite sites across the planet. • And two orbiters… • A thin coating of ice on the rocks and soil… Many images over several months… No visible life. But, what about its habitability now (and the past)? Rovers on Mars Pathfinder  Spirit/Opportunity  MSL rover “Curiosity” (about a size of a small car, max speed = 90m/hour) : mobility (3-12 miles) for more diverse collection of sample!! Water on Mars?  Sedimentary rocks  and hematite (bluish small rocks in the picture)  requires water to form. Water on Mars?  Subsurface water based on data obtained by Mars Odyssey spacecraft. Evidence of surface water flow? Evidence of Water flow? August 1999 September 2005 Pheonix Lander Highlights  Lander dug up Martian soil several ice blocks were exposed which were sublimated over 3-4 days “sol” = Martian day = 24 hrs 39min Pheonix lander confirmed water ice Short-term climate changes of Mars After losing its atmosphere and H2O, has the climate of Mars unchanged for the past 2-3 Gyr? No. The climate had changed with period of hundreds of thousands years! Ice ages of Earth  due to the change of obliquity. 22° - 25° : small range due to the stabilizing effect of the large Moon Mars does not have a large moon. Closer to Jupiter  a much wider range of obliquity change, 0° - 80° Larger obliquity  warm summer pole  more CO2  stronger greenhouse effect  warmer temperature. Even with this, average T couldn’t maintain surface liquid water, but high enough to have liquid water just beneath the surface! Martian Moons • Heavily cratered, synchronously rotating rocks very close to Mars (about 1/400 of the distance b/w Moon and Earth). • Deimos is moving away from Mars like our Moon around the Earth • Because Phobos is orbiting faster (7 hr 39 min) than Mars’ rotation, Phobos is spiraling toward the Mars. It will smash into the Mars in 40 million years. They are likely captured asteroids. In summary… Important Concepts Important Terms  Flake tectonics  Runaway greenhouse effect  Runaway icehouse effect  Reasons for Mars’ short-term climate change  Atmospheres of Venus and Mars  No magnetic field on Venus & Mars  Martian moons  Icehouse effect  Flake tectonics  Shield volcano  Hot-spot volcanism Chapter/sections covered in this lecture : sections 11-5 through 11-8
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            