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ASTR 100 Lecture 12: Jovian Planet Systems Tuesday: Jovian Planets, Kuiper belt, and Oort cloud, …Ch. 6-9 Space exploration (Not in book)and Formation of the Solar System (Ch. 6) Presentations…. Jovian or outer planets: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune Summary: Jovian planets considered “systems” consisting of planet, moons, rings Planets: composition, weather Moons: Many, some have terrestrial-planet-like features Rings: They look neat. They’re big. …but they’re fluffy Could fit 1,400 Earths inside Jupiter, but Jupiter is only 318 times as heavy Composed mostly of Hydrogen and Helium Compositional differences: Jupiter and Saturn mostly H and He Uranus and Neptune have greater proportion of “volatiles”: water, methane, ammonia - Volatiles more prevalent further away from Sun - Jupiter and Saturn’s larger masses allowed them to trap H and He WTF? metallic hydrogen? …Just means Hydrogens are sharing electrons Jovian planets all have high rotation rates: (More mass means harder to stop) ≈ 17 hrs. ≈ 16 hrs. Day ≈ 10 hrs. ≈ 10hrs. “Metallic hydrogen”, core metals, and high rotation rates give all Jovian planets awesome magnetospheres UV images of Jupiter’s aurorae from New Horizons spacecraft flyby (2007) Great Red Spot is an anti-hurricane, raging for last 300 years: Have seen similar weather on all other Jovian planets What’s up with the different colors of clouds? Each different “volatile” has a different color in vapor form What’s up with the stripes? IR image-> Weather patterns are caused by convection of air and rotation of planet. Jovian planets have like 400km/hr winds Moons …so many moons Geologic activity? Alive or dead? The rules of thumb for terrestrial worlds (i.e. bigger or smaller than Mars) don’t apply due to differences in composition of the Jovian moons The Jovian moons have very water-rich mantles: “ice geology” vs. “rock geology” Io: hotbed of volcanic activity Why hasn’t Io cooled off yet? Tidal heating: The other moons have tugged Io’s orbit into an more eccentic ellipse, Jupiter’s gravity grinds Io to heat it up. Europa: Crust of ice over a liquid water ocean maybe 100’s of km deep Strong candidate for extra-terrestrial life Ganymede and Callisto: Show cratering, must have old surfaces (Saturn’s large moon) Titan: Lakes of methane and ethane, thick atmosphere Huygens probe landed in 2005 Saturn’s medium moons: More of what one might expect from moons - geologically dead and cratered …mostly Enceladus ≈ 500km Enceladus lit up by Saturn’s magnetosphere? Miranda, 570km in diameter; 5km scarps, craters, coronae, regiones, sulci Galileo first saw “ears” on Saturn, now know that all of the Jovian planets have rings. IR image-> Must be universal. Once collisions or tides make a debris field, it maintains itself by “grinding down” through more frequent collisions and “catching” new stuff We have seen a Jovian planet, capture and rip apart a comet, Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9, in 1994 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CiLNxZbpP20 IR image-> Features of rings: Gaps, “ringlets”, gap and shepherd moons How do we know? 1) Sending probes 2) Earth-based telescopes (Spectroscopy) A few of the more important missions to Jovian planets: Voyager 1,2 (launched 1977) Galileo (launched 1989) Cassini (launched 1997) New Horizons flyby (2007) Key terms: Jovian planets, volatiles, “metallic hydrogen”, magnetosphere, rings, gaps, resonances, tidal forces Key Ideas: What are the basic parts features of a Jovian planet system? How are Jovian planets differentiated The weather and magnetospheres of Jovian planets How does “ice-geology” vs. “rock-geology” make even some small Jovian moons geologically alive? What are the basic features and origins of ring systems in Jovian planets? How do we know?