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Remnants of Rock and Ice: Asteroids, Comets, and Pluto Remnants of Rock and Ice Remnants Birth • Comets, Asteroids andfrom Meteorites carry the history of our solar system encoded in their compositions, locations, and numbers. • Asteroid: – a rocky leftover planetesimal orbiting the Sun. • Comet: – an icy leftover planetesimal orbiting the Sunregardless of its size or whether or not it has a tail. • Meteor: – a flash of light in the sky caused by a particle entering the atmosphere, whether the particle comes from an asteroid or a comet. • Meteorite: – any piece of rock that fell to the ground from the sky, whether from an asteroid, a comet, or even another planet. Asteroids • The main Asteroid Belt lies between 2.2 and 3.3 AU from the Sun. • Origin and Evolution of the Asteroid belt: – The Asteroid belt probably formed as a result of orbital resonance. Resonance occurs whenever one object’s orbital period is a simple ratio of another object’s period. – These resonances with Jupiter probably prevented a planet from ever forming in the region of the Asteroid Belt. • Another effect of the resonance is to form gaps in the orbits of the Asteroids as they orbit the Sun. • These are called the Kirkwood Gaps. The Kirkwood Gaps Asteroids are recognizable in telescope images because they move relative to the stars in just a short time. See SFA Observatory SFA Observatory Asteroid Discoveries Gaspra (16 km across) Galileo Ida(53 km) and its tiny moon Galileo Mathide(59 km) NEAR Eros (40 km) NEAR Meteorites • Primitive Meteorites: Most primitive meteorites are composed of rocky minerals with an important difference from Earth rocks. • The Primitive Meteorites are our best source of information about conditions in the solar nebula. Processed Meteorites • A smaller group of meteorites appears to have undergone substantial change since the formation of the solar system. • These “Processed Meteorites” apparently were once part of a larger object that modified the original material into another form. Carbon-rich primitive meteorite Primitive Stony primitive meteorite Differential iron meteorite Differential stony meteorite Processed Origin of Meteorites • Carbon –rich meteorites came from the outer portion of the asteroid belt. (> 3AU) • Carbon – poor meteorites formed in the inner warmer part of the asteroid belt. • The processed meteorites have compositions similar to the cores, mantles, or crusts of the terrestrial worlds. These are fragments of the terrestrial worlds. • Processed meteorites with basaltic compositions must have come from lava flows. Comets • Icy Planetesimals that have been left over from the formation of the Solar System. “Sun Grazing” comet observed by The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO). Anatomy of a Comet Comets exist as bare nuclei over most of their orbits and grow a coma and tails only when they approach the Sun The Kuiper Belt and the Oort Cloud Pluto • Pluto was discovered in 1930 by an American Astronomer named Clyde Tombaugh. • Pluto has long been seen to be a misfit among the planets, fitting into neither the terrestrail nor the jovian category. • It has a 248 year orbit that is unusually elliptical and significantly tilted relative to the ecliptic. • Pluto has a moon – Charon. Cosmic Collisions • The numbers of small bodies orbiting the solar system have diminished significantly since the days of early bombardment, when most impact craters were formed. • However, there are still plenty of fragments left and collisions between these fragments and the planets still occur on occasion. Comet Shoemaker -Levy 9 Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 The End. Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 • Was shatter by Jupiter’s gravity in 1992. • All pieces hit Jupiter in the summer of 1994 leaving dark impact scars. Images obtained by Dan Bruton in 1994 Meteor Shower Minor Body Comparisons Property ___Asteroids _________ Comets Orbit Shape Circular to elliptical Highly elliptical Size 0.5 km to 625 km Nucleus 1 to 10 km Composition Named? Iron or Rocky Named by their discoverers Ice and Rock Named after their discoverers Earth Impacts and Near Misses • Arizona Meteor Crater – measures 1 mile across – from an impact 50,000 years ago – by a 50 meter meteoroid • Tunguska Event – in 1908 – an asteroid broke up in our atmosphere – leveled trees for some 30 kilometers Frequency of Impacts versus impactor size & Effects • Chicxulub Event /cheek-shoo-loob/ – 65,000,000 years ago – 10 kilometer asteroid – is thought to have caused a mass extinction of dinosaurs The End... Live long and prosper.