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Origin of the Solar System and Solar System Debris Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 1 Debris • comets • meteoroids • asteroids • gas • dust Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 2 Asteroids irregular, rocky hunks small in mass and size Ceres - largest, 1000 km in diameter (1/3 Moon) Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 3 Asteroid Belt 2.8 AU from the Sun, between Mars and Jupiter some with highly eccentric orbits, e.g. Icarus, goes inside the orbit of Mercury 5500 asteroids discovered so far Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 4 A Typical Asteroid fluctuates in brightness => tumbling, irregular in shape cratered surfaces, often rough and pitted lose chunks in collisions Toutatis - two orbiting each other Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 5 Categories of Asteroids • S type (stony) relatively bright stony silicate materials • C type (carbon) darker contains carbon compounds • M type (metallic) brighter than C, darker than S metallic substances Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 6 Comets - Heralds of Disaster first seen as a bright blob later grows brighter and sprouts a tail as it nears the Sun Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 7 Comets coma: bright head of the comet may reach a million km diameter nucleus: small central core, about 10 km tail: material in the comet is heated by the Sun and vaporizes, can be millions of km’s long Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 8 Two Tails! gas tail: ion tail emission lines ionized gas plasma carbon monoxide (CO) carbon dioxide (CO2) molecular nitrogen (N2) magnetic fields interact with plasma giving the comet a glow Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 9 dust tail: spectrum of sunlight reflected by the dust radiation pressure pushes dust out of the coma points downward from the ion tail Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 10 Dirty Snowball Model Nucleus: solid, compact body frozen ices (water, methane, ammonia) embedded in rocky material Coma: nears the Sun, icy material vaporizes, forming the coma Tail: continual vaporizing enlarges the coma and forms the tail Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 11 Periodic Comets • make regular passes near the Sun • follow Kepler’s Laws • have elliptical orbits short period: orbit in same directions as the planets, less eccentric long period: highly eccentric orbits, cut through plane of Solar System Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 12 Oort Cloud a reservoir of comets out beyond Pluto, beyond the Kuiper Belt (belt of icy objects) average semi-major axis is 50,000 AU, period of 10 million years, eccentricity close to 1 travel very slowly, spend a lot of time far out in their orbits Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 13 Wonder of It All How did they get out there in the first place? Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 14 Meteors and Meteoroids meteoroid: name for particles and such before entering Earth’s atmosphere meteor: solid particle that vaporizes in Earth’s atmosphere meteorite: particles large enough to survive and land on Earth Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 15 Origins of Meteoroids • dust and ice flaked from comets • 99% comes from comets • follow orbits of original comets meteor showers: many meteors in a short period of time Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 16 Types of Meteoroids • irons • stones 90% iron, 9% nickel high density, melted appearance low density silicates similar to Earth’s crust chondrules - silicate spheres carbonaceous chondrites: chondrules embedded in material containing a lot of carbon Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 17 • stony iron: crossbreed between stones and irons meteorites - come from asteroids rather than from comets have enough density to make it through our atmosphere Identify a meteorite: etch a polished surface with acid and look for Widmanstatten figures They were originally inside a larger body and could cool slowly. Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 18 C type asteroid carbonaceous chondrite S type asteroid stony meteorite M type asteroid iron meteorites probable that the parent bodies were first things to form in the Solar System - ages will directly indicate the age of Solar System Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 19 Solar System Chemically: Sun mostly gaseous with some icy/rocky material as gases Terrestrial planets & asteroids rocky, metallic Jupiter, Saturn mostly gaseous Uranus, Neptune, Pluto, Charon, comets mostly icy Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 20 Dynamically • planets revolve counterclockwise Sun rotates counterclockwise • major planets have orbits only slightly inclined with plane of Sun exceptions: Pluto and Mercury • planets move in orbits that are nearly circular (low eccentricity) exceptions: Pluto, Mercury Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 21 • planets rotate counterclockwise (same direction as orbital motion exception: Venus, Uranus, Pluto • planets’ orbital distances follow a regular spacing (sort of) - about twice as one before • most satellites revolve in same direction as parent planet rotates and lie close to equatorial plane • some satellites’ orbital distance follows a regular spacing rule Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 22 • planets together contain more angular momentum than the Sun (99.5% vs 0.5%) • long period comets - come in from all angles and directions short period comets, planets, satellites, asteroids - coplanar orbits • all Jovian planets have rings Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 23 Nebular Model Sun and planets form from a cloud of interstellar material Sun forms in the center of flattened cloud Planets grow from the disk of the cloud Solar System is basically flat with the Sun in the middle. Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 24 Conservation of Angular Momentum once something starts spinning, it will continue unless acted on by an external influence angular momentum: tendency to keep spinning angular momentum depends on the mass and on how that mass is spread out Any time a body contracts (gets smaller), it spins faster in order to conserve angular momentum. Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 25 Imagine, a large cloud of gas and dust, slowly spinning. It starts to shrink, pulling in on itself with its own gravity. What happens? It spins even faster !! And eventually it collapses along the rotation axis. a flat disk with a fat center ! Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 26 Nice model …….. one problem …... Angular momentum is not as expected. Sun Planets 99% mass 1% mass 1% ang. momentum 99% ang. momentum Sun should be spinning very rapidly! Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 27 gravitational contraction: a mass pulling itself together gets hotter gravitational potential energy kinetic energy (heat energy) As the cloud contracts, it gets hotter. Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 28 Stages of Evolution • formation of nebula out of which the planets and Sun originate • formation of original planetary debris • evolution of planets • dissipation of leftover gas and dust Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 29 Planetary Formation • grains collide & accrete to form larger, pebble-sized objects • pebbles accumulate into planetesimals by gravitational contraction composed of whatever is handy • planetesimals gather into larger bodies takes tens of thousands of years clear out a space in the nebula • protoplants - process takes 100 million years Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 30 Condensation Sequence • temperature determines what materials condense • below 2000 K, grains of terrestrial material condense • below 273 K, grains of terrestrial and icy materials condense Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 31 Different distances from the Sun, different temperatures allow different materials to condense and form into grains. How LOW the temperature gets determines what materials. Leftover planetesimals bombard the new planets’ surfaces causing craters. Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 32 Planets become differentiated. Some rocky, metallic planetesimals end up as asteroids. Icy ones become comet nuclei. Intro to Solar System Origins of the Solar System 33