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1 Lecture 17 Asteroids and Meteors January 8b, 2014 2 Asteroids • • • • Bodies of rock (some iron) Irregular shape Typically 0.1 - 600 km Total number of visible asteroids may be 100,000. • Detected by movement with respect to stars. • Average distance between asteroids ~1,000,000 km 3 Path of Asteroid 4 Toutatis -- Radar Image Size: 4.6 × 2.4 × 1.9 km 5 Vesta -- HST Image Diameter: 530 km 6 Orbits of Asteroids • Most orbit Sun in Asteroid Belt between Mars and Jupiter • Debris that was not able to form a planet due to pull from Jupiter. • Apollo Asteroids – high orbital eccentricities. – Cross the orbit of the Earth 7 8 Resonances (optional material) • Jupiter’s pull disrupts orbits of some asteroids. • Trojan asteroids -- share orbit with Jupiter. • Kirkwood gaps – orbits in the asteroid belt where few asteroids are found. – Orbits correspond to fraction of Jupiter’s period. – Continual tug of Jupiter when it lines up with asteroids in same place in their orbit pulls them to a different orbit. 9 Gaspra and Ida • Two asteroids observed by Galileo on the way to Jupiter. • Irregular shape. • Many craters. • Ida has its own “moon” 10 Gaspra -- Galileo Image Size: 19 x 12 x 11 km 11 Ida and Dactyl -- Galileo Image Size: 58 x 23 km 12 Eros -- NEAR Image 13 Meteoroids • Meteoroids -- small debris in space, usually < 100 m in diameter • Meteor -- meteoroid falling through Earth’s atmosphere. – Friction with air causes it to heat and burn up. – Seen as “shooting star” – Most burn completely, only largest make it to the Earth • Meteorite -- meteoroid that makes it to the surface of the Earth. 14 Meteor Showers Quadrantids Date of Maximum intensity January 3 Lyrids April 22 15 Lyra Eta Aquarids May 4 20 Aquarius Delta Aquarids July 30 20 Aquarius Perseids August 12 80 Perseus Orionids October 21 20 Orion Taurids November 4 15 Taurus Leonids November 16 15 Leo Major Geminids December 13 50 Gemini Ursids December 22 15 Ursa Major Shower Typical Constellation hourly rate 40 Boötes 15 Meteor Showers • Some cometary orbits cross orbit of the Earth. • When they break up they leave debris in orbit. • Earth passes through debris, many meteors are seen. 16 Meteor Shower 17 Meteorites Iron Stony-Iron Stony 18 Earth Impacts • Earth is continually being bombarded. Barringer Meteor Crater, Arizona Diameter: 1.2 km Age: ~50,000 years 19 Tunguska Event -- Siberia (1908) • Asteroid destroyed in atmosphere. • Leveled trees for over 20 km from explosion. 20 Chicxulub Crater -- Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico • Dinosaurs -- possibly destroyed by asteroid impact ~65 million years ago – Alvarez & Alvarez found iridium rich layer of clay Chicxulub Diameter ~170 km 21 Risks of Impact 20m Diameter 200m 2km 22 © The New Yorker Collection 1998 Frank Cotham from cartoonbank.com. All Rights Reserved