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Definition 1. Small, rocky objects orbiting Sun 2. Undifferentiated “Minor Planets” a. Eccentric orbits between M & J b. MAsteroid Belt = 1/10th MMoon 3. Largest (& most spherical): CERES th (1/10,000 ME / < 600 miles wide) A. 1. Titius-Bode “Law” - prediction 2. Piazzi- Ceres (1801) at 2.8 AU 3. Today > 100,000 known 4. Asteroid Belt a. Home to most (2.1 - 3.3 AU) b. Prograde orbits 1. C-type / Carbonaceous aster. a. Darkest, most carbon b. Primitive material c. Includes 75% of all asteroids 2. S-type / Silicate asteroids a. Rocky material (“stony”) b. 15% of all asteroids 3. M-type asteroids a. Large fraction of iron/nickel b. ~ 10% of all asteroids c. $$ Future mining ? d. Planetary Resources (platinum/palladium) 4. Sizes of 50,000 + asteroids known a. 99% of > 60 miles wide found b. +90% of > 6 miles wide found c. 86% of > 1 Km wide found d. 10% of > 100 m wide found e. < 1% of < 30 m wide found 5. Larger asteroids more spherical 1.Vesta #3 ~ 340 miles wide a.Only one w/ ancient volcanism b. Basaltic meteoroids chipped off Vesta, hit Earth c. DAWN spacecraft (August ‘11) 2. Galileo close-ups in early ‘90s a. Ida (38 miles wide) / Gaspra b. Ida has small moon - Dactyl Vesta, 2011 (DAWN Spacecraft from 3,000 miles) 1.Renamed NEAR-Shoemaker 2. Visited porous Mathilde (‘97) (Very low density - “rubble pile”) 3. Orbit around EROS (2000) a. 3 miles up- high res. pics 1 yr b. Landed ‘01 w/o landing gear! c. Still sent radio for 16 days 1. Eccentricities > .4 2. Apollo asteroids (Mars -Amors) 3. 1200 known PHA’s - 1284 4. 300 potentially hazardous a. >150 m across, 5 million miles b. Icarus-Close to Sun, us, in ‘68 c. ‘72 – Great Daylight Fireball Wyoming d. ‘04 – 2 close calls (4,000 miles) e. ‘08 – Sudan (1st ever impact predicted in advance) f. About 40 per decade get “close” (within ~6 million miles) g. ~ 3 strike per million yrs. (1km) i. Obliterate 60 mile wide area ii. 100x energy of all nukes iii. Species extinctions.. h. Apophis (2029, 2036 - 1000 ft. wide) G. Options 1. Attach a “solar sail” 2. Attach thrusters 3. Gravity “tractor” 4. Nudge it with a nuke (detonate to the side) 5. Blow it up (probably not a good idea) 1.Several hundred Trojan asteroids orbit the Sun with Jupiter (2 are comets) 2. Found at Lagrange points - Joseph Lagrange (1772) a. 5 pts. in sync with a planet b. Trojans only found at L4 and L5 pts. - 600 in front of & behind Jupiter c. Asteroids also found at L pts. For Venus, Earth, Mars A. Basics 1. “Dirty Snowballs” (Whipple) many AU’s from the Sun 2. Only reflect light 3.Tail only develops close to Sun 1.Nucleus - main body of comet a. Only part for most of its orbit b. Few miles wide c. Only seen by space probes d. Contains most of the comet’s mass 2. Coma - gaseous halo a. As comet approaches Sun, ice sublimates into a gas b.Up to 60,000 miles wide (Sat.!) c. Brightest part 3. Hydrogen envelope - stretched millions of miles by solar wind a. Longest near Sun- up to 1 AU b. Ion tail i. Charged particles ii. Straight, glowing, bluish tint iii. Affected most by solar wind c. Dust tails -curved by gravity d. Tails always pt. away from Sun! http://www.windows.ucar.edu/tour/link=/comets/ comet_model_interactive.html Hale-Bopp ‘97 Light show! Comet P17 Holmes - 2007 1. Comets may break up close to Sun or plunge into the Sun a. Home to short period (~ 200 yrs.) comets- don’t orbit far beyond Neptune b. Usually prograde, fairly flat orbits c. Comets may be “kicked” into eccentric orbits by collision or pull of Jovian planets a.Vast spherical region (random orbits) around s. syst. ~100,000 AU b. Home of trillions of long-period (millions of yrs) cometary nuclei c.Total mass ~ mass inner planets d. Passing stars may deflect them 1. Edmund Halley (1705) predicted its return a. 76 yr. period b. 1682 comet came back in 1758 c. Recorded back to 240 B.C. 2. History a. Came close in 1910 b. Mark Twain c. Bayeux Tapestry (1066) a. Soviet Vega 2 thru coma b. Italian Giotto i. 600 km from nucleus ii. Dark, potato-shaped nucleus iii. Sunlit-side jets cause rotation of nucleus and orbit irregularities Hartley 2 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Nucleus split ‘92 Hit 60 km/s in ‘94 Earth-size fireballs Energy = 1 billion nuclear bombs Dark spots for days on Jupiter F. Physical properties of comets 1. ~ Mass of small asteroid- 3x faster 2. 30 tons/sec lost near Sun (Halley’s - 5000 orbits/40,000 yrs.) 3. Nuclei: 100 kg/m3 gas/dust/ice 4. Dust mixed w/ CH4, NH3, CO2 Definitions 1.Meteoroids: Space rock <100m 2.Meteor: Streak of light due to atm. friction from asteroid, comet 3.Meteorites: Any debris that reaches the ground (~ 4000 /yr) A. 1972 Grand Teton RUSSIA 2-15-13 The truth comes out… 1. Comets lose particles near Sun 2. Micrometeoroids spread out over entire path of comet 3.Denser areas: Meteoroid swarms 4. Earth goes thru path once or twice each yr.- meteor shower Ex/ Perseid (Aug.) Leonid (Nov.) Geminid (Dec.) Leonid Meteor Shower 1. Early solar system bombarded 2. Some from belt / others from Mars or the Moon (not Venus) 3. ~ 1 m wide / 1 ton survive entry 4. Earth has 100 craters > .1 km, best viewed in satellite photos (170 known impact sites) Egypt (Crater Discovered in 2010) Meteor Crater in 3-D 5. Tunguska Event- 1908 a. ~ 30 m meteoroid exploded miles above ground in Siberia b. Energy of a 10-megaton nuke 1. Micros: Low density (750) 2. Meteorites - up to 5000 kg/m3 3. Most rocky, some iron/nickel 4. Almost all are very old (~ 4.5 billion yrs. old) Chelyabinsk Meteor (2013) Chelyabinsk Impact Site (2013) Chelyabinsk Meteorite (2013)