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Earth and Other Planets 3 November 2015 Chapter 16 Great Idea: Earth, one of the planets that orbit the Sun, formed 4.5 billion years ago from a great cloud of dust. 1 Chapter Outline • The Formation of the Solar System • Exploring the Solar System • The Earth 2 The Formation of the Solar System 3 Clues to the Origin of the Solar System • Solar system – Objects gravitationally bound to Sun • Deduction of origin – Observations • Earth • Space 4 Clue #1: Planetary Orbits • Features of solar system – All planets orbit in same direction – Orbits in same plane – Most rotate in direction of orbit 5 Clue #2: Distribution of Mass • Most material within Sun • Two types of planets – Terrestrial planets – Jovian planets • Other objects – Moons, asteroids, comets 6 The Nebular Hypothesis • Nebular Hypothesis – Cloud of dust and gas – 99% H and He • Collapse of nebula – Planetary orbits – Clumping of matter – Planetesimals – Temperature 7 Basic Planet Categories • Terrestrial planets – – – – Mercury Venus Earth Mars • Jovian planets – – – – Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune 8 Some Conclusions • Planets formed at same time as Sun • Planetary and satellite/ring systems are similar to remnants of dusty disks such as that seen about stars being born • Planet composition dependent upon where it formed in solar system 9 Nebular Condensation (protoplanet) Model • Most remnant heat from collapse retained near center • After sun ignites, remaining dust reaches an equilibrium temperature • Different densities of the planets are explained by condensation temperatures • Nebular dust temperature increases to center of nebula 10 Nebular Condensation Physics • Energy absorbed per unit area from Sun = energy emitted as thermal radiator • Solar Flux = Lum (Sun) / 4 x distance2 • Flux emitted = constant x T4 [Stefan-Boltzmann] • Concluding from above yields T = constant / distance0.5 11 Nebular Condensation Chemistry Molecule H2 H2O CH4 NH3 FeSO4 SiO4 Freezing Point Distance from Center 10 K >100 AU 273 K >10 AU 35 K >35 AU 190 K >8 AU 700 K >1 AU 1000 K >0.5 AU 12 Nebular Condensation Summary • Solid Particles collide, stick together, sink toward center – Terrestrials -> rocky – Jovians -> rocky core + ices + light gases • Coolest, most massive collect H and He • More collisions -> heating and differentiating of interior • Remnants flushed by solar wind • Evolution of atmospheres 13 Pictorial View of Origins 14 Pictorial View Continued 15 HST Pictorial Evidence 16 HST Pictorial Evidence 17 The Formation of Earth • Planetesimals – Combined (accretion) to form earth • Great bombardment – Meteors – Growth of planet • 20 metric tons per day 18 Differentiation • Differentiation – Heat from collisions – Dense material sank to center – Lighter material rose to surface • Structure – Core – Mantle – Crust 19 Crust and Us 20 Earth’s Interior How We Know It 21 The Formation of the Moon • Large object (asteroid close to size of Mars) impacted earth • Parts of mantle blown into orbit • Moon formed from this material 22 Planetary Idiosyncracies • Cratering – Mercury, Mars, Moon – Few on Earth • weathering • Rotation – Venus – Earth’s axis – Uranus 23 The Evolution of Planetary Atmospheres • Earth’s atmosphere – Early – Outgassing • Atmosphere was N2, CO2, H2, & H2O – Gravitational escape – Living organisms 24 Exploring the Solar System The Inner Solar System • Mercury, Venus, Mars – Mercury and Venus too hot for life • Mars Exploration – Multiple missions – Found evidence of water 26 The Outer Solar System • Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune – Layered structure – No solid surface • Jupiter – Comet Shoemaker-Levy – Galileo spacecraft • Saturn – Cassini spacecraft 27 Outer Solar System II 28 • Jupiter’s Moons – Io, Europa, Ganymede, Callisto and 63 others known • Saturn’s Moons – Titan, Mimas, Hyperion and about 59 (61?) others • Rings Moons and Rings – Ice and rock - more ice in Saturn’s rings 29 Dwarf Planet Pluto Surprises • It has moons • Original moon discovered 1978 – Charon (KAIR’ en) • Now more – 2005 discovery of 2 additional moons – Named Nix and Hydra – 2011 #4 is P4 (Kerberos) – July 7, 2012 #5 is P5 (Styx) 30 Pluto’s Interior to Surface Old -> New Model • Model 1 – partially hydrated rock core – water ice layer II – predominant water ice layer I • Model 2 – partially hydrated rock core – organics layer – predominantly water ice layer 31 The Launch of New Horizons Pluto Mission 17 Jan 2006 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KNJNaIoa5Hk 32 Io’s Volcanoes from New Horizons 33 34 Pluto 35 Pluto’s Methane (frozen) 36 Charon 37 Pluto 38 Pluto Atmosphere Detection 39 Pluto and Charon 40 Carbon Monoxide (Frozen) 41 Solar Wind at Pluto 42 Pluto “Heart” Region 43 Pluto Mountain Range 44 Nix and Hydra 45 Pluto, True Color 46 Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors • Asteroids – Small rocky bodies – Orbit sun – Most in belt between Mars and Jupiter • Comets – Dirty snowballs • Orbit outside Pluto • Oort cloud • Kuiper belt – Halley’s Comet – Stardust and Deep Impact missions • Meteoroids, Meteors, and Meteorites – Meteor showers – Original solar system material 51 Planetary Summary Mass (Earth=1) Density (g/cm3) Major Constituents Mercury Venus Earth Mars 0.06 0.82 1.00 0.11 5.4 5.2 5.5 3.9 Rock, Iron Rock, Iron Rock, Iron Rock, Iron Jupiter Saturn 318 95 1.3 0.7 H, He H, He Uranus Neptune 14 17 1.3 1.7 Ices, H, He Ices, H, He Planet 52