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The Earth’s Energy Sources Activity Energy Sources Motion of water in oceans, lakes, rivers Solar energy, tidal forces Motion of atmosphere Solar energy Reshaping of surface Earth’s internal heat Life Solar energy (a few species that live on the ocean floor make use of Earth’s internal heat) Earth’s Sources of Energy • Sun – Radiant Energy • Interior Heat due to –Energy from planetesimals colliding to form Earth –Radioactive decay of elements – Uranium, thorium, etc • Gravitational work due to tidal forces of Sun and moon Energy Transport • Conduction- e• Convection - atoms/molecules • Radiation - (photons) http://www.shenandoah.k12.va.us/cms/One.aspx?portal Id=3201627&pageId=9494791 Convection Currents • Air – Thunderstorms, Tornados • Water – Hurricanes, El Nino, La Nina, Atlantic conveyor • Land – Cities are local hotspots due to massive amounts of concrete • All Convection currents are due to density changes as a result of the media being heated and normally expanded Earthquakes • Relieve stress in the crust • Epicenter is the point on the Earth’s surface directly above the point where stress is relieved. This stress point may be deep in the Earth’s crust • Three seismic waves created by an Earthquake –Surface waves, the rolling motion felt by people on the surface –P wave a longitudinal wave travels through interior of Earth –S wave a transverse wave travels through interior of Earth http://www.docbrown.info/page21/GeoChangesANS07.htm http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dynamic/inside.html http://images.slideplayer.com/24/7430612/slides/slide_11.jpg http://www.astronomynotes.com/solarsys/s7.htm http://lasp.colorado.edu/home/?post_type=s cience-seminars&p=15037 Mercury’s Iron Core • To produce the Magnetic field measured (~ 1% Earth’s strength) need liquid part of core to create currents • Energy to move currents? – Cooling of inner core to change into solid state http://www.ascensionearth2012.org/2015/05/mercu rys-mysterious-magnetic-past-goes.html http://www.universetoday.com/27005/earthsmagnetic-field/ https://www.mpg.de/8373381/two-dynamos_Jupiter https://maas.museum/observations/2012/12/ 19/harry-says-that-the-magnetic-fields-onthe-sun-are-reversing-their-polarity/ The Earth’s magnetic field produces a magnetosphere that traps particles from the solar wind • Electric currents in the liquid outer core generate a magnetic field • This magnetic field produces a magnetosphere that surrounds the Earth and blocks the solar wind from hitting the atmosphere • Most of the particles of the solar wind are deflected around the Earth by the magnetosphere. Magnetic Field Reversals • Earth’s Magnetic Field changes its polarity on an irregular pattern that varies from 10’s of thousands of years to 100’s of thousands of years • Sun’s Magnetic Field reverses Polarity every 11 years! • What is space weather ? • "conditions on the Sun and in the solar wind, magnetosphere, ionosphere and thermosphere that can influence the performance and reliability of space-borne and ground-based technological systems and can endanger human life or health." http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/s paceweather/ Why Care about Space Weather? • Earth-Space Activities ... disrupted by solar and geomagnetic events • Satellite operations • Navigation • Space Shuttle and Space Station activities • High-altitude polar flights • Electric power distribution • Long-line telephone communication • HF radio communication • Pipeline operations • Geophysical exploration http://www.sec.noaa.gov/info/SolarEffects.html http://www-istp.gsfc.nasa.gov/istp/outreach/cmeposter/images/blackout1big.gif http://www.spaceweather.gc.ca/effects_e.shtml Halloween 2003 (Oct-Nov) • • • • • • The largest X-ray solar flare ever recorded The fastest-moving solar storm ever. It splashed over us at nearly 6 million mph. The hottest storm ever. It was tens of millions of degrees as it doused Earth. power outages in Sweden disturbed airplane routes around the world, and damaged 28 satellites, ending the service life of two. http://www.spacetoday.org/SolSys/Sun/SunStormsRecordYr.html Halloween 2003 (Oct-Nov) • Burned out the radiation monitor aboard the Global Surveyor spacecraft orbiting Mars. That instrument had been tracking the radiation future explorers might encounter on trips to the Red Planet. • And beyond Mars near the planet Saturn, the Cassini spacecraft measured the intense energy from the Sun. • Months later, the energy from the storm reached beyond Pluto's orbit to the edge of the Solar System, washing over the Voyager spacecraft http://www.spacetoday.org/SolSys/Sun/SunStormsRecordYr.html http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/seg/geomag/icons/ringcurrent.jpg http://www1.american.edu/ted/ice/tsunamithailand.htm http://eijournal.com/print/imagery-in-the-news/imagery-inthe-news-departments-mar-apr-2011 https://www.skepticalscience.com/globalwarming-on-mars.htm • Phobos • 9378 km from Mars • 7 hours, 39 min to orbit • Would appear to cross horizon to horizon in 5 ½ hours (rises in West) • Deimos • 23,460 km from Mars • 30 hours, 18 min to orbit • Would appear to need 3 days to cross horizon to horizon (rises in East) Earth’s Moon is ~384,400 km from Earth and takes 27.3 d to orbit Plate Tectonics on Venus?? • No evidence, all mountains appear to be volcanic in origin • No sea-floor spreading, no faultlines • No Seismometers have ever been landed on Venus. Craft landed there (Russian) usually they lasted on a few hours before they failed due to harsh atmospheric conditions corroded circuits etc. • Lack of water probably prevents asthenosphere from being plastic http://www.public.asu.edu/~atpcs/atpcs/Univ10e/Images /6268_fig11-22.jpg http://www.rocksinmyheadtoo.com/Pangea.htm http://futurism.com/wpcontent/uploads/2013/12/PangeaUltima.jpg Cycles of Super-continents • Pangea is only latest in the cycle of Super-Continents • They form about every 500 million years • They block heat flow from below, so their existence creates the mechanism to break them apart ***** http://www.uwsp.edu/geo/faculty/ritter/images/lithosphere/volcanism/hotspt_small.jpg http://www.mbari.org/volcanism/images/HawaiiEmperor.jpg http://astro.wsu.edu/worthey/earth/html/im-geology/hot-spot-volcanism.gif http://geology.uprm.edu/Morelock/GEOLOCN_/1_image/intrplat.jpg https://www.utwente.nl/en/news/!/2016/2/462188/importantstep-in-understanding-of-light-scattering http://icecube.berkeley.edu/~bramall/work/astrobiology/fluorescence.htm https://www.physics.byu.edu/faculty/christensen/physics% 20137/Figures/Energy/Atmospheric%20Opacity.htm http://scied.ucar.edu/sites/default/files/images/large_image_for_image _content/atmosphere_layers_diagram_720x440.jpg http://scied.ucar.edu/ionosphere Atmospheres of Other Planets • Earth is only planet with a stratosphere because of UVabsorbing ozone molecules (O3). • Those same molecules protect us from Sun's UV light. "No greenhouse" temperatures © 2017 Pearson Education, Inc. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coriolis_force http://library.thinkquest.org/5818/images/mvmt1.gif https://ase.tufts.edu/cosmos/print_images.asp?id=3 Cassini spacecraft as it flew past Jupiter in 2000. Surface Pressure on Terrestrial Planets • Moon 3 x 10-15 bars (atmospheres) • Mercury 1 x 10-15 • Venus 92 • Earth 1.014 • Mars 0.00636 (6.36 x 10-3) https://www.ucar.edu/learn/1_1_2_1t.htm http://www.astronomynotes.com/solarsys/s3c.htm http://lasp.colorado.edu/~bagenal/1010/SESSIONS/14.TerrPlanAtmos.html http://exoplanet.as.arizona.edu/~lclose/teaching/a202/lect16.html Polar Ice Caps • Mars’s polar caps contain frozen water, a layer of permafrost may exist below the Martian regolith, and there may be liquid water beneath the surface • The Martian polar caps expand in winter as a thin layer of frozen carbon dioxide (dry ice) is deposited from the atmosphere http://www.universetoday.com/14892/mars-dust-storms/ http://www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/celest ial-objects-to-watch/storm-watch-on-mars/ The Martian atmosphere changes dramatically with the seasons • Great dust storms sometimes blanket Mars • Fine-grained dust in its atmosphere gives the Martian sky a pinkish-orange tint • Seasonal winds blow dust across the face of Mars, covering and uncovering the underlying surface material and causing seasonal color changes Earth and Mars began with similar atmospheres that evolved very differently • Mars’s primordial atmosphere may have been thicker and warmer than the present-day atmosphere • It is unclear whether it contained enough carbon dioxide and water vapor to support a greenhouse effect that would permit liquid water to exist on the planet’s surface • The present Martian atmosphere is composed mostly of carbon dioxide • The atmospheric pressure on the surface is less than 1% that of the Earth and shows seasonal variations as carbon dioxide freezes onto and evaporates from the poles http://pages.uoregon.edu/jimbrau/BrauImNe w/Chap09/7th/AT_7e_Figure_09_20.jpg The climate on Venus followed a different evolutionary path from that on Earth • Venus’s high temperature is caused by the greenhouse effect, as the dense carbon dioxide atmosphere traps and retains energy from sunlight. • The early atmosphere of Venus contained substantial amounts of water vapor • This caused a runaway greenhouse effect that evaporated Venus’s oceans and drove carbon dioxide out of the rocks and into the atmosphere • Almost all of the water vapor was eventually lost by the action of ultraviolet radiation on the upper atmosphere. • The Earth has roughly as much carbon dioxide as Venus, but it has been dissolved in the Earth’s oceans and chemically bound into its rocks http://www.subdued-site.com/WebPages_Local/Blog/topics /environment/worldPopGrowth_charts/enviro_worldPopGrowth_charts.htm http://www.census.gov/popclock/ http://www.pri.org/stories/2016-01-13/5-countries-dumpmore-plastic-oceans-rest-world-combined http://www.bluebird-electric.net/oceanography/pacific_ocean.htm http://pics-about-space.com/orbit-earth-space-junk-movie?p=1#