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Earth, Moon, and Mars: How They Work Professor Michael Wysession Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences Washington University, St. Louis, MO Lecture 1: Introduction to the Universe This Course will focus on Earth for the first two days; Mars and the Moon on the third (with lots of the rest of the solar system included all along!). 2 Reasons: #1: You can’t understand the geology of another planet until you first understand the geology of Earth. #1: You can’t understand the geology of another planet until you first understand the geology of Earth. (and one of these may one day be our home!) #2: NASA plays a major role in the current scientific investigation of Earth National Research Council’s Conceptual Framework for New Science Education Standards Textbooks at college, high school, middle school, and elementary school levels WWW.EARTHSCIENCELITERACY.ORG Big Idea #1: Earth scientists use repeatable observations and testable ideas to understand and explain our planet. Big Idea #2: Earth is 4.6 billion years old. Big Idea #3: Earth is a complex system of interacting rock, water, air and life. Big Idea #4: Earth continuously changing. Big Idea #5: Earth is the water planet. Big Idea #6: Life evolves on a dynamic Earth and continuously modifies Earth. Big Idea #7: Humans depend on Earth for resources. Big Idea #8: Natural hazards pose risks to humans. Big Idea #9: Humans significantly alter the Earth. Where are these? Where are these? Venus How do we know this? Jupiter Geosphere Composition of Crust (%): Weight Oxygen 47.2 Silicon 28.2 Aluminum 8.2 Iron 5.1 Moles 61.7 21.0 6.4 1.9 Volume 93.8 0.9 0.5 0.4 Composition of Whole Earth (weight %): Iron Oxygen Silicon Magnesium Nickel 35 30 15 13 2.4 Hydrosphere: 96.5% in Oceans 3.5% in glaciers, groundwater ~0% in streams, lakes, atmosphere, biosphere 71% of Earth’s surface is covered with water. If Earth were a perfect sphere, it would be covered with 2.25 km of water. Atmosphere: Composition: N2 - 78.1% O2 - 20.9% Ar 0.93% H2O - 0.1% CO2 - 0.039% (increasing) Ne 0.0018% Earth's magnetic field LOOKS LIKE there is a tilted, offset, wandering, bar magnet in its core. (But there isn’t!!) Fluid flow (convection) of liquid iron in Earth’s outer core creates the magnetic field. Magnetohydrodynamo The magnetosphere protects us from ionized particles of solar wind. Biosphere: Extends from the seafloor and deep crust, to the tops of mountains and the atmosphere. 3 - 300 million species; ~1.5 million identified VERY significant geological agent (Ex: atmosphere, weathering) Milky Way Galaxy 80,000 light years across (7.6 x 1017 km) = 760,000,000,000,000,000 km …and the universe is a whole lot bigger than this. Three lines of evidence for the Big Bang: 1) Doppler shift of stars 2) Background microwave radiation 3) Composition of the universe (Big Bang Nucleosynthesis – first 3-20 minutes) Cosmic Microwave Background, un-enhanced (COBE satellite) Cosmic Microwave Background, variations enhanced (WMAP – Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe satellite) Milky Way Andromeda Milky Way Nucleosynthesis: 1) Stellar nucleosynthesis – makes elements up to iron during last stages of a star 2) Explosive nucleosynthesis – makes elements larger than iron (from free neutrons) during supernovae of large stars Nucleosynthesis: D + D He He + He Be Be + He C C + He O C + C Mg O + C Si (etc.) Red Giant Betelgeuse Hourglass Nebula - collapsed white dwarf - gas ejected after red giant phase “Death” of a star: Helix Nebula - collision of two gas ejections from a dying star