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Our local neighbourhood - The Solar System Dr Nicola Loaring SALT/SAAO [email protected] Concept: The Scale of our Solar System • • • • If the Sun were a grapefruit (10cm) Earth, grain of sand 1mm, 15 m away Jupiter, marble 1.5cm, 80 m away Pluto, tiny grain of sand 0.2mm, 700 m away And the NEXT CLOSEST sun (or star) would be in ... Nairobi ! DEMO Concept: Two types of Planet Terrestrial planets: Rocky with molten cores Jovian planets: Mainly gas and liquid with rocky cores Rocky Planets The rocky worlds are the 4 inner planets plus our Moon They have a solid rock surface with an iron core and a weak or no Gas Giants There are 4 gas giant planets in our solar system. These planets have NO solid surfaces – just gas and clouds that get denser as you move to their centre. Relative distribution of the two types of Planets Gas giant worlds are far from the Sun Wikipedia Rocky worlds are close to the Sun Relative sizes Gas giant worlds are much larger than rocky worlds Jupiter – largest gas giant world Earth – largest rocky world NASA/JPL Activity opportunity: Powers of 10 Body Radius Surface Area Earth 1 1 Jupiter Sun 10x [101] 100x 100x [102] 10,000x Volume 1 1000x [103] 1,000,000 x Relative numbers of rings and moons www.hubblesite.org Gas Giant worlds have rings and many moons. (From left to right: Enceladus and shadow, Dione and shadow. Titan and Mimas are off the limb to the right). Rocky worlds have no rings and no, or few, moons. Why are there two types of planet? Solar System Formation All orbits are in the same direction and in the same plane. Suggests a common origin. Solar system formed when a cloud of gas and dust in space was disturbed. Gas and dust drawn together, forming a solar nebula. The cloud began to spin as it collapsed and therefore flattened. As the disk got thinner particles formed clumps, planetisimals eventually forming planets or moons. As the cloud continued to fall in, the centre eventually got so hot that it became a star, the Sun. Solar wind then blew away excess material. Why are there 2 types of planet? Inside the frost line: Too hot for hydrogen compounds to form ices. Outside the frost line: Cold enough for ices to form. Inner parts of disk are hotter than outer parts. Only materials that solidify at high temperatures can condense to form solid particles. Rock can be solid at much higher temperatures than ice. DEMO Density and Composition Earth 5.5 g/cm3 composition- iron, rock Saturn 0.7 g/cm3 composition- some rock, volatiles and lots H & He Callisto 1.9 g/cm3, Titan 2 g/cm3 composition -rock and ice Asteroids and Comets Leftovers from the accretion process Rocky asteroids inside frost line Icy comets outside frost line The inner rocky PlanetsMercury Has the largest temperature extreme in the solar system from 183C to 430C. Second densest planet after the Earth, so must have a large iron core. Has a very thin atmosphere consisting of atoms blasted off its surface from the solar wind. Atmosphere is constantly being replenished. DEMO Heavily cratered surface because its atmosphere is so thin. Mission Launch Year Mariner 10 1973 Messenger 2004 (to orbit 2011) BepiColombo 2013 (to arrive 2019) The inner rocky Planets Venus Recent Missions Launch Year Galileo 1989 (flyby 1990) Magellan 1989 (in orbit 1990-1994) Cassini 1997 (flyby 1998, 1999) Venus Express 2005 (arrive 2006) Messenger 2004 (flyby 2006, 2007) Planet C 2010 Venus is a similar size to the Earth. It atmosphere is mainly Carbon dioxide and Nitrogen. Its very hot there due to the ‘Green house effect’ a whopping 462C. Our home the Earth Earth is at a distance of 150 million kilometres from the Sun. Sunlight takes 8 minutes to reach us. Our atmosphere is composed of 78 percent nitrogen, 21 percent oxygen and 1 percent other constituents. 71% of the Earth’s surface is covered by water! Earth is the only planet in the solar system known to harbour life. Picture taken by Apollo 17 astronauts Mission The Moon Launch Year Apollo manned missions 1968 - 1972 Lunar Prospector 1998 SMART-1 2003 SELENE (JAXA) 2007 Chandrayaan-1 2008 LRO LCROSS Heavily cratered. 2009 Evidence for water. 2009 The inner rocky Planets Mars Mars is 1/10th the mass of Earth Average temp is –63C Rock are made of silicates (like sand) and also a dash of iron oxides to give it that reddish colour (Mars is rusty!) Surface is dry now, but scientists believe there were once rivers, lake and maybe oceans of water Water exists in “permafrost” a few metres below the surface (Mars Express / Mars Odyssey). Maybe even liquid water down there! (MGS). No landers have detected water in soil, but have found evidence of past water. Recent Missions Mars Viking 1 Mars has the Viking 2 highest (extinct) Mars Global Surveyor volcano in the Mars Pathfinder Solar System: Mars Express Olympus Mons at Spirit / Opportunity 24 km high 2.7 Phoenix times Everest! Launch Year 1975 (landed 1976) 1975 (landed 1976) 1996 (arrived 1997) 1996 (arrived 1997) 2003 (still active) 2003 (still active) 2007 (till 2008) ExoMars 2016? Mars Sample Return Mission 2020? The gas giants -Jupiter Mission Largest planet in the solar system – its diameter is 11x the Earth’s diameter. Jupiter takes about 12 years to orbit the sun and rotates in about 10 hours.Pioneer 11 Jupiter is a ball of dense hydrogen, helium, water, nitrogen and other gases over a rocky core. ~90% H, ~10% He. Voyager 1 Launch 1974 (arrived 1979) 1977 (arrived 1980) Above core is the main bulk of the planet which is liquid metallic hydrogen. (Huge pressure). Ionized protons and electrons in liquid form. Voyager 2 Powerful winds, jet streams, lightning and huge hurricane-like storms like the Great Red Spot. This storm has been raging for over 300 years Galileo and is twice the size of Earth! 1977 (arrived 1981) 1989 (arrived 1990, still operational) Cassini and Saturn Mission Pioneer 11 Voyager 1 Launch Date 95 times the Earth’s mass. Saturn, famous for its rings. These are made up of trillions of icy 1973 (flyby 1979) particles. 1015 tons of material in the rings, enough for a small moon! 1977 (encounter 1980) No more than 50 million years old (MUCH younger than the planet) continually replenished 2 outer portion of the C ring 1977 This image shows, from leftVoyager to right, the and (encounter 1981) inner portion of the B ring. The B ring begins a little more than halfway across the image. The general pattern is from "dirty" particles indicated by red to cleaner ice particles shown in turquoise in the outer parts of the rings. 1997 (orbiting 2004, Titan descent Cassini-Huygens 2005 - orbiter still operational) Titan Titan's surface in 2004-2005! Liquid ethane/methane on surface Lots of hydrocarbons Uranus Primarily composed of rock and ices with only 15% H (much less than Jupiter and Saturn). Mission No rocky core like Jupiter and Saturn, but material is more evenly distributed. Voyager 2 No liquid metallic hydrogen envelope. Atmosphere of 83% H, 15% He, 2% methane. Launch Date 1977 (encounter 1985-1986) Composed of ices and rock with about 15% H and a little He Neptune Atmosphere mainly H and He with a little methane which gives it its blue colour as methane absorbs Mission red light Small solid core, the size of the Earth Voyager 2 No distinct layers like Uranus (unlike Saturn and Jupiter) Neptune has the fastest winds in the solar system reaching 2000 Launch Date 1977 (flyby 1989) What Counts as a Planet? The IAU definition of a planet (2006): is in orbit around the Sun, Mission has sufficient mass so that it is nearly round Launch has "cleared the neighborhood" around its orbit. New Horizons 2006 (to arrive 2015) Dwarf Planets The IAU currently recognises five dwarf planets—Ceres, Pluto, Haumea, Makemake, and Eris. Ceres is in the asteroid belt others in the Kuiper belt. Many Kuiper Belt objects, exist in what is believed to be a vast shell of icy and rocky objects that live at the very edge of our solar system.