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Geology 12 Planetology Unit 5 Outline A: Origin of Solar System B: Planets C: Moons A: Origin of Solar System Big Bang 13.7 billion yrs ago 0 – 300,000 years: light elements (H2 and He) form (was 100% H2 & He; now 98%) 300 ma: Universe continued expanding forming 1st stars (13.4 ba) and galaxies (Quasars = developing galaxy) Stars produced heavier elements via fusion (Li – Fe) and exploding (super novas) 1st Stars Nebula 1st Galaxies Solar Nebular Theory: Deals with the creation of solar system 1. Swirling eddy cloud of dust and gas within the galaxy coalesces into a whirlpool. 2. As the whirlpool spins, it shrinks spinning faster finally into a spinning flat disc. 3. 90+ % of the mass concentrates at the centre to form an embryonic sun (protostar) which emits light/heat and solar (hydrogen nuclei) wind 4. The Sun’s solar wind coupled with all the ionized gasses in the rotating disc caused a magnetic braking effect (Sun now rotates once/25 days) slowing disc down to moderate speeds. Ionized gasses Sun Lines of Magnetic force 5. Sun’s heat warmed inner disc so lighter elements could not condense so solar wind pushes most of these elements out to form gas giant planets. gaseous rocky M VEM Inner C J S U Outer planets Planets Hot N Cold frozen E P Solar Nebular Theory Solar Nebular Theory 6. <10% of the mass accretes into larger and larger particles which eventually form planetesimals (60 – 100). As the planetesimals collided, they grew in size and mass (gravitational attraction), but fewer in number, to form the planets. Large collisions among planetesimals resulted in: a) b) Venus spinning backward very slowly Uranus & Pluto spin on their side Two planetisimals colliding Orbits Orbits Asteroids: left over planetesimals Most between Mars and Jupiter (Jupiter’s gravity prevented formation of small planet). Now a dwarf planet Comets: formed near Uranus and Neptune; the immense gravitational pull of Saturn and Jupiter has created their highly elliptical orbits that range from the Sun to the Oort Cloud at the edge of the Solar System. Sun to Earth = 1 A.U. = dist’ Earth to Sun: 150 m km Sun to Pluto: 39 A.U. Sun to edge of Solar System: 35,000 A.U. Comets Comets Oort Cloud Oort Cloud Final Result: 1. All planets revolve around the Sun in same direction: CCW (Q.10, p.6) 2. Nearly all planets (‘cept Venus), moons orbit and spin/rotate in same direction: CCW 3. Nearly all axes of rotation are perpendicular to plane of revolution (Plane of the Ecliptic) 90’ 90’ 4. a) Terrestrial Planets: are small, rocky, high densities (4 – 5.5 gm/cm3) and metallic element (light elements blown…) b) Gaseous Planets: large, low densities (0.7– 1.7 gm/cm3 ) and mostly frozen compounds (cold, little solar wind) 5. Slow rotation of Sun (slowed by magnetic braking) 6. Asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter (left over pieces of early Solar System) Solar System B: Planets Two Types: Terrestrial and Jovian/Gas Giant Hand out data table on Planets Terrestrial Planets Terrestrial Planets Metallic cores, silicate mantle-crust differentiated by volcanism and meteorite cratering Atmosphere produced by volcanic outgassing High densities: SG 4 – 5.5 Slow rotators: 24+ hrs/day Weak magnetic fields Few, if any moons Planets: Mercury 4880 km 1. Mercury Smallest planet (slightly larger than our moon) Closest to Sun (hot on sunny side; cold on shady side + long days: 1 M-day = 58 E-days) Weak gravity and high temperatures caused loss of atmosphere to space Radioactive heat expired long ago causing contraction of planet leading to normal faulting…heavy cratering over faults indicates cooling occurred long ago. (dating via principle of cross-cutting) Normal fault Mercury: craters & lava flows Venus 2. Venus (Earth’s sister/twin planet) because it’s the same size. Shrouded in thick clouds of CO2 and N2. (90x Earth’s pressure) Very hot (+450’C) with runaway greenhouse effect. Active volcanism, folded mountains, faults, trenches indicate tectonic activity. No magnetic field Rotates backwards 1 V-day = 243 E-days Venus 12100 km Earth 12800 km 3. Earth Active volcanism, folded mountains, faults, trenches indicates tectonic activity Plate tectonics, oceans and weathering covers up meteorite impacts Mars 4. Mars ½ Earth’s diameter; twice Moon’s Billions of years ago its volcanic outgassing provided ample CO2 and water for oceans. CO2 greenhouse effect warmed Mars so oceans flowed in great seasonal floods cutting immense canyons (and water depositional features). Volcanic activity slowed/ceased long ago (3.5 ba), CO2 atmosphere was lost to space, planet cooled and water froze. Now frozen desert with wind storms and dunes. N-hemisphere: large smooth plains, extensive volcanism (Olympus Mons: largest known volcano in Solar System), and few craters. S-hemisphere: heavily cratered from meteorite bombardment (Hellas: 2000 km crater is largest known in Solar System). Mars 6800 km Mar’s N-pole Mar’s breccia & debris Canyon: Valles Mariness Olympus Mons Olympus Mons Face of Mars Mars wind storm What kind of dunes are those? Longitudinal dunes Jovian Planets/Gas Giants 3 layer structure: rocky cores, liquid mantle, H2-He (+methane and ammonia) atmosphere topped by clouds All have rings Strong magnetic fields Low density: 0.7 – 2.0 Fast rotators: <17 hrs to a day Many moons Jupiter 142800 km 5. Jupiter Largest planet Liquid mantle of metallic hydrogen creates very strong magnetic field Emits 2.5 x more energy than it receives (heated by compaction-compresson 5 ba ago and is still cooling off). Faint ring + 16 moons Rotates very fast -> oblate spheroid: (10hr day) Saturn 6. Saturn BIG rings and 22 moons Emits 2.2 x more energy than it receives Similar structure to Jupiter 10 hr day 120660 km Uranus 50800 km 7. Uranus 9 faint rings 15 small moons Rotates on its side (was hit by Earth-sized object) which when the magnetic field is measured, gives a precise rotation rate (hard to measure on gaseous planets). Magnetic field Axis of rotation Dense rocky core surrounded by deep global ocean of water 17 hr day Neptune 8. Neptune 3 faint rings Very stormy (up to 2000 km/hr winds) despite great distance from Sun??? Rocky core surrounded by slushy water and liquid methane ocean 16 hr day Neptune 48600 km Dwarf Planets 1 Terrestrial Dwarf Planet: Ceres Rocky, no atmosphere Hi SG: 3-4 2 Ice Dwarf Planets: Pluto & Eris (but up to 50 outer bodies may fit classification) Frozen H2 + He (+methane & ammonia) Periodic faint to no atmosphere Low SG: 2 Ceres 1000 km diameter (Texas size) Ceres Pluto 2350 km Pluto 2/3 diameter of Moon (2350 km diameter) Highly elliptical orbit crosses Neptune’s 1999 Neptune’s orbit Sun 1980 Eris (formerly called 2003 UB313 and Xena) 2500 km diameter Quaoar: one of many (approx’ 50) frozen objects beyond Pluto, some larger than Pluto. 1250km Terrestrial Planets All the Planets Sun vs. Planets Our Sun vs. Other Stars Our Sun vs. Other Even Larger Stars C: Moons (Natural Satelites) Mercury and Venus: no moons Earth: the Moon Rotates on axis and circles Earth 1/month (27.3 days) Surface has two major parts a) Highlands: light coloured (Fs), oldest (4 ba), heavily cratered b) Maria (sea): dark-coloured basaltic lava flows (3.8 – 3.2 ba ago) Since then nothing but meteorite impacts Moon Moon Anorthosite Fs 4.5 by Basalt Flows 3.2-3.8 by Meteorite Impacts 20 m meteorite traveling @ 10 km/s can excavate a crater 600 m across! That’s only 23,000 mph (36,000 km/h) 1. Impact and immense heat from pressure and internal friction. Shock wave 2. Compressional rebound ejecta 3. Result: impact crater Fallback breccia ejecta (breccia and dust) Fractured floor Top View Raised centre Ejecta blanket Relative dating: what’s on top is youngest = superposition 3 kinds of material on surface 1. 2. Igneous rocks: basalt (lava flows) Breccia + Glass sphericules: result of shock metmorphism 3. dust Result of meteorite impacts Moon Formed from collision with a Mars-sized planetesimal with Earth about 4.5 ba. Molten rock of Moon lost most of its water (only ice is at S-pole believed from an icy meteorite impact) Moonquakes indicate: 100 km crust Plastic and liquid mantle Small solid core Moonquakes caused by cooling and shrinking mantle (normal faults) Impact Craters Ejecta Blanket Impact Craters Raised centre Berringer Crater, Arizona The object which excavated the crater was a The crater was lies created 50,000 years nickel-iron meteorite about 50 meters yards) Meteor Crater at anabout elevation of (54 about ago during theimpacted Pleistocene when the of across, plain aisspeed 1740 m which (5709 ft) above the seaepoch level.atIt about local climate onft) the Plateau was several kilometers per second. The speed of 1,200 m (4,000 inColorado diameter, some 170 m the much cooler and damper. At the time, the impact has been a subject of some debate. deep (570 ft), and is surrounded by a rim that area 45 wasm an open grassland dotted with Modelling initially suggested that the meteorite rises (150 ft) above the surrounding woodlands mammoths, struck The at ainhabited speed of of by up woolly to 20 kilometers per plains. center the crater is filled with giant(45,000 ground sloths,ft)but and camels. It was second mph), recent research 210-240 m (700-800 of more rubble lying above uninhabited by humans, the first of whom suggests the impact was substantially slower, at crater bedrock. are thought to have reached(28,600 North America 12.8 kilometers per second mph). It is only around 13,000 believed that about half years of the ago. impactor's 300,000 tonne (330,000 short tons) bulk was vaporized during its descent, before it hit the ground. Permian Extinction 80% of species wiped out Cretaceous Extinction 50% of species wiped out Continental Shelf To Can Cun Land 3d gravity Anomaly of impact crater Mars: 2 small, irregular shaped moons 1. Demos: 8 km long 2. Phobos: 27 km long, circles Mars/8hrs and will crash in 20 ma Mars Moon: Deimos Mars Moon: Phobos Jupiters Moons Jupiter (18 moons) 4 large moons 1. Io: very close to Jupiter causing huge land tides (+90km) causing tremendous internal friction…this heat leads to intense volcanic activity -> sulphur volcanoes Io Io Io “Gravitational tug of war” Io volcanic plume 2. Europa: 2nd closest moon Large tides also cause internal friction…enough to melt water…so…Europa has thick oceans of convecting water covered by ice. Europa Europa ice cracks Ice Oceans Solid Rocky Mantle ? Core ? 3. Ganymede: grooves (ridges and valleys) that are younger than craters suggesting?? Ice crustal plates?? 4. Callistro: most cratered object in Solar System Both largely frozen ice with silicate rocky cores. Ganymede Largest moon in SS Grooves, ridges of ice? Callisto Saturn (22 moons) Titan: atmosphere of hydrocarbons and nitrogen; oceans of hydrocarbons ½ rocks and ½ frozen water N2 atmosphere Landed there 2 yrs ago Titan 2nd largest moon in SS Titan Titan’s surface Uranus (15 moons) Small Miranda: bizarre V-shaped grooves Miranda Miranda V-groove: Plate Tectonics? Meteorite impact? Shrinkage? Neptune (8 moons) Triton Largest moon of Neptune Volcanic activity (geysers of carbonrich material of N2) Probably a captured planet (same size as Pluto) Triton Triton Triton’s surface Nitrogen geyser Nitrogen geyser Pluto (3 moons) Charon ½ size of Pluto Eris: 1 moon called Dysnomia Do WS 20.1