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The Solar System •Inner planets; geology, atmosphere evolution •The asteroids – scrambled and fried •Outer planets and their mini-solar systems of moons •Comets: icy dirtballs or dirty iceballs? Inner vs. Outer Planets characteristics Temp vs distance in solar system All planets and the sun, sizes How Does a Planet Retain an Atmosphere? • Surface gravity must be high enough and surface temperature must be low enough that the atmosphere molecules don’t leak away during the 4.6 billion years since formation. Two Ways a Planet Loses Atmosphere: First… • Lighter molecules move faster, because on average Kinetic Energy = Thermal Energy • (½)m<v>2 = (3/2)kT • Molecules are continually bouncing off of each other and changing their speed, but if the average speed is higher, a few may be speedy enough to escape the planet’s gravity • Hydrogen and Helium = 97% of the mass of the solar nebula, and these are the lightest and easiest molecules to lose The Second way to Lose Atmosphere… • …maybe easier to understand - Impact Cratering! Big comets and asteroids hitting the planet will deposit a lot of kinetic energy which becomes heat, blowing off a significant amount of atmosphere all at once. • This is a Big issue especially in dense areas (inner solar system), and dense times (soon after formation). The Inner Planets • It’s hot close to the sun. No ices. So only the rocky material (~3% of the solar nebula) could collect. Not hydrogen and helium since escape velocities that are too low for these • Atmosphere histories for each planet are unique…as we’ll see Early inner planet; a ball of lava Inner planet interiors; summary Mercury mariner Mercury mud cracks Mercury fault Mercury • Smallest planet, only 3,000 mi across. • 600F on daylight side, too hot to retain any atmospheric molecules at all. Probably doesn’t help that the sun is so close and solar storms can rack the planet and help carry off any atmosphere too. • Cratering shows it hasn’t had atmosphere for most of solar system’s history venusHST Venus-all Venus lava flows Venus-surface1 Venus-surface2 Venus-surface4 Venera-left Venera-right Venus • Has thick CO2 atmosphere, 100 times denser than earth’s. CO2 is the heaviest common molecule. • Greenhouse effect – CO2 transparent to visible light coming down from the sun, but opaque to infrared coming back off the surface, hence heat comes in but can’t easily escape. 900K on surface!! • Let me draw you a picture… Greenhouse effect Earth – largest inner planet • Crust divided into tectonic plates which move due to friction against the moving molten mantle underneath. Continental drift animation • . Click here for animation website. • This likely explains why the earth has so little atmosphere. That’s one heck of an impact event. Atmosphere; initially rich in CO2, methane, no oxygen Why so little atmosphere, and why is CO2 such a tiny % (~0.3% today)? 1. Life took out CO2 and produced O2, and organic and inorganic processes produced CaCO3. Nice! This has been lowering greenhouse gases at the same time the sun has been increasing its luminosity – balance! 2. Moon created by Mars-sized planet impacting early Earth. Evidence: (1) moon crustal age is a little younger than Earth’s, (2) moon composition = Earth mantel composition, (3) moon orbits ~in ecliptic, not equator plane as you would expect if it was formed with the earth. Folded mountains – earth and Venus Aurora, iceland volcano Mt. Aetna in italy Ozone hole moonPlieades moon Moon’s surface; maria vs highlands Mare humorum, Clavius 160mi across Apollo 15 on moon1 Apollo 15 on moon Graze reduction marsHS Mars globe, big craters Mars globe, w/ v. marinaris Olympic mons caldera Mars valle marinaris Mars continents Mars solis plenum Martian sand dunes Mars gullies Martian surface; pathfinder Spirit track Mars mud cracks Martian rock; blueberries, razorback Mars crater edge - rover Mars BurnsCliffs Mars drilling rock Mars frozen ice floes Mars heart-shaped crater phobos Phobos mars orbiter diemos Asteroids – Remnants of planet(s) roughed up by Jupiter? • Giant gap from Mars to Jupiter, plenty big enough to house another planet. But instead… • Thousands of bits and pieces of rock • Resonances and orbit crossings led to collisions, or maybe never came together in the first place (tidal stretching) • Total mass is less than that of Mars The Outer Plants: Hydrogen/Helium Giants • 97% of early solar nebula was hydrogen and helium, roughly the composition of the outer planets • Cold temperatures, high mass allow these light atoms to be held by gravity for these 4.6 billion years • Rocky cores surrounded by deep layers of H, He. Jupiter,Saturn,Uranus,Neptune lineup Jupiter layers Jupiter redspots Jupiter storms Jupiter IR, excess heat Jupiter + Io Io globe Io globe closer in Io volcano Io pele Io volcano closeup Io surface hi res Io cutaway Europa cracks Europa interior cutaway Lake Vida Antarctic Callisto ice spires Ganymede globe gray Callisto globe Callisto cratering Jupiter small rocky moons saturnHST Saturn hst2 Saturn rings Mimas and rings Cassini division close up Saturn dragon storm Saturn aurorae Saturn aurorae sequence Titan haze from side Titan color Titan b&w oceans Titan shorelines titan Titan ocean+canyon Titan impact crater Titan bouldersColor phoebe Enceladus-all Enceladus surface wedge Enceladus surface Enceladus surface2 Enceladus cracks Mimas Rhea cassini iapetusWalnut saturnMoonEpithemus Uranus, rings in ir Uranus,ringsHST oberon Miranda lowres Miranda hi res Miranda bullseye Miranda cliff Neptune HST Neptune great dark spot triton Beyond Neptune – cold and dark! • No planets beyond Neptune, instead, the Kuiper Belt of large comets… • “rocks” of light elements (hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, chlorine…) are called “ice” and melt at very low temperatures. • Globs of this stuff, mixed with plenty of dust and dirt, are called “Comets”! Hyakutake sahuaro Hyakutake fisheye Hyakutake long fl lens K4 LINEAR K4 LINEAR; longer exposure C/NEAR with SOHO Comets – A Tale of Two Tails • Comets swing by the sun on big arcing orbits. • The gas is blown back rapidly, since gas atoms are very light. Gas tail is very straight and moves very fast – gas atoms left comet very recently. • Dust tail is yellowish and often curved, as the dust grains move very slowly, showing the history of the comets path over a longer history. C/Machholz C/Hale-Bopp C/Hale-Bopp Jtree C/Bradfield & LINEAR T7 C/IkeyaZhang and M31 Comet surface - artist Halley closeup C/Borrelly closeup C/Wile closeup/ composite Comet P57 breaking up S4 LINEAR breakup b&w S4 LINEAR breaking up S4 LINEAR up close S4 LINEAR4 S4 pieces SL9 string of comets Crater chain on moon Comet TempleTuttle; Leonids parent Uniform vs Leonid meteor streams Leonids ’99 Ayers antiradiant Leonids ‘01 Leonids ’01 fisheye Leonids ’01 fisheye2 Leonids ‘02 Leonids Jtree Leonids ’02 anti radiant Leonids ’02 from space Leonids ‘02, lake moon DeepImpact KBO’s Sedna, quaoar, pluto, earth/moon Asteroids – Remnants of planet(s) roughed up by Jupiter? • Giant gap from Mars to Jupiter, plenty big enough to house another planet. But instead… • Thousands of bits and pieces of rock • Resonances and orbit crossings led to collisions, or maybe never came together in the first place (tidal stretching) • Total mass is less than that of Mars asteroidTrails Inner SS known asteroids all Pallas occultation Radar of 3.5km NEO AnnFrank from Stardust Eros, whole thing Eros Landing Site Eros surface gaspra Ida and Dactyl to scale Asteroid close encounters have changed some orbits, creating a population of earth-crossing asteroids. Those that haven’t already hit us, probably will in the (hopefully distant) future, Causing…. Trouble! Daylight fireball Michelle’s car Fresh Russian Crater MeteorCrater, Arizona Chixilub crater