* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Dwarf Planet
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Earth’s Origin and Planetary Geology I. The Sun A. The Sun is a _____. star 1. A hot gaseous sphere • • with a surface temperature of about 5,550o Celsius (approximately 10,000o Fahrenheit) Interior temperature may be as high as 15,000,000o Celsius 2. Radiates energy into space. B. Size of the Sun If the Sun was a Volley ball . . . • Jupiter would be roughly the size of a nickel. • Earth would be about the size of a pinhead 109 times Earth’s diameter (1.38 x 106 km) 1. Size: _______ 1,300,000 2. Volume: Could hold more than ________ Earth’s. 3. Mass • 745 times greater than the combined mass of all the planets in the Solar System C. The Source of the Sun’s Energy Fusion light elements into heavier 1. ________of elements by high temperature and pressure in the core. 2. 75% of the Sun’s mass is hydrogen Hydrogen atoms fuse, producing 3. _________ energy _________ and _________. Helium Fusion in the Sun • Deuterium (2H) and Tritium (3H) have formed from the collision of protons. – These are isotopes of hydrogen. – They have extra neutrons in the nucleus. • The deuterium and tritium combine to form helium. • The mass of the helium that is formed and the emitted particle is less than the mass of the hydrogen that started the process. • The missing mass has been converted to energy and released. • • Estimates indicate that about 4 million metric tons of matter are converted into energy every second. But because the Sun is so massive, this process can continue for another five billion years! Comparing the Sizes of Stars II. Distances in Space A. _________________ Astronomical Unit 1. Distance measured Sun to the ________ , the closest star to Earth 2. Equal to the average distance between the Sun and Earth (150,000,000 km or 93,000,000 mi.) 3. Used for distances within our Solar System. The Light Year B. __________________ No . . . Not this guy (Buzz Lightyear of Toy Story) Light Year 1. The distance that a ray of light travels in one year 2. At the speed of light (300,000 km/sec or 186,000 km/sec) light travels about 9.4 trillion kilometers (5.8 trillion miles) in one year 3. Double stars of Alpha Centuri are about 4.3 LY from Earth. 4. The red giant star Betelgeuse is nearly 490 LY from Earth. Orion the Hunter III. Theories on the Origin of the Universe and the Solar System Bang A. The Big ________ No, not these guys… A. The Big ________ Bang 1. The entire universe was a very hot dot, smaller than the diameter of an atom 2. 13.7 billion years old Based on recent research with only a 1% margin error.) a. Expanded faster than the speed of light b. Mechanism that initiated the event is still being researched. What is meant by an expanding universe? • According to the Big Bang model, the point of energy exploded in an incredibly giant and violent event. • It wasn’t like a bomb exploding. – When a bomb explodes fragments are sent outward in all directions. • The Big Bang caused space itself to expand. – As space expanded, particles formed and were carried away from each other. Model of an Expanding Universe • Imagine the universe as being curved like a balloon. – Galaxies are drawn on the balloon. These represent galaxies. • As the balloon is inflated space between the dots increases. • When seen from any galaxy, the other galaxies are moving away The Big Bang • Cooling eventually resulted in the formation of hydrogen, helium, deuterium and lithium atoms • Stars were born at +200 million years • Peak of galaxy formation at + 3 billion years Simplified Timeline of Events after the Big Bang 9.1 billion years B. Galaxies Top View 1. 2. 3. Side View 4. A galaxy is a system containing ___________ billions of stars. Space contains several billion galaxies ____________ Peak of galaxy formation occurred when the universe was about three billion years old. Galaxies glow from the combined light of billions of stars. Types of Galaxies Peculiar GalaxiesAbnormal in size and shape Barred Spiral Galaxy Elliptical Galaxy Irregular Galaxies – The Magellanic Clouds The Milky Way 5. ______________ a. The Home Galaxy to which the Sun belongs b. A spiral galaxy c. Diameter: 140,000 light years d. Greatest thickness: 20,000 light years. e. Sun: About 23,000 light years from the galaxy’s center. f. Approximately 100 billion stars. g. Belongs to a small cluster of 40 galaxies know as the _____________ Local Group 140,000 LY C. Origin of the Solar System (____________ Solar Nebula Theory) 1. Planets formed at the ___________ as the same time Sun and from the same nebular material. a. The Sun, Earth and the Moon are all about 4.6 billion yrs old _________________. b. Mercury, our Moon, and the moons of the outer planets craters are scarred with __________. c. This suggests they were bombarded with objects in the past. Jupiter’s Moon Io Jupiter’s Callisto • The most cratered object in the Solar System The Solar Nebula • Solar system born 4.6 billion years ago • A few light-years in diameter • Composed mostly of gaseous – Hydrogen (71%) – Helium (27%) – Traces of other gases • Microscopic dust – Mixture of silicates, iron compounds, carbon compounds and water ice • Collapse may have been triggered by a nearby exploding star or a collision with another cloud Formation of the Solar System Solar Nebula Theory • • Gravitational attraction between the particles in the interstellar gas cloud (nebula) cause it to collapse inward. Could have been caused by: – – Nearby exploding star Collision with another cloud. Solar Nebula Theory • The rotation of the cloud caused it to flatten. – – Formed a rotating disk. The bulge in the center became the Sun. Accretion • Particles in the disk began to stick together, possible assisted by static electric forces. – The particles grew in size as the combined (a process called “accretion.”) – Composition of particles depended on where they were in the disk. Inner Part Near the Sun • • Too warm for water-ice to condense Solid particles were silicate and iron-rich matter. Outer Part of Disk (at about the distance of Jupiter from the Sun) • • • Cold enough for water-ice to form Particles silicate and iron-rich material and frozen water. These particles grew much larger than the particles in the inner part of the cloud. Planetismals Formed • • • If collisions between particles were not too violent they stuck together. Smaller particles gradually grew until they were several kilometers wide. These small, planet-like bodies are called planetesmals. Formation of Planets • Planetesmals began to collide and grow (accretion) – – • If they were not completed destroyed, they merged. Their orbits became nearly circular. Mass increased due to accretion. Outer (Jovian) Planets • Grew larger – – – • Water-ice could form Water-ice was about 10 times more abundant than silicon and iron-rich compounds. With larger mass, these planets could attract more material. Gas could be attracted and retained due to the large gravity. – – Extremely large hydrogen-rich atmospheres surround Earthsized rocky bodies (original materials of the planets) Called gas giants because of huge gaseous atmospheres. Our Solar System • • • 8 planets 172 known moons (satellites) as of October 2008 a tremendous number of asteroids – most orbit the Sun between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter • • Millions of comets and meteorites Interplanetary dust and gases Elliptical Orbits • The shape the orbits of all planets are ellipses • Ellipses have two focal points, unlike the circle which has one central focus – The Sun is located at one focus and the other is empty Eccentricity of an Ellipse Circle • The degree of departure from a perfectly circular orbit. • Related to the lengths of the: – Major Axis: Longest axis through the foci – Minor Axis: Shorter axis Eccentricity of an Ellipse Circle • Eccentricity increases as the lengths of the two axes become more unequal. – At extreme eccentricity the two axes are equal – A circular orbit has no eccentricity Earth’s Elliptical Orbit • Earth’s orbit is a nearly circular ellipse Earth’s Elliptical Orbit • Earth’s orbit is a nearly circular ellipse Earth’s Elliptical Orbit • Earth’s orbit is a nearly circular ellipse Earth’s Elliptical Orbit • Earth’s orbit is a nearly circular ellipse Earth’s Elliptical Orbit • The effect of Earth’s elliptical orbit on season is very small, varying by only a few percentage points • The longer period (7 days) between the March Equinox and the September equinox tends to compensate. Solar System Configuration X Solar System Configuration Pluto is no longer considered a planet! Pluto’s Been Demoted! • On August 24, 2006 the International Astronomical Union redefined the definition of a planet as: – “a celestial body that is in orbit around the sun – has sufficient mass for its self-gravity to overcome rigid body forces so that it assumes a nearly round shape, – and has cleared the neighborhood around its orbit.” Pluto is now considered a “Dwarf Planet” • Pluto lost its status as a planet because it’s highly eccentric orbit crosses over the orbit of Neptune. – As such it hasn’t “cleared the neighborhood around its orbit. • A dwarf planet like Pluto is – Any other round object that • Has not “cleared the neighborhood around its orbit • Is not a satellite Planets 4. Terrestrial ________________ a. Closer to the Sun and most lighter elements driven off. b. Small, rocky, and dense c. Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars d. No atmosphere. (Originally) e. Numerous impacts of objects from space (meteors, comets) Earth’s Differentiation • Differentiation = segregated into layers of differing composition and density • Early Earth was probably uniform • Molten iron and nickel sank to form the core • Lighter silicates flowed up to form mantle and crust Earth’s Interior Layers • Crust - 5-90 km thick – continental and oceanic • Mantle – composed largely of peridotite – dark, dense igneous rock – rich in iron and magnesium • Core – iron and a small amount of nickel Earth’s Interior Layers • Lithosphere – solid upper mantle and crust – broken into plates that move over the asthenosphere • Asthenosphere – part of upper mantle – behaves plastically and slowly flows Hot, Barren, Waterless Early Earth • about 4.6 billion years ago • Shortly after accretion, Earth was – – – – a rapidly rotating, hot, barren, waterless planet bombarded by comets and meteorites with no continents, intense cosmic radiation and widespread volcanism f. Origin of Earth’s Atmosphere Volcanic Outgassing 1. ________________________: Atmosphere evolved from the release of water from volcanoes. 2. Earth’s Primordial Atmosphere • Earth’s very early atmosphere was probably composed of hydrogen helium ___________and _________, • the most abundant gases in the universe • If so, it would have quickly been lost into space – because Earth’s gravity is insufficient to retain them – because Earth had no magnetic field until its core formed • Without a magnetic field, – the solar wind would have swept away any atmospheric gases Outgassing • Once a core-generated magnetic field – protected the gases released during volcanism • called outgassing – they began to accumulate to form a new atmosphere • Water vapor – is the most common volcanic gas today – but volcanoes also emit – carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, – carbon monoxide, sulfur, hydrogen, chlorine, and nitrogen g. ___________ Meteorites • Some meteorites contain water which likely was released into the impact when the vaporized upon impact with Earth’s surface. Comets • A new class of comets, “main belt comets” may have formed within the orbit of Jupiter – Contain “Heavy” water (HDO) which has equal parts Hydrogen, Oxygen, and Deuterium (an isotope of H with extra neutron) Hydrogen Deuterium • Earth’s oceans contain HDO • Comet impacts might have contributed significant water to the formation of Earth’s atmosphere and the oceans. h. Origin of Earth’s Oceans: Release of water from precipitation over millions of years early in Earth history. Forming the Earth - Moon System • Impact by Mars-sized or larger planetesimal with young Earth – 4.6 to 4.4 billion years ago – Ejected a large quantity of hot material, – and formed the Moon The Asteroid Belt Asteroids Asteroid Impacts Asteroid Impacts Meteorite Impact Barringer Crater, AZ • Width: 1 mi (1.2 km) • Depth: 570 ft (175 m) • Created by the impact of a 50 m wide iron meteor 50,000 yrs. ago Also Known as “Meteor Crater” • Width: 1 mi (1.2 km) • Depth: 570 ft (175 m) Chicxulub – An Extinction Event Gas Giants j. ____________ • Larger mass – Able to attract and retain gas by their own gravity – Most likely slightly larger than Earth-sized bodies of ice and rock surrounded by huge hydrogen-rich atmospheres. Jupiter At last count, Jupiter has 63 moons. Jupiter’s Moon Europa Saturn Saturn’s Structure Saturn’s Moons • At last count, Saturn has 60 confirmed natural satellites. Uranus – The “U” Planet Neptune The Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud • Kuiper (pronounced “Ki-Per”) Belt objects are believed to be the remnants of the Solar System’s early accretional phase. Objects between 30 AU and 50 AU include – dwarf planets (Trans-Neptunian Objects) – Short period comets The Oort Cloud • The Oort cloud contains long-period comets, most likely a result of the sling-shot effect of the gas giant planets Pluto, The Dwarf Planet Sedna Sedna and its moon Sedna’s Location Trans-Neptunian Object 2003UB313 (“Xena”) III. Earth’s Age A. Oldest Earth Materials rock found on Earth on Earth (as of 2002) 1. Oldest _________________ a. 4.03 billion years old b. From northwestern Canada 2. Oldest known _________________ (found in 2001) detrital mineral a. Zircon crystal from Australia b. 4.4 billion years old B. Estimates of Earth’s Age Allende CV3 meteorite 4.56 x 106 yrs 1. 2. 3. 4. 4.6 billion years Based on isotopic dating of _____________and _________________. meteorites Moon rocks According to current theories on formation of the Solar System, the sun, at the same time planets, and other objects in the Solar System formed _______________. Even though no rocks as old as Earth have been found, the age has been inferred from dating meteorites and Moon rocks because it’s probable that they and Earth formed ______________________. at the same time