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Extraterrestrial life and … extrasolar planets PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Announcements • Final exam – Thursday, May 10 11AM-1PM – Brief review today • Pick up past assignments! • Office Hours – Jade: not in this week – John: as usual – Me: as usual – Email for times other than office hours PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Have we Been Visited by Aliens ? Check out: http://www.ufoevidence.org/photographs/photohome.asp PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 A UFO panel convened to discuss all of the current evidence: The Sturrock Panel • They concluded that the UFO problem is not a simple one – No simple, universal answer – Whenever there are unexplained observations, there is the possibility that scientists will learn something new by studying those observations. – Example: “ball lightning” PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Visual Evidence example: UFOs and Ball Lightning • UFOs – Not reported by scientists – Scientists are skeptical • Ball Lightning – Often reported by scientists (and others who are deemed credible and believable) – Never photographed ! (confirmed to be authentic) – Not produced in a laboratory and theoretical models are dubious (but a lot of effort has been put into studying this) – A physiological effect ? PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Sprites observed over a thunderstorm in Kansas in August, 2000 PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 • Mission update #1 PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Life on Mars ? • The Viking Lander had a biological experiment package on board to search for life – If life is confirmed to exist on Mars, this would be a scientific discovery of EPIC proportions! – In fact, some reason that this alone supports the Humans-to-Mars initiative • ALH48001 – was there life on Mars in the past ? PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Labeled Release Experiment: “Give them water” PTYS/ASTR 206 Pyrolytic Release Experiment: “Give them sunlight” Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Gas Exchange Experiment: “Give them food” Viking Results Summarized • A key find came from the GCMS experiment – Mars has NO organic compounds – The surface of Mars is sterile • The consensus opinion is that Viking found no evidence for life on Mars • Better location? – We know more about the surface of Mars now, perhaps a better site selection would help! PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 The Story of ALH84001 • A “SNC meteorite” found in 1984 in Alan Hills Antarctica • Softball-sized meteorite weighing about 4 lbs. • In a 1997 article in Science, David McKay indicated the meteorite showed evidence of primitive bacterial life on Mars PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 • A separate class of meteorites. – Igneous rocks crystallized from molten magma in a way which suggests they formed in a planetary-sized body, not an asteroid – They show evidence of shock heating, presumably as a result of the impact which ejected them into space. – Gas bubbles trapped in one meteorite, EETA79001, have a composition which matches the current Martian atmosphere • Names after the first 3 places where they were found (Shergotty, Nakhla, Chassigny) PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 SNC Meteorites 4.5 Billion years ago -- The original igneous rock solidified within Mars 3.6 - 4 billion years ago -- the rock was fractured. Water then permeated the cracks, depositing carbonate minerals and allowing primitive bacteria to live in the fractures. 3.6 billion years ago -- the bacteria and their by-products became fossilized in the fractures. 16 million years ago -- a large meteorite struck Mars, dislodging a large chunk of this rock and ejecting it into space. 13,000 years ago -- the meteorite landed in Antarctica, where it was discovered in 1984 PTYS/ASTR 206 ALH84001 timeline Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 globules The Story of ALH84001 • Simple organic compounds were found on the fracture surfaces • Carbonate “globules” – look like mineral alterations caused by primitive bacteria on Earth – Concentric “rings” of different composition – Magnetite was very pure • “Ovoids” – may be fossilized remains of bacteria – Extremely small • Smaller than even single cells PTYS/ASTR 206 – Not life as we know it Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 ovoids • Where do we stand on this ? – The original authors still maintain that this is evidence of life on Mars. – Most scientists believe that the evidence can be explained by non-biological processes • Need additional evidence • The future? – A sample-return mission would be important to resolve the issue of life on Mars • Very expensive • A multinational plan for 2005 was scrapped due to the back-to-back failures of 1999. – The earliest launch of the next sample-return PTYS/ASTR 206 Planets mission is 2014 Life / Exo 5/1/07 • Mission update #2 PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Extrasolar Planets • About 8 years ago, astronomers began finding extrasolar planets, or planets orbiting other stars – More than 200 have been detected so far • They are not actually seen, instead, their effects on their parent star are oberved PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Methods of detecting extrasolar planets • Astrometry (changes in the star’s location) • Radial Velocity (changes in the star’s velocity) • Transit method (dimming caused by a transiting planet) • Other methods: – Pulsar timing, gravitational microlensing, circumstellar disks PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Habitable zone • a region of space where conditions are favorable for life as it can be found on Earth (water can exist as a liquid) • This distance is centered on PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 The recent discovery of a new extrasolar planet that is within the habitable zone of its parent star It may be earth like – but the diameter (and hence the density) is not known without modeling PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 • Mission update #3 PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Final Exam • Format: – 6 short answer questions (4 pts each) – 38 multiple choice questions (2 pts each) – Closed book, closed note, no electronic devices (including a calculator!) – Bring a #2 Pencil – You will have 2 full hours to take the exam • What will it cover? – – – – Mostly material discussed in the lectures (75%) Reading (25 %) 75% of the exam will be from Chapters 14-17 25% from topics covered throughout the course PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets • A brief review of these follows 5/1/07 Final Exam • What should you study? – Go over lecture slides – Go over questions at the beginning of each chapter – Go over key ideas and review questions at the end of each chapter – Go over in-class activities, quizzes, and homework (except for mathematical questions) • The solutions are on the website A practice exam is now posted on the website PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Final Exam: A brief review of comprehensive material (25% of exam) • Chapters 1-4 : Basic Astronomy – The motion and position of objects in the sky • Diurnal motion, retrograde motion • Reason for seasons – Moon phases – Kepler orbits and gravity • Chapter 5: The Nature of Light and Atoms – Wien’s Law – Stefan-Boltzman law – The Electromagnetic Spectrum – Kirchoff’s Laws (emission and absorption lines in spectra) PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Final Exam: A brief review of comprehensive material (25% of exam) • Chapters 7 and 8: The layout, nature, origin, age, and formation of the Solar System – Basic solar-system properties • Terrestrial planets and gas giants • All planets orbit the Sun in the same direction and in the same plane • Density of the planets – The Solar Nebula – The nebular hypothesis of the formation of the solar system PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Final Exam: A brief review of comprehensive material (25% of exam) • Basic Planetary processes – Interiors and Surfaces – Review the “rules of thumb” discussed in the textbook • p. 156 (in box 7-2) • p. 159 • p. 161 – Planetary Magnetic Fields – Atmospheres • Chapter 9: The Earth – Plate tectonics – Structure of the interior PTYS/ASTR 206 Planets – Greenhouse effect Life / Exo 5/1/07 Final Exam: A brief review of comprehensive material (25% of exam) • Chapter 18: The Sun – Basic Structure (interior and atmosphere) • Radiative zone – NOT radioactive zone! – Energy Source • Sun-Earth connection – Sunspots and the sunspot cycle • Sunspots are dim against the Sun, but still very bright! – What is a geomagnetic storm? – What is a cosmic ray? • Chapters 10 and 11: The Moon and Mercury – Lots of craters – why? – Basic surface geology (highlands, mare) – No atmosphere – why ? PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets – Synchronous rotation (due to tidal forces) 5/1/07 Final Exam: A brief review of comprehensive material (25% of exam) • Chapter 12: Venus – Why does it exhibit phases ? And why is it so bright? – Runaway greenhouse effect • Chapter 13: Mars – – – – Why is it at opposition every 2 years (nearly) ? Evidence for Water Atmosphere Basic geology (northern vs southern regions) PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Final Exam: A brief review of Chapters 14-17 (75% of exam) • Chapters 14 : Jupiter and Saturn – Orbits – composition – Rotation • Both are rapid and exhibit “differential rotation” – Oblateness (Saturn is the most oblate) – Features of the upper atmosphere • Belts, and Zones, Giant Red Spot (Jupiter) – Interiors – Magnetic Fields • Jupiter – extremely strong • Saturn – aligned with rotation axis – Planetary Rings (formation, gaps, which planets have them? Saturn’s rings, etc.) PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Final Exam: A brief review of Chapters 14-17 (75% of exam) • Chapter 15: Jupiter and Saturn’s Moons – Galilean Satellites: A Solar system in miniature – Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto – Titan and Enceladus – Tidal forces (tidal heating of the moons) – Connection to the Jovian Magnetosphere • Io torus PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Final Exam: A brief review of Chapters 14-17 (75% of exam) • Chapter 16: The Outer Worlds – Uranus and Neptune • • • • How were they discovered? Why are they blue-green in color? Uranus has an unusual tilt Both have unusual magnetic fields – Pluto • • • • Discovery Orbit Charon Kuiper-belt objects PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Final Exam: A brief review of Chapters 14-17 (75% of exam) • Chapter 17: Asteroids/Comets/Meteorites – Asteroid Belt – Kuiper Belt – Oort Cloud – Kirkwood Gaps – Trojan Asteroids – Asteroids shapes and brightness – “Rubble piles” PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07 Final Exam: A brief review of Chapters 14-17 (75% of exam) • Chapter 17: Asteroids/Comets/Meteorites (cont.) – Meteorites • Stony, irons, stony-irons, carbonaceous chondrites – Comets • Basic structure • Orbits • Meteor showers PTYS/ASTR 206 Life / Exo Planets 5/1/07