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The Solar System What is a planet? Old Definition a large, solid body that shines by reflecting sunlight and revolves in a stable orbit around the Sun What is a planet? New Definition 3 major criteria are required to classify an object as a planet: – a large solid body that shines by reflecting sunlight and revolves in a stable orbit around the sun (old definition) – large enough that its own gravity pulls it into a round shape – dominant enough to clear the path of its orbit (its in orbit by itself) What does the word exo mean? Exoplanets • “Exo” means “outside.” • What is an exoplanet? Exoplanets – a planet in another solar system – more than 2000 have been discovered so far – New York Times Science Section February 3, 2015 announced the discovery of an exoplanet with rings 200 x larger than Saturn’s rings Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson are camping. They pitch their tent under the stars and go to sleep. Sometime in the middle of the night, Holmes wakes Watson and says, “Watson, look up at the stars and tell me what you see.” Watson says, “I see millions of stars and even if a few of those have planets, it’s quite likely there are some planets like Earth, and if there are a few planets like Earth out there, there might also be life.” Holmes replies, “Watson, you idiot! Someone stole our tent!” Classifying Planets • Inferior planets – planets between Sun and Earth (show phases like the moon) • Superior planets – planets farther from the Sun than Earth; always appear full Classifying Planets Inner Planets are between the Sun and the Asteroid Belt. They are inside the belt. Outer Planets are farther from the Sun. They are outside the Asteroid Belt. The Asteroid Belt is between Mars and Jupiter. What is missing? Inner Planets • The inner planets are: – Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars • Inner planets are also called terrestrial planets. Why? Inner Planets • The inner planets are: – Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars • They are called terrestrial planets because they are made mainly of rock and ironnickel compounds. Mercury Mercury has almost no gravity so it cannot hold on to an atmosphere. Although there is a little gas around it, it’s not enough to be considered an atmosphere. Without an atmosphere and being close to the sun causes temperatures to be very high during the day and very low at night. Venus retrograde rotation Venus rotates clockwise very slowly probably because it was hit by a very large object a long time ago. Clockwise is opposite most planets so it’s called retrograde rotation. Called Earth’s twin because they have similar gravity, mass, and are close to one another. Air pressure is 90 times greater than Earth! Because of its thick atmosphere, a lot of heat is trapped, making the planet very hot. Earth Mars is red due to the iron oxide in the soil. The largest volcano in the solar system is on Mars. Mars was names after the god of war. The names of its two moons, Phobos and Deimos, mean panic and fear. Currently there are several satellites in orbit around Mars and several rovers on its surface. Crewed missions to Mars are planned. Mars The Asteroid Belt separates the Inner and the Outer Planets. Asteroid belt • consists of thousands of rock fragments in orbit around the Sun • largest of them are called minor planets • the largest asteroid, Ceres, has been reclassified as a dwarf planet Many objects in the Asteroid Belt have names. Asteroid Belt This is Ceres. Why is it a dwarf planet? • Vesta is 330 miles wide and made of basalt • Is a protoplanet – an object left over from the formation of the solar system. • It is the second largest object in the asteroid belt. Vesta as seen by the Dawn probe in orbit 330 miles away. The colors were chosen to highlight certain areas: green for iron, orange for debris thrown out of an impact crater. Dawn reached Ceres in Dec. 2015 Kupalo Crater as seen from 240 miles above Infrared mapping with a spectrometer will determine what minerals are on the surface. The Outer Planets are outside of the Asteroid Belt. ↓ Outer Planets • The outer planets are: – Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune • made mostly of frozen hydrogen and helium • atmospheres made of thick layers of methane and ammonia • ALL have rings Outer Planets • also known as Gas Giants or Jovian Planets • have a lot of moons due to their large mass and gravitational pull • moons are small and have retrograde orbits (revolve around planets in clockwise direction) Jupiter largest planet in the solar system with the strongest magnetic field, which creates auroras. radiates more heat into space than it receives from the sun has spots Saturn takes 30 years to complete one orbit around the sun lowest density of any planet; its density is lower than that of water! radiates more heat than it receives has a strong magnetic field Hubble captured photographs of the auroras on Saturn! Saturn also has cyclones. Saturn has a famous moon named Enceladus Enceladus - Saturns moon - YouTube Uranus – rotates on its side probably because something large crashed into it a long time ago even though the planet is tipped over, its magnetic field is not has a blue color due to the methane gas in its atmosphere so far from the sun that its temperature is -200 degrees Celsius has 42 years of dark winter followed by 42 years of constant summer Centaurs • objects between Jupiter and Neptune with unstable orbits • 9 have been named so far • may become comets Neptune discovered mathematically magnetic axis is tipped and is not at the center of the planet has winds of 2000 kilometers per hour Pluto 1935 Pluto was discovered at the Lowell Observatory in Arizona by an astronomer working in this small building. (Yes, that’s me!) In 2005, Mike Brown made discovered a tenth planet, Eris. This discovery ignited a firestorm of controversy. The debate ended with the demotion of Pluto from real planet to “dwarf” planet. Suddenly Brown was receiving hate mail from schoolchildren and being bombarded by TV reporters. The book is very good! Pluto is not a planet anymore! Why? • Pluto does not orbit alone. There are other objects in its orbital path. • Pluto’s orbit is not stable. It crosses Neptune’s orbit. • Pluto is much smaller and made of rock, more like the inner planets than the outer planets. The Kuiper Belt – Pluto is a Kuiper Belt Object (KBO) ↓ The Kuiper Belt • a region of debris 50 to 55 Astronomical Units (AU) from the sun (4.5 to 7.5 billion km or 2.8 to 4.6 billion miles) • About 1500 objects in this belt have been identified; there may be as many as 70,000 • the largest, like Pluto, are considered dwarf planets • next largest are called planetoids • where short period comets come from Pluto - Dwarf Planet In 2006 Pluto was reclassified as a Dwarf Planet. Dwarf Planets: • are round • orbit the sun • are not moons • cannot clear their orbital path 2011 – A 4th moon discovered! 2012 – A 5th moon discovered! Results of the Name the Moons of Pluto contest in 2013 2 Pluto Moons Get New Names: Styx & Kerberus | Space.com Scroll down to second video. Pluto's Moons | Five Satellites of Pluto | Space.com Use this site if you had trouble with the link on the page before. New Horizons Mission to Pluto launched in 2006 The spacecraft carries a new Florida quarter, engraved with the "Gateway to Discovery" design, on the 3-billionmile journey. The quarter serves a purpose: scientists are using it as a spinbalance weight on the mission. New Horizons flew near Pluto in 2015. New Horizons Videos | NASA Pick any video to watch. More Dwarf Planets • CERES – largest object in the asteroid belt (1/3 mass of asteroid belt) – smallest dwarf planet – only dwarf planet NOT in the Kuiper Belt • ERIS (Greek/Roman goddess of strife and discord) – Eris is larger than Pluto so logically either Eris had to be a "planet" or Pluto had to be reclassified. – largest dwarf planet, largest known member of the Kuiper Belt – orbits 10,128,000,000 km from the Sun • MAKEMAKE • HAUMEA January 2014 Dwarf Planet Ceres in the Asteroid Belt has water jets! Planet X A new ninth planet has been discovered! Like Neptune, Planet X was found mathematically when astronomers tried to explain the orbits of extreme Kuiper Belt objects. Mike Brown (left) and Konstantin Batygin California Institute of Technology discovered Planet X, February 2016 • 10 times mass of Earth • like a mini Neptune • elliptical orbit 200 – 1200 AU away from Sun • beyond Kuiper Belt • orbit takes 20,000 Earth years • too far to see if we even knew where to look for it! Voyager 1 launched in 1977 finished a survey of outer planets in 1989 uses radioactive power packs travels at 17 km/s its radio message takes 16 hours to reach Earth Voyager has left the Heliosphere The heliosphere is the immense magnetic bubble containing our solar system, solar wind, and the entire solar magnetic field. It extends well beyond the orbit of Pluto. Voyager 1 is now in interstellar space. Voyager 2 is in the "Heliosheath" -- the outermost layer of the heliosphere where the solar wind is slowed by the pressure of interstellar gas. Voyager 1 – 134 AU from Earth Voyager 2 – 111 AU from Earth; only spacecraft to ever explore Uranus and Neptune Oort Cloud • an immense spherical cloud surrounding our Solar System at its outermost edge • 5000 to 100,000 AU away • may contain 2 trillion small objects • where long period comets come from • Sedna – farthest known object in our solar system (8 billion miles away), considered to be in the Oort Cloud – ¾ size of Pluto; -400 F; orbit takes 10,500 years – so far away that the Sun appears very small and could be covered by the head of a straight pin Comets • Comets are small icy bodies that release gas or dust. • They are the least changed objects since the formation of the solar system. • 5 parts: nucleus, coma, hydrogen cloud, dust tail and ion tail • tail always points away from the Sun due to the solar wind blowing it that way • can only be seen when near the sun when heat creates the coma and the tails Comets go around the Sun in long, oval orbits – Short-period comets need less than 200 years to complete one orbit. – Long-period comets take 200 years or longer to orbit the Sun. http://www.youtube.com/w atch?v=C8zV1xiGqf4 On 1/15/06 a trip of almost 3 billion miles ended. A capsule holding interstellar and cometary particles returned to the Utah desert. In 1999, NASA sent Stardust to Comet Wild 2. To capture tiny particles in space, NASA used the least dense solid known, aerogel. It is 99.8% air, 1000 times less dense than glass, and provides 39 times more insulation than the best fiberglass insulation. Stardust