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A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn...

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A Census of the Solar System
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Page 1: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

A Census of the Solar System

Page 2: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

1 star and 8 major planets

Mercury

Venus

Earth

Mars

Jupiter

Saturn

Uranus

Neptune

terrestrial

giant

(1)

(2)

(39)

(18)

(23)

(8)

Page 3: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

Planetary comparisons The Gas Giants

Jupiter -- 1/1000 Msun , 300 Mearth

1/10 Rsun , 11 Rearth

Page 4: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

Terrestrial Objects

7 largest moons

Page 5: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

Other members Dwarf Planets – Pluto and the Trans-Neptunian or Kuiper Belt Objects

Page 6: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

Highly elliptical orbit inclined 170 to ecliptic

Brings it inside Neptune’s orbit, 1979 – 1999, Pluto was closer than Neptune

Page 7: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

Asteroids, Meteors and Comets

Page 8: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

Fundamental Properties of the solar System

1. Planets and their satellites all lie in the same plane - the ecliptic – to within a few degrees 2. Sun’s rotational equator aligned with ecliptic 3. Planetary orbits are nearly circular ellipses 4. Planets all revolve in same W -> E direction 5. Sun and planets all rotate on axes in same W –E direction (except Venus and Uranus) 6. Distance between planets have a regular spacing (Bode’s Law) 7. Planet – satellite systems resemble solar systems 8. comets define a large almost spherical cloud surrounding the solar system – Oort Cloud 9. Planet compositions differ and there is a gradient with distance from the Sun 10. All mass is in the Sun (99.9%) but most of the angular momentum is in the planets

Page 9: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

Formation of Solar System

Page 10: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

The Condensation Sequence of the elements, minerals and molecules

Page 11: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

The Heavy Bombardment

Page 12: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

Astrometric Detection Method

Doppler Detection Method

Transit Detection Method

The first two methods are based on the fact that a planet orbiting a star will cause the star to "wobble" in space.

The first method detects the component of this wobble that is horizontal to our line of site, and is based simply on observing the position of the star over time.

The Search for ExoSolar Planets

Page 13: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

***The second method detects the component of the wobble that is radial to us, (i.e. directly towards or away from us), and is based on the Doppler shift in the star's light as the star moves towards or away from us.

Page 14: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

*** The third method is based on detecting the small drop in apparent luminosity of a star as a planet transits in front of it, between the star and the Earth.

Page 15: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

ExtraSolar System Planets

Page 16: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

Multiple systems

As of Feb 13, 2014 -- 1035 planets confirmed (JPL) + 3602 candidates

Page 17: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

The Kepler Mission

Designed to constantly survey the same region of sky 105 sg deg

1.4 meter diameter mirror with a 0.95m photometer.

Uses the transit method and survey thousands of stars repeatedly at least 3 – 4 times to determine period and orbit of transiting planet.

Page 18: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

A NASA telescope taking a nose count of planets in one small neighborhood of the Milky Way registered more than 1,200 candidates, including 58 residing in life-friendly orbits around their parent stars.

The census, collected by NASA's Kepler Space Telescope after just four months of work, shows that small planets like Earth are much more prevalent than Jupiter-sized worlds and that multiple-planet systems are common (about 200).

Results from Kepler satellite:

Press release Feb 2, 2011

As of Sept 2014 -- 978 confirmed , + 3256 candidates

http://kepler.nasa.gov/Mission/discoveries/

Of these, 207 are approximately Earth-size, 680 are super Earth-size, 1,181 are Neptune-size, 203 are Jupiter-size and 55 are larger than Jupiter.

Page 19: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

11 new systems with 26 planets

Page 20: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

Kepler-22b: A 2.4 Earth-radius Planet in the Habitable Zone of a Sun-like Star Dec 5 , 2011

Probably about mass of Neptune ~ 35M earths

Page 21: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)
Page 22: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)
Page 23: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

First Earth-sized planet in the habitable zone of another star, April 2014

Page 24: A Census of the Solar System. 1 star and 8 major planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune terrestrial giant (1) (2) (39) (18) (23)

Web sites -- http://planetquest.jpl.nasa.gov/ exoplanet.eu exoplanets.org (Caltech) Kepler mission -- http://www.kepler.arc.nasa.gov/


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