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The Solar System

Date post: 04-Jan-2016
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The Solar System. Ingredients?. The Solar System. Ingredients?. 1 Star: the Sun 8 Planets + a few “minor planets” 126 moons around these planets Asteroids, meteoroids, comets A lot of nearly empty space. Questions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Astronomy Picture of th e Day
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Page 1: The Solar System

Astronomy Picture of the Day

Page 2: The Solar System

Mercury

Mass = 0.055 MEarth

Radius = 0.38 REarth

Surface Temp: 100 - 700 K

Moonlike: Surface craters, no atmosphere

Orbital period = 88 days

Rotation period = 59 days (Exactly 2/3 of Mercury’s year!)

Page 3: The Solar System

Question

● How do we determine the rotation rate of a planet?

Page 4: The Solar System

Determining rotation rate of a planet• Use reflected radio waves to determine line of

sight doppler shifts.

Page 5: The Solar System

We always see the same face of the Moon.

So period of orbit = period of rotation

Why?Tidal Locking

Earth

Moon

If orbit period faster than spin period, bulge moves around surface of Moon => friction

What does this have to do with Mercury?

Top view of Moon orbiting Earth

Page 6: The Solar System

Mercury’s Rotation• Highly eccentric orbit => Mercury’s speed changes as it

orbits the sun => no synchronous rotation

• Next best thing - presents same side to sun every other time around.

Page 7: The Solar System

Venus

● About how far from the Sun (in AU) is Venus?

● How long is its orbital period (Venutian year)?

● How long is its rotational period (Venutian day)?

Page 8: The Solar System

Venus

Mass = 0.82 MEarth

Radius = 0.95 REarth

Average distance from Sun = 0.72 AU

Orbital period = 225 days

Rotation period = 243 days (longer than orbital period, and retrograde!)

Page 9: The Solar System

Anomalous rotation of Venus

• Extremely slow - Venutian day longer than Venutian year!

• Retrograde - Sun rises in the west and sets in the east!

• Most likely due to a collision during solar system formation

Page 10: The Solar System

Venus

• Thick clouds prevent viewing of surface. (UV Image)

• High temperatures and pressures, acidic gases

• Led to much speculation.

• How did we get info about surface?

Page 11: The Solar System

"Radar Echo" technique measures altitude

space probe

time for signal to return tells you the altitude of surface feature.

Planet Surface

Page 12: The Solar System

Venera 14 photo of surface. Lander destroyed after about an hour!

Page 13: The Solar System

Venus' Atmosphere

- Hot at surface - 750 K! (Room temp. on Earth about 300K)

- Why so hot?

Page 14: The Solar System

Runaway Greenhouse Effect

1) Water and CO2 evaporate from oceans into atmosphere.

2) Greenhouse effect more efficient.

3) Temperature rises.

4) More evaporation (back to #1).

=> complete evaporation of oceans. Thick atmospheric blanket.

Page 15: The Solar System

Atmospheric Comparison

Page 16: The Solar System

How does Venus lose its interior heat?

Page 17: The Solar System

How does Venus lose its interior heat?

• We don’t know!

• No plate tectonics => no interior convection

• Possible volcanic activity, but …

• Distribution of craters on surface is uniform

● Surface of Venus is same age everywhere: 500 Million yrs. old

• Cataclysmic resurfacing?

● Geologically dead rest of the time

Page 18: The Solar System

Mars

Mass = 0.11 MEarth

Radius = 0.53 REarth

Average distance from Sun = 1.52 AU

Rotation Period = 24.6 hours

Orbital Period = 687 days

Page 19: The Solar System

The Martian Atmosphere

95% CO2

Surface Temperature 250 K.

Surface Pressure 0.006 that of Earth's atmosphere (thin air!)

Why so cold with such a thin atmosphere?

Page 20: The Solar System

The Martian Atmosphere

95% CO2

Surface Temperature 250 K.

Surface Pressure 0.006 that of Earth's atmosphere (thin air!)

"Reverse Runaway Greenhouse Effect"

Temperature - important factor in planetary evolution!

● Heat loss mechanisms and differentiation, Greenhouse effects, etc.

Page 21: The Solar System

Olympus MonsLargest known volcano in Solar System – 3X the height of Everest!

Page 22: The Solar System

Question

● What is the main reason that many scientists think Mars may have once harbored life?

Page 23: The Solar System

Evidence for Past Surface Water

"runoff channels" or dry rivers

"outflow channels"

teardrop "islands" in outflow channels

standing water erosion in craters?

Page 24: The Solar System

Where did the water go?

Page 25: The Solar System

1. Polar Ice Caps2. Evidence for "Permafrost" layer beneath surface

"Splosh" craters suggesting liquefied ejecta.

Where did the water go?

Page 26: The Solar System

Life on Mars?

Two Martian meteorites found in Antarctica

Page 27: The Solar System

Mars' Moons Phobos and Deimos

Phobos: 28 x 20 kmDeimos: 16 x 10 km

Properties similar to asteroids. They are probably asteroids captured into orbit by Mars' gravity.


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