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The Solar System

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Neptune ... Neptune. Neptune's existence was predicted in advance. ... At times, it is closer to the sun than Neptune. Pluto has one satellite, named Charon. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Solar System


1
The Solar System
  • Planetary Orbits
  • Fundamental Physics
  • Kepler's Laws
  • Comets and Asteroids
  • Fundamental Nature
  • Impacts and Mass Extinction
  • Origins of the Solar System
  • Planets
  • Overview
  • Terrestrial Planets
  • Jovian Planets
  • Pluto
  • Other Planetary Systems
  • Methods for Detecting
  • Examples

2
Planetary Orbits
  • Planets orbit the sun in response to its
    gravitational attraction.

3
Periods
  • In addition to orbiting the sun, planets also
    rotate.
  • The period of revolution is the time required for
    the planet to complete one orbit.
  • The period of rotation is the time required to
    turn once about its axis.
  • The rotation period determines the length of the
    planet's day.
  • The revolution period determines its year.

4
Types of Rotation
  • Most planets rotate in the same sense that they
    revolve around the sun. This is known as
    prograde rotation.
  • Two planets (Venus and Uranus) rotate in the
    opposite sense of their revolution. This is
    called retrograde rotation.

Prograde Movie Retrograde Movie
5
Orbital Planes
  • Planetary orbits lie in a plane.
  • The plane of the earth's orbit is called the
    ecliptic.
  • The orbital planes for most planets are very
    close to the ecliptic. The most inclined is
    Pluto's, which has a 17o tilt.

6
Kepler's First Law
  • Planetary Orbits are ellipses with the sun at one
    focus.

Perihelion
Aphelion
  • Perihelion Point of closest approach to the
    sun.
  • Aphelion Point where the planet is most distant
    from the sun.

7
Kepler's Second Law
  • A radial line from the planet to the sun sweeps
    out equal areas in equal times.
  • Planets move faster as they get closer to the sun
    and more slowly as they move away.

8
3rd Law
  • The square of the period of revolution is
    proportional to the cube of distance from the
    sun.
  • This happens because as the distance from the sun
    increases, the average orbital speed of the
    planet decreases, while the distance around the
    orbit is also increasing.
  • Mercury completes one orbit every 88 days.
  • Pluto completes one orbit every 249 years.

9
The Planets
  • In order of increasing distance from the sun,
    there are nine named planets
  • Mercury
  • Venus
  • Earth
  • Mars
  • Jupiter
  • Saturn
  • Uranus
  • Neptune
  • Pluto and Beyond

10
Terrestrial Planets
  • These planets are
  • Mercury
  • Venus
  • Earth
  • Mars
  • The bulk of the planet's mass is composed of
    solid materials
  • Their atmospheres are fairly shallow (Mercury's
    is practically nonexistent.)
  • These planet's are much denser than the jovian
    planets.
  • They have few natural satellites. Earth has one
    and Mars has two.

11

Mercury
  • Mercury is the closet planet to the sun.
  • Its diameter is a little larger than the Moon.
  • Surface temperatures at midday can reach 800oF.
  • Its rotation period is tidally locked to its
    revolution period in a 32 ratio

12

Venus
  • In size and composition, Venus appears similar to
    Earth.
  • Its atmosphere is mostly CO2.
  • Atmospheric pressure is about 90 X that on Earth.
  • Its surface temperature is about 900oF. This is
    hotter than Mercury, and is due to a strong
    greenhouse effect.

13

Earth
  • Earth is the largest terrestrial planet, and also
    the densest (due to its large iron core).
  • It is the only planet with free oxygen in its
    atmosphere and large amounts of liquid water.
  • It is the only planet known to support life.

14

Mars
  • The atmospheric pressure on Mars is only about 1
    that on Earth.
  • It has no liquid water at present.
  • Its polar caps grow and shrink with the seasons.
    They are composed of solid carbon dioxide and
    aren't very thick.

15
Jovian Planets
  • Jupiter
  • Saturn
  • Uranus
  • Neptune
  • The atmosphere's of these planets are a sizable
    fraction of its diameter (Solid surfaces may not
    exist).
  • They are composed mostly of hydrogen and helium.
  • All have rings and satellite systems that are
    much more extensive than the terrestrial planets.

16

Jupiter
  • Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar
    system.
  • Its mass is about 1 of the suns mass.
  • A prominent feature on Jupiter is the Great Red
    Spot, a cyclonic storm (hurricane) that has
    persisted for hundreds of years (at least).

17

Saturn
  • All Jovian planets have rings, but Saturn's are
    the brightest.
  • The rings are composed of dust, gravel, and ice.
  • Saturn is the least dense of all the planets, its
    density is actually less than water's.

18

Uranus
  • Uranus was discovered by William Herschel in
    1781.
  • Although difficult to see, its atmosphere shows
    the same banding as other Jovian planets.
  • Uranus has an axial tilt so great (82o), that it
    seems to be rolling on its side as it moves
    around its orbit.

19

Neptune
  • Neptune's existence was predicted in advance.
  • The prediction was based on its affect on the
    orbit of Uranus.
  • Only one spacecraft (Voyager 2) has visited the
    planet. If found a storm (the Great Dark Spot)
    similar to the one on Jupiter.

20

Pluto
  • Pluto is the smallest planet in the solar system.
  • It was discovered by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930.
  • Pluto's orbit is the most elliptical of all the
    planets. At times, it is closer to the sun than
    Neptune.
  • Pluto has one satellite, named Charon.

21
A 10th Planet?
  • A new object, tentatively known as 2002 UB313 has
    been found in the outer solar system.
  • It is approximately 3,000 km in diameter (larger
    than Pluto)

22
Sedna
  • Sedna is currently the second most distant object
    in the solar system.
  • It has a highly eccentric orbit with a very long
    orbital period (10,500 y).

23
Comets
  • Comets are small bodies that contain some dust
    and gravel, but are mostly composed of various
    ices (water, ammonia, methane).
  • Most are believe to orbit the sun in a region far
    beyond Pluto's orbit, called the Oort cloud.
  • These are too small to be seen directly.

24
Visible Comets
  • A few comets are in highly eccentric orbits that
    bring them fairly close to the sun.
  • When these get close to the sun, some of the ices
    evaporate to form the comet's tail.

25
Famous Comets
  • The most famous comet is Halley's comet, which
    returns to the inner solar system every 76 years.
  • Two recent visitors Hyatuke-2 (1995) and
    Hale-Bopp (1997) have orbital periods of 18,000 y
    and 4,000 y, respectively.

26
Asteroids
  • Asteroids are small objects, usually rocky or
    metallic.
  • The largest known asteroid is Ceres it is about
    600 miles in diameter.
  • The image on the left was taken by the NEAR
    spacecraft.

27
Asteroid Belt
  • Most asteriods orbit the Sun in a zone between
    Mars and Jupiter. This zone is called the
    asteroid belt.
  • Jupiter's gravity occasionally can eject
    asteroids from this zone.

28
Near Earth Asteroids
  • Some asteroids have orbit that cross the Earth's
    orbit.
  • Many of these are known, but most go undetected
    until they actually collide with Earth.

29
Meteors
  • Most colliding objects are so small that they
    burn up in the atmosphere before reaching the
    ground.
  • These objects are called meteors.

30
Meteorites
  • A few objects are large enough to survive until
    atmospheric friction slows them to a reasonable
    speed.
  • These impact the ground as meteorites.
  • Main meteorite types are
  • Nickel-iron
  • Chondrite (stoney)
  • Carbonaceous Chondrite

Iron Chondrite Carbonaceous Chrondrite
31
Destructive Impacts
  • Large object (gt100 ft diameter) carry as much
    kinetic energy as an H-bomb.
  • Chrondite objects (and comets) generally explode
    at high altitudes.
  • Iron objects will reach the ground.
  • In both cases, the impacts can be highly
    destructive.

32
Barringer Site
  • About 50,000 years ago, a nickel-iron meteorite
    struck the earth near Winslow, Arizona.
  • It was about 150 ft across and its speed was
    about 40,000 mph.

33
Barringer Crater
  • The impact was equivalent to the explosion of a
    25 megaton H-bomb.
  • The resulting crater is 4,000 ft across and 700
    ft deep.

Vistor center
34
Tunguska Event
  • At 717 a.m. On June 30, 1907, the earth was
    struck by an object near the Tunguska river in
    Siberia.
  • The explosion was equivalent to a 15 megaton
    H-bomb.
  • Because no crater has been found, the object is
    thought to be a chondrite or comet.

35
Large Impacts
  • Although rare, really large objects (gt 1 km) have
    occasionally struck the earth.
  • Energies released in these impacts are much
    larger than any H-bomb.
  • The largest of these may be responsible for some
    episodes of mass extinction.

36
Mass Extinctions
  • Geologist divide the Earth's past history into
    eras based on the fossils they find.
  • Major divisions occur when large numbers of
    extinctions occur simultaneously.

37
The K-T extinction
  • The K-T extinction occurred at the end of the
    Cretaceous period about 65 million years ago.
  • Between 50-70 of all species were wiped out at
    this time.

38
K-T Boundary
  • The boundary between the Cretaceous and Tertiary
    periods is marked by a thin layer of iridium-rich
    clay.
  • No dinosaur fossils are found above this layer.
  • While iridium is rare in Earth's crust, it is
    much more abundant in nickel-iron meteorites.

Guibo, Italy site Raton, NM site
39
The Cause
  • 65 million years ago, the Earth was struck by a
    nickel iron meteorite about 10 km in diameter.
  • The impact site was on the continential shelf
    near the area that is now the Yucutan peninsula
    in Mexico.

40
The Effects
  • The energy released in the impact was about 5
    trillion megatons!
  • The resulting crater now called Chixulub is
    between 150 and 200 miles across.
  • The impact severely disrupted world ecology for
    thousands of years.

41
Origins
  • The current theory about the origin of the solar
    system is called the protoplanet hypothesis.
  • In this theory, the planets formed as a
    by-product of the process that formed the sun.

42
The Nebula
  • The solar system formed from a large rotating
    cloud of dust and gas (a nebula).
  • Some unknown external event, possibly the
    shockwave from a nearby supernova, compressed the
    cloud and caused it to collapse.

43
Birth of the sun
  • As the cloud collapses, gravity would flatten it
    into a disk.
  • As it contracts, it would spin faster, but the
    sense of the spin would not change.
  • Eventually, the center of the cloud becomes so
    hot and dense that hydrogen fusion begins in its
    core. This is how the sun formed.

44
Formation of the Terrestrial Planets
  • Planets form from secondary concentrations of
    material.
  • The newly formed sun would drive most of the
    hydrogen and helium out of the inner parts of the
    cloud.
  • The inner planets are therefore deficient in
    these materials.

45
Birth of the Jovian Planets
  • The jovian planets formed in regions cool enough
    to retain hydrogen and helium.
  • These planets are therefore larger than the inner
    planets, because of the relative abundances of
    these substances.

46
Supporting Evidence
  • All planets revolve and most rotate in the same
    sense as the sun's rotation. This is a relic of
    the cloud's original rotation.
  • Planets and satellites that retain their original
    surfaces are heavily cratered. This is a result
    of the last stages of the accretion process.

47
More Evidence
  • Dusty disks have been identified around young
    stars using infrared light.
  • These appear to be solar systems that are now
    forming.

48
Other Solar Systems
  • Current technology does not make it possible to
    directly image a planet orbiting another star.
  • Methods of detecting other solar systems rely on
    the effect of a planet's gravity on the star.

49
Detection Methods
  • Direct observation of a star's motion in the sky
    has so far not produced conclusive evidence of
    other planets.
  • Doppler shifts in the light emitted by the star,
    however, have found many examples.
  • The latter method can give the planet's mass and
    the period of its orbit, and its probable
    distance from the star.

50
Examples
  • The first confirmed extra-solar planet orbits the
    star 51 Pegasi. It has a mass about ½ of
    Jupiters and an orbital period of 4 days!
  • A planet with 9 times Jupiter's mass orbits the
    star 70 Virginis with a period of 161 days.
  • A planet with 3 times Jupiter's mass orbits 47
    Ursa Majoris with a period of 3 years.
  • Currently, there are 101 known planets in 88
    systems, with 11 stars known to have multiple
    planets.
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