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The Jovian Planets

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Title: The Jovian Planets


1
The Jovian Planets
0
  • Please pick up your transmitter and swipe your
    student ID.

2
The Jovian Planets (Gas Giants)
Animation 1
0
Animation 2
Saturn
Jupiter
Neptune
Uranus
No well-defined surface!
3
Interior Structure
0
4
The Chemical Compositionof Jupiter and Saturn
0
5
Jupiter
0
Largest and most massive planet in the solar
system
Contains almost ¾ of all planetary matter in the
solar system.
Most striking features visible from Earth
Multi-colored cloud belts
Explored in detail by several space probes
Visual image
Pioneer 10, Pioneer 11, Voyager 1, Voyager 2,
Galileo
Infrared false-color image
6
The Great Red Spot
0
Has been visible for over 300 years
Giant storm system similar to Hurricanes on
Earth Wind speeds of 430 km/h ( 270 miles/h)
Changes appearance gradually over time
8-year sequence of images of the Great Red Spot
on Jupiter
7
Jupiters Rotation
0
Jupiter is the most rapidly rotating planet in
the solar system
Rotation period slightly less than 10 hr.
8
Considering the rapid rotation of Jupiter, would
you expect it to be perfectly round?
  1. Yes.
  2. No, it should be oblate.
  3. No, it should be prolate.

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9
Jupiters Rotation
0
Jupiter is the most rapidly rotating planet in
the solar system
Rotation period slightly less than 10 hr.
Centrifugal forces stretch Jupiter into a
markedly oblate shape.
10
Jupiters Atmosphere
0
Jupiters liquid hydrogen ocean has no surface
Gradual transition from gaseous to liquid phases.
Only very thin atmosphere above cloud layers
transition to liquid hydrogen zone 1000 km
below clouds.
11
Jupiters Atmosphere (II)
0
Three layers of clouds
1. Ammonia (NH3) crystals
2. Ammonia hydrosulfide (NH4SH)
3. Water crystals
12
Would you think that the atmosphere of Jupiter
gets warmer towards lower altitudes because of
the greenhouse effect?
  1. Yes The atmosphere contains many greenhouse
    gases.
  2. No, because of the dense cloud cover that
    reflects most of the sunlight.
  3. No, because theres no surface to absorb visible
    light and re-emit in infrared.
  4. Both 2. and 3. are correct.

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13
Jupiters Atmosphere (II)
0
Three layers of clouds
1. Ammonia (NH3) crystals
2. Ammonia hydrosulfide (NH4SH)
3. Water crystals
Heating mostly from latent, internal heat
14
The Cloud Belts of Jupiter
0
Dark belts and bright zones.
Zones higher and cooler than belts high-pressure
regions of rising gas.
15
The circulation patterns in the cloud belts are
physically similar to which phenomenon on the sun?
  1. Sun spots.
  2. Prominences.
  3. Granulation (sub-photospheric convection).
  4. Solar wind.
  5. Coronal Mass Ejections.

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16
The Cloud Belts on Jupiter (II)
0
Just like on Earth, high-and low-pressure zones
are bounded by high-pressure winds.
Jupiters Cloud belt structure has remained
unchanged since humans began mapping them.
17
Jupiters Magnetic Field
0
Magnetic field at least 10 times stronger than
Earths magnetic field.
Magnetosphere over 100 times larger than Earths
magnetosphere
18
Which factor might be the most important for
Jupiters strong magnetic field?
  1. Its thick cloud belts.
  2. A large liquid iron core.
  3. A large solid iron core.
  4. A large region of metallic hydrogen.
  5. Its rapid rotation.

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Aurorae on Jupiter
0
Just like on Earth, Jupiters magnetosphere
produces aurorae concentrated in rings around the
magnetic poles.
1000 times more powerful than aurorae on Earth.
20
At the location of Jupiter, is the flux of
solar-wind particles (from the sun) stronger or
weaker than at Earth?
  1. Stronger.
  2. About the same as on Earth.
  3. Weaker.

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Aurorae on Jupiter
0
Just like on Earth, Jupiters magnetosphere
produces aurorae concentrated in rings around the
magnetic poles.
1000 times more powerful than aurorae on Earth.
Particles producing the aurorae originate mostly
from moon Io
22
The History of Jupiter
0
  • Formed from cold gas in the outer solar nebula,
    where ices were able to condense.
  • In the interior, hydrogen becomes metallic (very
    good electrical conductor)
  • Rapid rotation ? strong magnetic field
  • Rapid growth
  • Rapid rotation and large size ? belt-zone cloud
    pattern
  • Soon able to trap gas directly through gravity
  • Heavy materials sink to the center
  • Dust from meteorite impacts onto inner moons
    trapped to form ring

23
Jupiters Ring
0
Not only Saturn, but all four gas giants have
rings.
Jupiters ring dark and reddish only discovered
by Voyager 1 spacecraft.
Galileo spacecraft image of Jupiters ring,
illuminated from behind
Composed of microscopic particles of rocky
material
Location Inside Roche limit, where larger bodies
(moons) would be destroyed by tidal forces.
24
Who discovered the largest moons of Jupiter?
  1. Ptolemy
  2. Galilei
  3. Copernicus
  4. Kepler
  5. Newton

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Jupiters Moons
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About 2 dozen moons known at this time, but more
are being discovered
Largest and most prominent 4 Galilean Moons
(already discovered by Galilei in 1610)
Ganymede
Callisto
Io
Europa
26
What happens to a soft rubber ball if you keep
squishing and releasing it?
  1. It will get gradually colder.
  2. It will get gradually warmer.
  3. None of the above.

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Jupiters Influence on its Moons
0
Presence of Jupiter has at least two effects on
geology of its moons
2. Focusing of meteoroids, exposing nearby
satellites to more impacts than those further out.
1. Tidal effects possible source of heat for
interior of Ganymede
28
Io Bursting Energy
0
Most active of all Galilean moons no impact
craters visible at all.
Over 100 active volcanoes!
Activity powered by tidal interactions with
Jupiter.
Interior is mostly rock.
29
Interactions with Jupiters Magnetosphere
0
Ios volcanoes blow out sulfur-rich gases
? tenuous atmosphere, but gases can not be
retained by Ios gravity
? gases escape from Io and form an ion torus in
Jupiters magnetosphere.
? Aurorae on Jupiter are fueled by particles from
Io
30
Europa A Hidden Ocean
0
composition mostly rock and metal icy surface.
Close to Jupiter ? should be hit by many
meteoroid impacts but few craters visible.
? Active surface impact craters rapidly erased.
31
The Surface of Europa
0
Cracked surface and high albedo (reflectivity)
provide further evidence for geological activity.
32
The Interior of Europa
0
Europa is too small to retain its internal heat ?
Heating mostly from tidal interaction with
Jupiter.
Europa has a liquid water ocean 15 km below the
icy surface.
33
Would there, in principle, be life possible in
the sub-surface ocean of Europa?
  1. Yes.
  2. No, because theres no light which is necessary
    for plant life.
  3. No, because its too cold.
  4. No, because its too warm.

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But it would have to be able to make use of heat
provided by internal heat from the planet.
34
Ganymede A Hidden Past
0
Largest of the 4 Galilean moons.
  • Rocky core
  • Ice-rich mantle
  • Crust of ice

1/3 of surface old, dark, cratered
rest bright, young, grooved terrain
Bright terrain probably formed through flooding
when surface broke
35
Callisto The Ancient Face
0
Tidally locked to Jupiter, like all of Jupiters
moons.
composition mixture of ice and rocks
Dark surface, heavily pocked with craters.
No metallic core Callisto never differentiated
to form core and mantle.
? No magnetic field.
Layer of liquid water, 10 km thick, 100 km
below surface, probably heated by radioactive
decay.
36
Saturn
0
2nd largest planet about 16 smaller than
Jupiter.
1/3 of Jupiters mass density less than water
Saturn would float in water!!
Rare, isolated storm systems.
Rotates about as fast as Jupiter, but is twice as
oblate ? No large core of heavy elements.
Atmospheric cloud structures similar to
Jupiters, but less obvious.
37
Saturn
0
Please press 1 to check your transmitter.
1/3 of Jupiters mass density less than water
Saturn would float in water!!
2nd largest planet about 16 smaller than
Jupiter.
Rare, isolated storm systems.
Rotates about as fast as Jupiter, but is twice as
oblate ? No large core of heavy elements.
Atmospheric cloud structures similar to
Jupiters, but less obvious.
38
Saturns Atmosphere
0
Three-layered cloud structure, just like on
Jupiter
Main difference to Jupiter
Fewer wind zones, but much stronger winds than on
Jupiter
Winds up to 500 m/s near the equator!
39
Saturns Magnetosphere
0
Magnetic field 20 times weaker than Jupiters
Aurorae centered around poles
40
Saturns Rings
0
Consisting of ice particles, from microscopic to
several meters in size.
Several sub-divisions
C-ring
B-ring
Cassini Division
A-ring
41
Why did the material in Saturns rings not clump
together to form another moon of Saturn?
  1. It was too cold to melt and clump together to
    form a moon.
  2. It is mostly ice, which doesnt stick together.
  3. Tidal forces of the nearby planet kept pulling
    rocks apart.
  4. It is too far away from Saturn, so it is not
    gravitationally bound to the planet.

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Shepherd Moons
0
Some moons on orbits close to the rings focus the
ring material, keeping the rings confined.
43
What will happen to a small piece of rock
orbiting Saturn, if its orbital period is exactly
twice the orbital period of a moon that is
orbiting further out?
  1. Nothing special.
  2. It will be destroyed by tidal forces.
  3. It will gradually be pushed inward and fall onto
    Saturn.
  4. It will gradually be pulled outward, away from
    Saturn.

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Divisions and Resonances
0
Moons do not only serve as Shepherds.
Where the orbital period of a moon is a
small-number fractional multiple (e.g., 23) of
the orbital period of material in the disk
(resonance), the material is cleared out
? Divisions
45
The Moons of Saturn
0
Largest moon Titan The only moon in the solar
system with an atmosphere
Mostly Nitrogen, but also traces of organic
compounds like Methane and Ethane
46
Uranus
0
Discovered in 1781
4 times larger than Earth (in radius)
14.5 times the mass of Earth
Faint rings, indirectly detected through
occultations
Rotation axis inclined by 970 against the orbital
axis Uranus is rolling on its orbit
Hubble-Space-Telescope image (rings artificially
enhanced)
47
The Rings of Uranus
0
Rings of Uranus and Neptune are similar to
Jupiters rings.
Confined by shepherd moons consist of dark
material.
Rings of Uranus were discovered through
occultations of a background star
Apparent motion of star behind Uranus and rings
48
The Atmosphere of Uranus
0
Like other gas giants No surface.
Gradual transition from gas phase to fluid
interior.
Mostly H 15 He, a few Methane, ammonia and
water vapor.
Cloud structures only visible after artificial
computer enhancement of optical images taken from
Voyager spacecraft.
Optical view from Earth Blue color of methane
49
The Structure of Uranus Atmosphere
0
Only one layer of Methane clouds (in contrast to
3 cloud layers on Jupiter and Saturn).
Cloud layer is very deep in Uranus atmosphere.
Uranus cloud layer difficult to see because of
thick atmosphere above it.
50
The Interior of Uranus
0
Average density 1.29 g/cm3 ? larger portion of
rock and ice than Jupiter and Saturn.
Ices of water, methane, and ammonia, mixed with
hydrogen and silicates
51
Is the Earths magnetic north pole exactly in
line with the north pole of its rotation?
  1. Yes.
  2. No, the magnetic north pole is slightly offset
    (in the direction of Canada).
  3. No, it is substantially offset (near central
    Europe).
  4. No, it is completely independent of the rotation
    The magnetic north pole is actually on the
    Equator.

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The Magnetic Field of Uranus
0
No metallic core ? no magnetic field was expected.
But actually, magnetic field of 75 of Earths
magnetic field strength was discovered
Offset from center 30 of planets radius!
Inclined by 60o against axis of rotation.
Possibly due to dynamo in liquid-water/ammonia/met
hane solution in Uranus interior.
53
The Moons of Uranus
0
Oberon
Titania
1610 km
D 1550 km
Ariel
Umbriel
1160 km
1190 km
Miranda
480 km
54
Would you expect the moons of Uranus to be
volcanically active?
  1. Yes, because their interiors should be very hot
    due to tidal interactions with Uranus.
  2. Yes, because their interiors should be very hot
    due to radioactive decay of heavy elements.
  3. Yes, because they might be heavily bombarded by
    meteorites.
  4. No, because they might be very cold and have a
    very deep crust and solid mantle region.

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The Moons of Uranus
0
Oberon
Titania
1610 km
D 1550 km
Ariel
Umbriel
1160 km
1190 km
Miranda
480 km
Mostly inactive heavily cratered surfaces.
56
Neptune
0
Discovered in 1846 at position predicted from
gravitational disturbances on Uranus orbit.
57
Why does Neptune appear blue?
  1. Its the natural color of hydrogen in the
    Neptunes atmosphere.
  2. Its the natural color of methane in the
    Neptunes atmosphere.
  3. Its the natural color of ammonia in the
    Neptunes atmosphere.
  4. Because of large-angle scattering of sunlight
    towards Earth (the same effect that makes our sky
    appear blue).

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58
Neptune
0
Discovered in 1846 at position predicted from
gravitational disturbances on Uranus orbit.
Blue-green color from methane in the atmosphere
4 times Earths diameter 4 smaller than Uranus
59
The Atmosphere of Neptune
0
The Great Dark Spot
Cloud-belt structure with high-velocity winds
origin not well understood.
Darker cyclonic disturbances, similar to Great
Red Spot on Jupiter, but not long-lived.
White cloud features of methane ice crystals
60
The Rings of Neptune
0
Interrupted between denser segments (arcs)
Made of dark material, visible in
forward-scattered light.
Ring material must be regularly re-supplied by
dust from meteorite impacts on the moons.
Focused by small shepherd moons embedded in the
ring structure.
61
When viewed from the North, all planets and moons
are orbiting
  1. Clockwise.
  2. Counterclockwise.
  3. All counterclockwise, except for Venus which
    orbits clockwise.
  4. Some clockwise, some counterclockwise. Theres no
    preferred sense of orbital motion.
  5. Planets are orbiting clockwise around the sun
    moons are orbiting counterclockwise around their
    planets.

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The Moons of Neptune
0
Two moons (Triton and Nereid) visible from Earth
6 more discovered by Voyager 2
Unusual orbits
Triton Only satellite in the solar system
orbiting clockwise, i.e. backward.
Nereid Highly eccentric orbit very long orbital
period (359.4 d).
63
The Surface of Triton
0
Very low temperature (34.5 K)
? Triton can hold a tenuous atmosphere of
nitrogen and some methane 105 times less dense
than Earths atmosphere.
Surface composed of ices nitrogen, methane,
carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide.
Possibly cyclic nitrogen ice deposition and
re-vaporizing on Tritons south pole, similar to
CO2 ice polar cap cycles on Mars.
64
The Surface of Triton (II)
0
Ongoing surface activity Surface features
probably not more than 100 million years old.
Large basins might have been flooded multiple
times by liquids from the interior.
65
Pluto and Charon
0
Pluto discovered 1930
Average distance from the sun 40 AU
Orbit highly inclined against plane of the solar
system
Most eccentric planetary orbit in the solar
system part of orbit is inside Neptunes orbit!
Moon Charon about half the size of Pluto
occasional eclipses of Pluto and Charon
Size of Earth to scale
Hubble-Space-Telescope image
66
Would you think that Pluto and Charon have a
similar history as the four gas giants?
  1. Yes, because they are in the same region of the
    solar system.
  2. Yes, because they are very similar in size and
    composition to the gas giants.
  3. Both 1. and 2. are true.
  4. No, because they are very different in size and
    composition from the gas giants.
  5. No, because they have very unusual orbits.
  6. Both 4. and 5. are true.

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The Origin of Pluto and Charon
0
Probably very different history than neighboring
Jovian planets.
Modern theory Pluto and Charon members of Kuiper
belt of small, icy objects.
Collision between Pluto and Charon may have
caused the peculiar orbital patterns and large
inclination of Plutos rotation axis.
68
The Tenth Planet
0
Discovered on Jan. 8, 2005
  • Bigger than Pluto
  • Currently 97 AU from the sun (3 times further
    than Pluto)
  • Composition and surface structure probably
    similar to Plutos
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