Satellites of the outer solar system - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Satellites of the outer solar system

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Satellites of the outer solar system The almost-planets – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Satellites of the outer solar system


1
Satellites of the outer solar system
  • The almost-planets

2
Large Moons
3
Galilean Satellites
4
Interiors
5
Surfaces
6
Io
7
Io Glowing in the Dark...
  • Galileo images show glowing gases, hot volcanos,
    in Jupiters shadow
  • Volcanic glow suggests volcanos are too hot to be
    ordinary basalt magma

8
Eruptions
9
(No Transcript)
10
Europa
11
100 x 140 km
12
32 x 42 km
13
1.7 x 4 km
  • Eroded appearance at highest resolution Few
    impact craters

14
Ganymede
15
Voyager 2 terrain types on Ganymede cratered
and grooved
16
79 x 57 km
  • Intense faulting in grooved terrain

17
  • But some young areas are very smooth
  • Surface age 3.5 b.y. or 1.0 b.y.?

54 x 90 km
18
  • Cratered terrain also complex

19
Callisto
  • Multi-ring basins
  • Bright fresh craters
  • Many, many, other craters.

1400 km across
20
  • Zooming in on Callisto

21
  • Big surprise at high resolution
  • Eroded appearance
  • Few small craters

55 x 44 km
22
  • Dark material between craters is very smooth at
    small scales-
  • Why? Sublimation?

13 x 13 km
23
Comparative planetology
24
Surface Processes
  • Io
  • Volcanism (endogenic)
  • No craters (young surface)
  • Europa
  • Tectonics (endogenic)
  • Cryovolcanism (endogenic)
  • Few craters (young surface)
  • Ganymede
  • Tectonics (endogenic)
  • Some craters (older surface)
  • Callisto
  • Mostly Craters (very old surface)

25
Energy
  • Recall, for endogenic processes to occur energy
    is needed.
  • However, the Galilean satellites are small, so
    they have little internal heat (original or
    radioactive). They are far from the Sun, so get
    little solar energy. Where does the energy come
    from?

26
Tidal Heating
27
Titan
28
Titan
  • Titans surface will be revealed with radar
    mapping by the Cassini spacecraft
  • Its atmosphere will be measured with the Huygens
    probe
  • Its thick atmosphere harbors complex chemical
    reactions
  • For this reason, it is interesting to study as an
    early-earth analog and it may harbor life
  • The surface may consist of large ethane seas

29
Triton
30
Triton
  • Triton is in a retrograde motion. This implies
    it was captured. Combine this fact with their
    compositional similarities and Plutos uniqueness
    leads some to postulate a similar origin for the
    two bodies.
  • The existence of an atmosphere on Triton can be
    seen in the wind streaks on the surface
  • Tritons surface is relatively young, there are
    few craters.

31
(No Transcript)
32
Prometheus
Thalassa
Larissa
Janus
Proteus
Despina
33
Small Satellites
  • The remaining outer planet satellites are small
    bodies of rock and ice
  • They have little internal heating and little
    endogenic activity
  • Because of their old surfaces, they are generally
    heavily cratered

34
Small Satellites some are quirky
  • Mimass large crater Hershel was almost enough to
    shatter the small moon
  • Iapetus is two-faced with a dark leading
    hemisphere (3 reflectivity) and a bright
    trailing hemisphere (50)
  • Mirandas surface is extensively modified with
    great valley systems (10 km deep) and peculiar
    trapezoidal mountain ranges

35
Comparative Planetology 2
  • In general, the bigger a planetary body is, the
    more energy is available to modify it
  • Small bodies are irregularly shaped and covered
    only with craters (exogenic)
  • Slightly bigger bodies are spherical
  • Bigger bodies are spherical and differentiated
  • The largest bodies are spherical, differentiated,
    and have endogenic processes which modify their
    surfaces
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