Chapter 7 Earth and the Terrestrial Worlds - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 131
About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 7 Earth and the Terrestrial Worlds

Description:

Chapter 7 Earth and the Terrestrial Worlds Mercury craters smooth plains cliffs Venus volcanoes few craters Mars some craters volcanoes riverbeds? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:91
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 132
Provided by: chabotcol
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 7 Earth and the Terrestrial Worlds


1
Chapter 7Earth and the Terrestrial Worlds
2
Mercurycraterssmooth plainscliffs
3
Venusvolcanoesfew craters
Radar view of a twin-peaked volcano
4
Marssome cratersvolcanoesriverbeds?
5
Mooncraterssmooth plains
6
Earthvolcanoescratersmountainsriverbeds
7
Why have the planets turned out so differently,
even though they formed at the same time from the
same materials?
8
9.1 Earth as a Planet
  • Our goals for learning
  • Why is Earth geologically active?
  • What processes shape Earths surface?
  • How does Earths atmosphere affect the planet?

9
Why is Earth geologically active?
10
Earths Interior
  • Core Highest density nickel and iron
  • Mantle Moderate density silicon, oxygen, etc.
  • Crust Lowest density granite, basalt, etc.

11
Terrestrial Planet Interiors
  • Applying what we have learned about Earths
    interior to other planets tells us what their
    interiors are probably like.

12
Why do water and oil separate?
  • Water molecules repel oil molecules electrically.
  • Water is denser than oil, so oil floats on water.
  • Oil is more slippery than water, so it slides to
    the surface of the water.
  • Oil molecules are bigger than the spaces between
    water molecules.

13
Why do water and oil separate?
  • Water molecules repel oil molecules electrically.
  • Water is denser than oil, so oil floats on water.
  • Oil is more slippery than water, so it slides to
    the surface of the water.
  • Oil molecules are bigger than the spaces between
    water molecules.

14
Differentiation
  • Gravity pulls high-density material to center
  • Lower-density material rises to surface
  • Material ends up separated by density

15
Thought Question
  • What is necessary for differentiation to occur
    in a planet?
  • It must have metal and rock in it.
  • It must be a mix of materials of different
    density.
  • Material inside must be able to flow.
  • All of the above.
  • b and c.

16
Thought Question
  • What is necessary for differentiation to occur
    in a planet?
  • It must have metal and rock in it.
  • It must be a mix of materials of different
    density.
  • Material inside must be able to flow.
  • All of the above.
  • b and c.

17
Lithosphere
  • A planets outer layer of cool, rigid rock is
    called the lithosphere.
  • It floats on the warmer, softer rock that lies
    beneath.

18
Thought Question
  • Do rocks s-t-r-e-t-c-h?
  • Norock is rigid and cannot deform without
    breaking.
  • Yesbut only if it is molten rock.
  • Yesrock under strain may slowly deform.

19
Thought Question
  • Do rocks s-t-r-e-t-c-h?
  • Norock is rigid and cannot deform without
    breaking.
  • Yesbut only if it is molten rock.
  • Yesrock under strain may slowly deform.

20
Strength of Rock
  • Rock stretches when pulled slowly but breaks when
    pulled rapidly.
  • The gravity of a large world pulls slowly on its
    rocky content, shaping the world into a sphere.

21
Heat Drives Geological Activity
  • Convection hot rock rises, cool rock falls.
  • One convection cycle takes 100 million years on
    Earth.

22
Sources of Internal Heat
  • Gravitational potential energy of accreting
    planetesimals
  • Differentiation
  • Radioactivity

23
Heating of Interior over Time
  • Accretion and differentiation when planets were
    young
  • Radioactive decay is most important heat source
    today

24
Cooling of Interior
  • Convection transports heat as hot material rises
    and cool material falls
  • Conduction transfers heat from hot material to
    cool material
  • Radiation sends energy into space

25
Thought Question
  • What cools off faster?
  • A grande-size cup of Starbucks coffee
  • A teaspoon of cappuccino in the same cup

26
Thought Question
  • What cools off faster?
  • A grande-size cup of Starbucks coffee
  • A teaspoon of cappuccino in the same cup

27
Thought Question
  • What cools off faster?
  • A big terrestrial planet
  • A tiny terrestrial planet

28
Thought Question
  • What cools off faster?
  • A big terrestrial planet
  • A tiny terrestrial planet

29
Role of Size
  • Smaller worlds cool off faster and harden
    earlier.
  • Moon and Mercury are now geologically dead.

30
Surface Area to Volume Ratio
  • Heat content depends on volume.
  • Loss of heat through radiation depends on surface
    area.
  • Time to cool depends on surface area divided by
    volume
  • Larger objects have a smaller ratio and cool more
    slowly.

31
Planetary Magnetic Fields
  • Moving charged particles create magnetic fields.
  • A planets interior can create magnetic fields if
    its core is electrically conducting, convecting,
    and rotating.

32
Earths Magnetosphere
  • Earths magnetic fields protects us from charged
    particles from the Sun.
  • The charged particles can create aurorae
    (Northern lights).

33
Thought Question
  • If the planet core is cold, do you expect it to
    have magnetic fields?
  • Yes, refrigerator magnets are cold, and they have
    magnetic fields.
  • No, planetary magnetic fields are generated by
    moving charges around, and if the core is cold,
    nothing is moving.

34
Thought Question
  • If the planet core is cold, do you expect it to
    have magnetic fields?
  • Yes, refrigerator magnets are cold, and they have
    magnetic fields.
  • No, planetary magnetic fields are generated by
    moving charges around, and if the core is cold,
    nothing is moving.

35
Special TopicHow do we know whats inside a
planet?
  • P waves push matter back and forth.
  • S waves shake matter side to side.

36
Special TopicHow do we know whats inside a
planet?
  • P waves go through Earths core, but S waves do
    not.
  • We conclude that Earths core must have a liquid
    outer layer.

37
What processes shape Earths surface?
38
Geological Processes
  • Impact cratering
  • Impacts by asteroids or comets
  • Volcanism
  • Eruption of molten rock onto surface
  • Tectonics
  • Disruption of a planets surface by internal
    stresses
  • Erosion
  • Surface changes made by wind, water, or ice

39
Impact Cratering
  • Most cratering happened soon after the solar
    system formed.
  • Craters are about 10 times wider than objects
    that made them.
  • Small craters greatly outnumber large ones.

The Production of a Crater
40
Impact Craters
Meteor Crater (Arizona)
Tycho (Moon)
41
Volcanism
  • Volcanism happens when molten rock (magma) finds
    a path through lithosphere to the surface.
  • Molten rock is called lava after it reaches the
    surface.

Volcanic Eruptions and Lava Flows
42
Lava and Volcanoes
Runny lava makes flat lava plains.
Slightly thicker lava makes broad shield
volcanoes.
Thickest lava makes steep stratovolcanoes.
43
Outgassing
  • Volcanism also releases gases from Earths
    interior into the atmosphere.

44
Tectonics
  • Convection of the mantle creates stresses in the
    crust called tectonic forces.
  • Compression forces make mountain ranges.
  • A valley can form where the crust is pulled
    apart.

Tectonics and Convection of the Mantle
45
Plate Tectonics on Earth
  • Earths continents slide around on separate
    plates of crust.

Plate Tectonics on Earth
46
Erosion
  • Erosion is a blanket term for weather-driven
    processes that break down or transport rock.
  • Processes that cause erosion include
  • Glaciers
  • Rivers
  • Wind

47
Erosion by Water
  • The Colorado River continues to carve the Grand
    Canyon.

48
Erosion by Ice
  • Glaciers carved the Yosemite Valley.

49
Erosion by Wind
  • Wind wears away rock and builds up sand dunes.

50
Erosional Debris
  • Erosion can create new features by depositing
    debris.

51
How does Earths atmosphere affect the planet ?
Which Molecules are Greenhouse Gases?
52
Effects of Atmosphere on Earth
  • Erosion
  • Radiation protection
  • Greenhouse effect
  • Makes the sky blue!

53
Radiation Protection
  • All X-ray light is absorbed very high in the
    atmosphere.
  • Ultraviolet light is absorbed by ozone (O3).

54
The Greenhouse Effect
Which Molecules are Greenhouse Gases?
55
Earths atmosphere absorbs light at most
wavelengths.
56
Greenhouse effect Certain molecules let
sunlight through but trap escaping infrared
photons. (H2O, CO2, CH4)
The Green House Effect
57
Thought Question
  • Why is the sky blue?
  • The sky reflects light from the oceans.
  • Oxygen atoms are blue.
  • Nitrogen atoms are blue.
  • Air molecules scatter blue light more than red
    light.
  • Air molecules absorb red light.

58
Thought Question
  • Why is the sky blue?
  • The sky reflects light from the oceans.
  • Oxygen atoms are blue.
  • Nitrogen atoms are blue.
  • Air molecules scatter blue light more than red
    light.
  • Air molecules absorb red light.

59
A Greenhouse Gas
  • Any gas that absorbs infrared
  • Greenhouse gas molecules with two different
    types of elements (CO2, H2O, CH4)
  • Not a greenhouse gas molecules with one or two
    atoms of the same element (O2, N2)

60
Greenhouse Effect Bad?
  • The Earth is much warmer because of the
    greenhouse effect than it would be without an
    atmospherebut so is Venus.

61
Why the sky is blue
  • Atmosphere scatters blue light from the Sun,
    making it appear to come from different
    directions.
  • Sunsets are red because less of the red light
    from the Sun is scattered.

62
What have we learned?
  • Why is Earth geologically active?
  • Earth retains plenty of internal heat because it
    is large for a terrestrial planet.
  • That heat drives geological activity, keeping the
    core molten and driving geological activity.
  • The circulation of molten metal in the core
    generates Earths magnetic field.

63
What have we learned?
  • What geological processes shape Earths surface?
  • Impact cratering, volcanism, tectonics, and
    erosion
  • How does Earths atmosphere affect the planet?
  • Erosion
  • Protection from radiation
  • Greenhouse effect

64
7.2 Mercury and the Moon Geologically Dead
  • Our goals for learning
  • Was there ever geological activity on the Moon or
    Mercury?

65
Was there ever geological activity on the Moon or
Mercury?
66
Moon
  • Some volcanic activity 3 billion years ago must
    have flooded lunar craters, creating lunar maria.
  • The Moon is now geologically dead.

67
Cratering of Mercury
  • Mercury has a mixture of heavily cratered and
    smooth regions like the Moon.
  • The smooth regions are likely ancient lava flows.

68
Cratering of Mercury
Region opposite the Caloris Basin is jumbled from
seismic energy of impact
The Caloris basin is the largest impact crater on
Mercury
69
Tectonics on Mercury
  • Long cliffs indicate that Mercury shrank early in
    its history.

70
What have we learned?
  • Was there ever geological activity on the Moon or
    Mercury?
  • Early cratering on Moon and Mercury is still
    present, indicating that activity ceased long
    ago.
  • Lunar maria resulted from early volcanism.
  • Tectonic features on Mercury indicate early
    shrinkage.

71
7.3 Mars A Victim of Planetary Freeze-drying
  • Our goals for learning
  • What geological features tell us that water once
    flowed on Mars?
  • Why did Mars change?

72
Mars versus Earth
  • 50 Earths radius, 10 Earths mass
  • 1.5 AU from the Sun
  • Axis tilt about the same as Earth
  • Similar rotation period
  • Thin CO2 atmosphere little greenhouse
  • Main difference Mars is SMALLER

73
Seasons on Mars
  • Seasons on Mars are more extreme in the southern
    hemisphere because of its elliptical orbit.

74
Storms on Mars
  • Seasonal winds on Mars can drive huge dust storms.

75
What geological features tell us water once
flowed on Mars?
76
The surface of Mars appears to have ancient
riverbeds.
77
Eroded crater
The condition of craters indicates surface
history.
78
Close-up of eroded crater
79
(No Transcript)
80
Volcanoesas recent as 180 million years ago
81
Past tectonic activity
82
Low-lying regions may once have had oceans.
83
Low-lying regions may once have had oceans.
84
Opportunity
Spirit
85
  • 2004 Opportunity Rover provided strong evidence
    for abundant liquid water on Mars in the distant
    past.
  • How could Mars have been warmer and wetter in the
    past?

86
Today, most water lies frozen underground (blue
regions) Some scientists believe accumulated
snowpack melts carve gullies even today.
87
Why did Mars change?
88
Climate Change on Mars
  • Mars has not had widespread surface water for 3
    billion years.
  • The greenhouse effect probably kept the surface
    warmer before that.
  • Somehow Mars lost most of its atmosphere.

89
Climate Change on Mars
  • Magnetic field may have preserved early Martian
    atmosphere.
  • Solar wind may have stripped atmosphere after
    field decreased because of interior cooling.

90
What have we learned?
  • What geological features tell us water once
    flowed on Mars?
  • Dry riverbeds, eroded craters, and rock-strewn
    floodplains all show that water once flowed on
    Mars.
  • Mars today has ice, underground water ice, and
    perhaps pockets of underground liquid water.
  • Why did Mars change?
  • Mars atmosphere must have once been much thicker
    for its greenhouse effect to allow liquid water
    on the surface.
  • Somehow Mars lost most of its atmosphere, perhaps
    because of a declining magnetic field.

91
7.4 Venus A Hothouse World
  • Our goals for learning
  • Is Venus geologically active?
  • Why is Venus so hot?

92
Is Venus geologically active?
93
Cratering on Venus
  • Impact craters, but fewer than Moon, Mercury,
    Mars

94
Volcanoes on Venus
  • Many volcanoes, including both shield volcanoes
    and stratovolcanoes

95
Tectonics on Venus
  • Fractured and contorted surface indicates
    tectonic stresses

96
Erosion on Venus
  • Photos of rocks taken by lander show little
    erosion

97
Does Venus have plate tectonics?
  • Most of Earths major geological features can be
    attributed to plate tectonics, which gradually
    remakes Earths surface.
  • Venus does not appear to have plate tectonics,
    but its entire surface seems to have been
    repaved 750 million years ago.

98
Why is Venus so hot?
99
Why is Venus so hot?
  • The greenhouse effect on Venus keeps its surface
    temperature at 470C.
  • But why is the greenhouse effect on Venus so much
    stronger than on Earth?

100
Atmosphere of Venus
  • Venus has a very thick carbon dioxide atmosphere
    with a surface pressure 90 times that of Earth.

101
Greenhouse Effect on Venus
  • Thick carbon dioxide atmosphere produces an
    extremely strong greenhouse effect.
  • Earth escapes this fate because most of its
    carbon and water are in rocks and oceans.

102
Atmosphere of Venus
  • Reflective clouds contain droplets of sulfuric
    acid.
  • The upper atmosphere has fast winds that remain
    unexplained.

103
Runaway Greenhouse Effect
More evaporation, stronger greenhouse effect
Greater heat, more evaporation
  • The runaway greenhouse effect would account for
    why Venus has so little water.

104
Thought Question
  • What is the main reason why Venus is hotter than
    Earth?
  • Venus is closer to the Sun than Earth.
  • Venus is more reflective than Earth.
  • Venus is less reflective than Earth.
  • The greenhouse effect is much stronger on Venus
    than on Earth.
  • Human activity has led to declining temperatures
    on Earth.

105
Thought Question
  • What is the main reason why Venus is hotter than
    Earth?
  • Venus is closer to the Sun than Earth.
  • Venus is more reflective than Earth.
  • Venus is less reflective than Earth.
  • The greenhouse effect is much stronger on Venus
    than on Earth.
  • Human activity has led to declining temperatures
    on Earth.

106
What have we learned?
  • Is Venus geologically active?
  • Its surface shows evidence of major volcanism and
    tectonics during the last billion years.
  • There is no evidence for erosion or plate
    tectonics.
  • Why is Venus so hot?
  • The runaway greenhouse effect made Venus too hot
    for liquid oceans.
  • All carbon dioxide remains in the atmosphere,
    leading to a huge greenhouse effect.

107
7.5 Earth as a Living Planet
  • Our goals for learning
  • What unique features on Earth are important for
    human life?
  • How is human activity changing our planet?
  • What makes a planet habitable?

108
What unique features of Earth are important for
life?
  • Surface liquid water
  • Atmospheric oxygen
  • Plate tectonics
  • Climate stability

109
What unique features of Earth are important to
human life?
Earths distance from the Sun and moderate
greenhouse effect make liquid water possible.
  • Surface liquid water
  • Atmospheric oxygen
  • Plate tectonics
  • Climate stability

110
What unique features of Earth are important to
human life?
  • Surface liquid water
  • Atmospheric oxygen
  • Plate tectonics
  • Climate stability

PHOTOSYNTHESIS (plant life) is required to make
high concentrations of O2, which produces the
protective layer of O3.
111
What unique features of Earth are important to
human life?
  • Surface liquid water
  • Atmospheric oxygen
  • Plate tectonics
  • Climate stability

Plate tectonics are an important step in the
carbon dioxide cycle.
112
Continental Motion
  • Motion of continents can be measured with GPS

113
Continental Motion
  • Idea of continental drift was inspired by
    puzzle-like fit of continents
  • Mantle material erupts where seafloor spreads

114
Seafloor Recycling
  • Seafloor is recycled through a process known as
    subduction

115
Plate Motions
  • Measurements of plate motions tell us past and
    future layout of continents

Plate Tectonics on Earth
116
Carbon Dioxide Cycle
  • Atmospheric CO2 dissolves in rainwater.
  • Rain erodes minerals that flow into the ocean.
  • Minerals combine with carbon to make rocks on
    ocean floor.

117
Carbon Dioxide Cycle
  • Subduction carries carbonate rocks down into the
    mantle.
  • Rock melts in mantle and outgases CO2 back into
    atmosphere through volcanoes.

118
Long-Term Climate Change
  • Changes in Earths axis tilt might lead to ice
    ages.
  • Widespread ice tends to lower global temperatures
    by increasing Earths reflectivity.
  • CO2 from outgassing will build up if oceans are
    frozen, ultimately raising global temperatures
    again.

119
What unique features of Earth are important to
human life?
  • Surface liquid water
  • Atmospheric oxygen
  • Plate tectonics
  • Climate stability

The CO2 cycle acts like a thermostat for Earths
temperature.
120
These unique features are intertwined
  • Plate tectonics create climate stability
  • Climate stability allows liquid water
  • Liquid water is necessary for life
  • Life is necessary for atmospheric oxygen

How many other connections between these can you
think of?
121
How is human activity changing our planet?
122
Dangers of Human Activity
  • Human-made CFCs in the atmosphere destroy ozone,
    reducing protection from UV radiation.
  • Human activity is driving many other species to
    extinction.
  • Human use of fossil fuels produces greenhouse
    gases that can cause global warming.

123
Global Warming
  • Earths average temperature has increased by
    0.5C in the past 50 years.
  • The concentration of CO2 is rising rapidly.
  • An unchecked rise in greenhouse gases will
    eventually lead to global warming.

124
CO2 Concentration
  • Global temperatures have tracked CO2
    concentration for the last 500,000 years.
  • Antarctic air bubbles indicate the current CO2
    concentration is at its highest level in at least
    500,000 years.

125
CO2 Concentration
  • Most of the CO2 increase has happened in last 50
    years!

126
Modeling of Climate Change
  • Complex models of global warming suggest that the
    recent temperature increase is indeed consistent
    with human production of greenhouse gases.

127
What makes a planet habitable?
  • Located at an optimal distance from the Sun for
    liquid water to exist

128
What makes a planet habitable?
  • Large enough for geological activity to release
    and retain water and atmosphere

129
Planetary Destiny
  • Earth is habitable because it is large enough to
    remain geologically active, and it is at the
    right distance from the Sun so oceans could form.

130
What have we learned?
  • What unique features of Earth are important for
    life?
  • Surface liquid water
  • Atmospheric oxygen
  • Plate tectonics
  • Climate stability

131
What have we learned?
  • How is human activity changing our planet?
  • Human activity is releasing carbon dioxide into
    Earths atmosphere, increasing the greenhouse
    effect and producing global warming.
  • What makes a planet habitable?
  • Earths distance from the Sun allows for liquid
    water on Earths surface.
  • Earths size allows it to retain an atmosphere
    and enough internal heat to drive geological
    activity.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com