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ASTR 330: The Solar System

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Title: ASTR 330: The Solar System


1
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Lecture 5 Review Quiz
  • Distinguish between remote sensing and in situ
    sensing, and give examples.
  • What is meant by an atmospheric spectral window?
  • What information can we tell about a planet from
    infrared spectral lines?
  • What are the two main types of telescopes, and
    name some recent advances in telescope technology.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
2
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Announcements
  • Yellow forms still required for students Gilkey,
    Snyder Talebi!
  • E-mail anyone not getting e-mail on the class
    list?
  • Homework 1 returned.
  • Standard was high mean42.5.
  • Question 4 problems.
  • Materials on-line HW 1 solutions. Lectures 6
    7.
  • Calculators.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
3
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Lecture 5
  • Formation of the
  • Planetary System

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Picture from emuseum_at_Minnisota State Univ, Mankato
4
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Questions For This Class
  • From what did the solar system form?
  • How did it form?
  • Why are the objects in the solar system all so
    different?
  • Could it have formed differently, e.g. with a
    binary star?
  • How long did it take for the planets to accrete
    most of their mass?
  • How have the planets evolved since the end of
    their major accretion?
  • Is this evolution continuing today?

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
5
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Data and Evidence
  • In trying to answer these questions we have
    limited evidence at our disposal today.
  • In our own solar system, we have only the
    end-point of a complex evolutionary process to go
    on the observed sizes, orbits, compositions etc
    of the planets and other bodies.
  • It is somewhat like trying to deduce the
    childhood and experiences of a human, having only
    a picture of the adult.
  • As astronomical technology has progressed, in the
    last decade we have been able to now view the
    beginnings of solar systems around other stars a
    valuable insight into our own history.
  • However, many aspects of solar system formation
    at this stage are still not certain.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
6
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Facts We Can Use Chemical Composition
  • More than 99 of the material in the solar
    system is in the Sun.
  • The Sun is composed almost entirely of Hydrogen
    and Helium.
  • Hence the initial raw material must have had
    close to this composition.
  • Jupiter and Saturn have almost the same
    composition as the Sun.
  • The smaller bodies are depleted in H, He and
    other light gases.
  • Hence the inner planets were probably formed
    without ices or other volatiles.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
7
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Facts We Can Use Orbits and Rotations
  • All the planets have orbits which are
    approximately circular.
  • These orbits all lie roughly in the same plane.
  • The planets all rotate in the same direction
    around the Sun.
  • The Sun rotates in the same direction as the
    planets orbit.
  • The Suns equator lies essentially in the same
    plane of the planets orbits.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
8
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Early Theories
  • The first serious speculations about the
    formation of the solar and planetary system using
    the laws of gravity and physics were due to
    Pierre-Simon, Marquis de Laplace (1796).
  • Laplace envisioned a vast rotating interstellar
    gas cloud which collapsed under its own
    gravity, to form a disk.
  • These ideas were improved on by Roche (1854) and
    are still valid today, though with many changes
    in the details!

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Picture creditUniv. St. Andrews
9
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Overview Of Formation

Now lets look at the individual stages in more
detail
Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Figure Universities Corp. For Atmospheric
Research (UCAR)
10
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • In the beginning
  • was a huge cloud of molecular material, known
    as the proto-solar or primordial nebula, similar
    to the Orion Nebula (right).
  • This nebula may have only contained only 10-20
    more mass than the present solar system.
  • Due to some disturbance, perhaps a nearby
    supernova, the gas was perturbed, causing ripples
    of increased density.
  • The denser material began to collapse under its
    own gravity

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Picture from stardate.org
11
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Initial Collapse
  • The nebula must have possessed some rotation. Due
    to the spin, the cloud collapsed faster along the
    poles than the equator.
  • The result is that the cloud collapsed into a
    spinning disk.
  • The disk material cannot easily fall all the
    remaining way into the center because of its
    rotational motion, unless it can somehow lose
    some energy, e.g. by friction in the disk
    (collisions).
  • The initial collapse takes just a few 100,000s of
    years.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Picture credit AnimAlu Productions
12
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Rotation and Angular Momentum
  • Angular momentum is a conserved quantity in the
    absence of dissipation the total angular momentum
    of the cloud stays the same.
  • Angular momentum is the product of three
    quantities mass, size (radius) and rotation
    speed (or velocity)
  • L mrv
  • If L is constant, then clearly if any one of the
    other quantities decreases, another quantity must
    increase proportionately.
  • I.e., if the cloud collapses and becomes smaller
    (r decreases) and the mass stays the same, then
    the rotational speed (v) increases the cloud
    spins up.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
13
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Rotational Spin-Up
  • The spin-up of a shrinking object can be
    demonstrated by a familiar example
  • An ice skater performing a spin (Michelle Kwan,
    right) draws in her arms to spin faster without
    expending any extra effort.
  • Now lets look at some actual protoplanetary
    disks

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
14
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Actual Protoplanetary Disks
  • The images (left) show four protoplanetary disks
    in the Orion Nebula, 1500 light years away,
    imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope (HST).
  • The disks are 99 gas and 1 dust. The dust shows
    as a dark silhouette against the glowing gas of
    the nebula.
  • Each frame is 270 billion km across about 1800
    AU. The central stars are about 1 million years
    old infants!

These image are visible composites from red,
green and blue light.
Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
15
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Disk Composition
  • The central parts of the nebula were very hot
    over 10,000 K.
  • Going outwards in the nebula, the temperature
    drops, and different compounds condense out at
    different distances from the protostar
  • Calcium, Aluminum oxides first,
  • then Iron-Nickel alloys (by 0.2 AU, Mercury),
  • Magnesium silicates and oxides next (by 1.0 AU),
  • Olivine and Pyroxene (Fe-Si-O compounds),
  • Feldspars (K-Fe-Si-O compounds),
  • Hydrous silicates,
  • Sulfates,
  • And finally ices (water ice by 5.0 AU).
  • This radial variation in composition in the
    nebula is one cause of the variation in
    composition of the planets with solar orbit
    distance.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
16
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Planetesimals
  • Dust grains and ices were sticky (not just
    chemically, but electrically and magnetically
    cohesive) and began to clump together
    (accretion), forming small bodies 0.01 to 10 m
    across, all orbiting the proto-star in the same
    direction like Saturns rings.
  • As their size grew, gravity began to have an
    effect, and larger bodies around 1 km in size
    called planetesimals formed.
  • The details of planetesimal formation are still
    uncertain, but km-sized bodies would have
    appeared by 10,000 years after the disk formed.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
17
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • The Proto-Sun
  • Gravity caused the center of the cloud to
    collapse into a ball the proto-sun. The
    gravitational energy released begins to heat
    things up.
  • When the protosun became hot and dense enough,
    nuclear fusion was ignited.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Picture credit AnimAlu Productions
18
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • T Tauri Phase
  • Young solar-type stars are said to be in the T
    Tauri phase (named after the first example), and
    can have wind velocities of 200-300 km/s. This
    phase lasts about 10 million years.
  • Once the star begins to shine, the stellar wind
    turns on, and the star begins to blow material
    which has not yet accreted outwards.
  • T Tauri stars are characterized by vigorous
    outflows perpendicular to the relatively dense
    disk.
  • After 105 or 106 years, the original gas nebula
    has been dissipated.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Picture credit James Schimbert, U. Oregon, Eugene
19
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Planetesimal Growth
  • Gravitational interactions between planetesimals
    perturbed their orbits into non-circular,
    collisional trajectories.
  • Time passed, and the planetesimals impacted one
    another. In lower energy collisions or where the
    sizes are unequal, the planetesimals merged into
    a new larger object.
  • But in higher-energy collisions, two
    similarly-sized original bodies were disrupted
    back into fragments.
  • Over time, the larger planetesimals gathered up
    more and more mass from collisions with smaller
    impacting bodies.
  • In this way, the cores of the inner and outer
    planets were formed.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
20
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Inner Planets
  • After about 108 years, the solar wind and
    accretion of planetesimals had cleared the inner
    solar system of debris.
  • The inner planets had by then accreted almost all
    their eventual mass.
  • A period called the Late Heavy Bombardment,
    around 3.9 billion years ago is associated with
    clearing up the last planetesimals on inclined
    orbits, as inferred from lunar cratering.
  • However, the process of collision and
    accumulations continues to the present day e.g.
    meteors, SL-9.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Picture credit AnimAlu Productions
21
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Outer Planets
  • The outer planets continued to accrete for longer
    than the inner planets, and gathered much more
    ices and volatiles.
  • The outer planets are also responsible for the
    asteroid belt and comets.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Picture NASA
22
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Differentiation
  • As the planets accreted, temperature and pressure
    rose in the inner regions.
  • Heavier substances fell to the core (e.g. metal
    for the inner planets) and lighter substances
    floated on top.
  • This process, called differentiation, occurred in
    all the planets but the end result depended on
    the initial ingredients!

Below proposed Ganymede interior rock core and
ice mantle.
Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Picture NASA
23
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Asteroids
  • The major asteroid belt lies between the orbits
    of Mars and Jupiter, at a distance of around 2.7
    AU.
  • The asteroids were once thought to be the remains
    of a planet destroyed by a massive impact.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Picture credit NASA GSFC
24
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Asteroids
  • Current theories hold that the fragmented belt of
    material is the natural consequence of the
    presence of the giant planet Jupiter nearby
    during the planetary accretion phase.
  • The massive Jupiter core formed first, and then
    either gobbled up nearby planetesimals, or, in
    the case of the asteroids slightly further away
    Jupiter was able to disrupt any attempts they
    made to cling together into a planet! The
    Asteroids are all less than 1000 km in size.
  • Asteroids also exist in groups either preceding
    or trailing Jupiter in its orbit (Jupiter
    Trojans) or Mars (Martian Trojans). There are
    also asteroids which cross the Earths orbit, and
    others.
  • Asteroids are important because they are examples
    of the original planetesimals from 4.6 billion
    years ago. We will talk more about asteroids in a
    later lecture.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
25
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Edgeworth-Kuiper Belt
  • The Edgeworth-Kuiper belt is a band of icy
    planetesimals outside the orbit of Neptune
    (40-120 AU), hypothesized in the 1940s.
  • These objects are relics from the early formation
    phase of the solar system, which did not manage
    to form into planets.
  • The first EKO detected was found in 1992 (not
    counting Pluto and Charon!) now over 800 are
    known.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Picture Johns Hopkins University
26
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • EB 313 and Pluto
  • The object EB 313, first seen in 2003, caused a
    major upset to astronomy when its size was
    announced in mid-2005 to be larger than Pluto!
    (2400 or 3000 km, according to 2 studies Pluto
    is 2300 km)
  • This animation shows EB 313 moving against the
    star background in the upper left.
  • Astronomers have been grappling ever since with
    the question of how to define what is a planet!
  • A decision in August 2006 has resulted in Pluto
    being downgraded to a new dwarf planet category.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Graphic wikipedia
27
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Eris and Dysnomia
  • Follow-up observations with the Keck adaptive
    optics system showed that EB 313 was accompanied
    by a small moon.
  • Originally dubbed Xena and Gabrielle by the
    discoverers, they gained official names on Sept
    13 Eris and Dysnomia.
  • The names mean strife or discord, and
    lawlessness - appropriate to the trouble they
    are causing!

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Graphic wikipedia
28
ASTR 330 The Solar System
Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Graphic wikipedia
29
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • KBOs and SDOs
  • Kuiper belt objects are actually clustered quite
    closely between 39 and 48 AU - stable orbital
    zones with respect to Neptune.
  • Eris lies at a68 AU, but its 557-year orbit is
    highly elliptical, ranging from 38 to 100 AU, and
    inclined at 45 degrees.
  • For this reason, Eris is classified as a SDO or
    scattered disk object.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Graphic wikipedia
30
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Other Kuiper Belts
  • We cannot gain a good view of the Kuiper belt as
    a whole due to our position in the inner solar
    system but, we can look elsewhere.
  • These HST images show 2 Kuiper Belts around other
    stars, face on (left) and edge-on (right).

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Graphic wikipedia
31
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Oort Cloud
  • A vast reservoir of icy planetesimals at 100s out
    to 100,000s of AU.
  • Named the Oort Cloud, after Jan Oort who guessed
    its existence in 1950, by noting that long-period
    comets came from all directions of the sky.
  • Ironically, Oort cloud objects formed closer to
    the Sun the EKOs, but are on extremely eccentric
    orbits.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Graphic SWRI
32
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Oort Cloud Formation
  • Any planetesimals coming close to mighty Jupiter
    and Saturn were ejected from the solar system
    entirely.
  • However, icy bodies coming close to Neptune and
    Uranus were merely flung into very distant and
    eccentric orbits around the Sun.
  • These orbits were no longer confined to the plane
    of the solar system and so these icy bodies
    formed a huge spherical cloud around the Sun,
    reaching out to 100,000 AU.
  • These objects periodically visit the inner
    reaches of the solar system, and we see their
    long tails of gas and dust as comets.

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
33
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Pictorial Summary

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
Picture credit James Schimbert, U. Oregon, eugene
34
ASTR 330 The Solar System
  • Quiz - Summary
  • Describe the conditions which existed in our
    part of the Milky Way prior to the birth of the
    solar system.
  • Why did the gas cloud collapse to a disk and not
    a point why did everything not fall into the
    Sun?
  • Describe how planets formed from the disk.
  • Describe the early history (pre-main sequence)
    of the Sun.
  • Why are the inner planets volatile-poor while
    the outer planets are volatile-rich?

Dr Conor Nixon Fall 2006
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