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Inner Planets (Part I)

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Title: Inner Planets (Part I)


1
Inner Planets (Part I)
Sept. 16, 2002
  1. Science
  2. Intro to Inner Planets
  3. Four Main Processes
  4. Planetary Comparisons
  5. Intro to Atmospheres

2
Announcements
  • If you are not here today due to Yom Kippur,
    there will be an opportunity to make up todays
    quiz after class on Weds.
  • An extra credit problem will be available on the
    course web site tonight or tomorrow morning.
  • It is due Thurs. Sep 19 at 5pm

3
Review
  • Pieces of the Solar System
  • Sun (in a few weeks)
  • inner planets (this week)
  • outer planets (next week)
  • other stuff (following week)
  • Angular momentum
  • angular momentum is conserved
  • Solar System formation
  • accretion disk, rotation, protostar
  • planetesimals
  • solar wind

4
Fact vs. Theory
  • Facts are data which has been measured
  • e.g. the Sun rose this morning
  • Theory is a model which describes/explains data
    or predicts future events
  • e.g. the Sun will set tonight
  • a thrown baseball will follow an arc
  • because of gravity and Newtons Laws the Earth
    revolves around the Sun and will continue to do
    so
  • It is impossible to prove a theory
  • even Newtons Laws are a theory
  • It IS possible to disprove a theory
  • when facts do not agree with the model

5
Examples
  • Fact All major (currently observed)
    planets/moons/asteroids are revolving around the
    Earth in the same direction and in a similar
    plane
  • Theory The Solar System was created from a
    revolving sphere of gas and dust
  • Facts The inner planets are composed primarily
    from refractory materials while the outer planets
    are mostly volatile materials
  • Theory The inner region was hotter and the
    volatile materials did not survive there, but did
    in the outer region, this contributed to the
    planets formations

6
NASA Solar System Missions
  • Flyby missions - satellite to pass by another
    object
  • quick look, but cheap
  • examples Voyager, Mariner, Pioneer,
  • Orbiters - satellite in orbit around a planet or
    moon
  • more detailed studies, but not hands-on
  • examples Galileo, Clementine, Magellan,
  • Landers - lander on the surface of a planet or
    moon
  • get rock samples and direct data, limited area
    can be covered
  • examples Viking, Mars Surveyor, Mars Odyssey,
  • Manned missions - humans on the surface of a
    planet or moon
  • can do advanced, complicated studies/experiments,
    but very expensive
  • examples Apollo 11 through Apollo 17

7
Differentiation
  • During planetary formation, the rocks and
    planetesimals compress together due to gravity
  • energy is converted into heat
  • material melts and becomes fluid
  • Differentiation is the process of the heavier
    materials sinking towards the center of the
    planet while lighter materials rise to the outer
    edges
  • materials become separated by type
  • Outer surface of planet cools fastest and hardens

8
Planet Interiors
  • Layered
  • solid inner core
  • liquid outer core
  • solid outer mantle/crust
  • Hotter inside, cooler outside
  • planet radiates heat into space
  • outer crust cooled and hardened
  • center is hottest and has highest pressure
  • Melting point depends on temperature and pressure
  • in the center, pressure wins and material is
    solid
  • farther out, temperature wins and material is
    liquid
  • outer edge, both lose and material is solid

9
Planet Interiors (cont)
  • The inner planets have similar structure
  • although we dont have a lot of data on other
    planets
  • Data on Earths interior comes from seismic
    readings of earthquakes

10
Four Main Processes
  • These processes shape the surfaces of planets
  • Tectonism
  • movement of pieces of the planets crust (plates)
  • Volcanism
  • flow of material (lava) from beneath the planets
    crust
  • Impact Cratering
  • meteors hitting a planets surface
  • Gradation
  • erosion of the surface
  • The first 3 processes build up structure on the
    surface (mountains, valleys, etc)
  • The last process wears the surface down

11
Tectonics
  • Major movements of the planets crust
  • create mountain ranges, deep valleys
  • on Earth tectonic plates rub against each other
  • other planets not plates, but major
    cracking/shifting (fractures)

12
Interior Heating
  • Radiative cooling alone should have cooled the
    Earths interior more than observed
  • Friction adds some of the heat
  • tidal forces due to the gravitational pull of the
    Moon and Sun cause pieces of the interior to rub
    together
  • this rubbing generates heat (just like rubbing
    your hands together)
  • Radioactive decays add most of the heat
  • The interior temperature is a balance between
    original heat, radiative cooling and additional
    heat
  • As the radioactive material disappears, the
    Earths interior will cool

13
Volcanism
  • Fissures in the planets crust can allow hot
    mantle to flow to the top (lava)
  • the mantle is solid, but after relieving the
    pressure from the crust, it can turn liquid
  • Long fissures cause shield volcanoes (large, long
    mounds of cooled lava) to form over long time
    periods
  • Local holes can form mounds
  • on Earth, plate movement limits the size and can
    result in a chain of islands
  • Large flows of more fluid lava can create great
    plains of lava
  • e.g. Lunar mares (seas)
  • Amount of volcanic activity indicates how active
    a planet is

14
Comparative Volcanism
  • Moon
  • mares are volcanic in nature and indicate the
    Moon once had a lot of lava flow
  • Mercury
  • some visual indications of lava flow, not enough
    known
  • Mars
  • largest mountains in the Solar System (up to 25
    km high) caused by volcanism
  • Venus
  • evidence of a lot of complex volcanic activity
  • Earth
  • lots of current and previous volcanic activity
    (Pompeii, Hawaiian Islands, Mt. St. Helens)

15
Impact Cratering
  • The number of collisions between objects depends
    on how many objects there are
  • Early in the Solar System there were many more
    small planetesimals more collisions
  • Number of craters can be used to date a planet
  • Craters can be erased by tectonism, volcanism and
    gradation
  • occurs on active planets
  • (e.g. Earth)
  • on dead planets, craters
  • remain (e.g. Moon)
  • Formation
  • heats and compresses
  • material thrown outward
  • surface rebounds

16
Comparative Cratering
  • Moon
  • lots of craters in all sizes
  • Mars
  • craters with impact craters which indicate there
    might have been water on Mars once
  • Venus
  • dense atmosphere protects Venus
  • Earth
  • protected by atmosphere (many meteors burn up)
  • large oceans leave no impact crater
  • most craters erased by gradation

17
Moon from the Earth
  • Theory the Moon comes from the Earth
  • Mars size protoplanet hit Earth early in its
    history
  • this impact showered large amounts of material
    into Earth orbit
  • volatile materials were lost
  • remaining materials condensed to form the Moon
  • Facts which are explained
  • Moon composed of same materials as Earth (moon
    rocks)
  • Moon has no significant volatile materials
    (water, air)
  • Moon is large fraction of Earths size

18
Gradation
  • Surface leveling
  • caused by blowing wind, flowing water and
    water/ice freezing/melting
  • Moon Mercury
  • no atmosphere, possible ice, little gradation
  • Mars
  • large dust storms observed, evidence of water
    flow
  • Venus
  • evidence of blowing wind, no evidence of water
  • Earth
  • all processes present
  • e.g. dust/wind storms, rain, tides, glacier flow

19
Magnetic field
  • Inner planets all have some magnetic field
  • This magnetic field is not caused only by
    magnetized materials
  • At least partially caused by rotation of Earth
  • spinning electric charges in core create magnetic
    field
  • Facts
  • Earth has a strong magnetic field
  • Earths magnetic field moves with time (magnetic
    north pole not the same as celestial north pole)
  • the Moon has no or very small magnetic field
  • Mercury has strong magnetic field
  • Venus and Mars have small magnetic field

20
Gases Some Basics
  • Lighter gases rise
  • This is really because heavier gases sink and
    push the lighter gases upward
  • Temperature of a gas is really the speed of the
    molecules
  • Faster gases are hotter
  • Sunlight and heat from a planets interior
    provide energy to heat atmospheres
  • Sunlight can also break up molecules
  • Fast atoms/molecules in the outer atmosphere can
    escape the planets gravitational pull
  • Planets have a hard time hanging onto hydrogen
    and helium

21
Primary Atmosphere
  • A planets original atmosphere comes from the gas
    of the accretion disk
  • It is composed mainly of hydrogen and helium
  • same stuff the Sun is made of
  • If a planets gravity isnt strong enough, it
    cant hold onto these light gases
  • They escape and leave the planet without an
    atmosphere
  • Heating and solar wind help these processes
  • This happened to the inner planets
  • We will see later it did not happen to the gas
    giants
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