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Outline for 21 November Tuesday

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C) the length of its day is very close to an Earth day. ... (c) Decay of radioactive elements in Saturn's large, rocky core. Chapter 10. 7q. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Outline for 21 November Tuesday


1
Outline for 21 November (Tuesday)
  • Planets and Moons
  • Orbits
  • Surface and Interior
  • Atmosphere
  • Rings

2
Outline for 21 November (Tuesday)
  • Planets and Moons
  • Orbits
  • Surface and Interior
  • Atmosphere
  • Rings

3
Outline for 21 November (Tuesday)
  • Planets and Moons
  • Orbits
  • Distance from Sun
  • Eccentricity
  • Distance from controlling object
  • Rotation period
  • Tidal forces
  • Synchronous rotation

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Synchronous Rotation
  • Why does it happen?

10
Chapter 11
  • 4b. Mercury can be seen most easily from Earth
  • A) near the Sun, just after sunset or just before
    sunrise.
  • B) during a lunar eclipse, when the sky is
    sufficiently dark near the Moon, because Mercury
    is always close to the Moon in our sky.
  • C) in the winter, when the ecliptic plane is high
    in the sky at night.
  • D) at midnight, when it is high in the sky.

11
Chapter 11
  • 12b. How often does a solar transit of
    MercuryMercury passing directly across the face
    of the Sun as seen from Earthoccur?
  • A) regularly, once every synodic period of
    Mercury, or every 116 days
  • B) never
  • C) regularly, every sidereal period of Mercury,
    or every 88 days
  • D) relatively infrequentlybetween 10 and 20
    times per century

12
Chapter 13
  • 2q. The length of each of the Martian seasons,
    compared to those on Earth, is
  • (a) about the same as Earth because the tilt of
    Mars's spin axis and rotation rate are similar to
    those of Earth.
  • (b) about twice as long because of Mars's orbital
    period.
  • (c) about half as long as Earth, due to the
    relationship between the Martian period of
    revolution and its synodic period.

13
Chapter 13
  • 17b. Mars experiences similar seasonal changes to
    those on Earth because
  • A) it has about the same shape of elliptical
    orbit as that of the Earth, producing similar
    changes in solar radiation intensity as the
    planet orbits the Sun.
  • B) its spin axis is tilted at about the same
    angle to its orbital plane as is the Earth's
    axis.
  • C) the length of its day is very close to an
    Earth day.
  • D) the length of its year is very close to that
    of Earth.

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Key Terms
  • greatest eastern elongation
  • greatest western elongation
  • solar transit
  • prograde rotation
  • retrograde rotation
  • occultation
  • 1-to-1 spin-orbit coupling
  • 3-to-2 spin-orbit coupling

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Draw ball and arrow at A, B, C, D
C
D
B
A
Mercurys orbital period is 88 days Mercurys
rotation period is 58 days
16
Draw ball and arrow at A, B, C, D
C
D
B
A
Mercurys orbital period is 88 days Mercurys
rotation period is 58 days
17
Draw ball and arrow at A, B, C, D
C
D
B
A
88/4 22 days to get to A
Mercurys orbital period is 88 days Mercurys
rotation period is 58 days
22/58 0.375
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Draw ball and arrow at A, B, C, D
First rotate around Mercurys axis. Then move
into position in orbit.
C
0.375 of a full turn
D
B
A
88/4 22 days to get to A
Mercurys orbital period is 88 days Mercurys
rotation period is 58.6 days
22/58 0.375
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Draw ball and arrow at A, B, C, D
C
D
D
B
A
88/4 22 days to get to A
Mercurys orbital period is 88 days Mercurys
rotation period is 58 days
22/58 0.375
20
C
1.125 turns
D
0.75 of a full turn
B
1.5 turns
0.375 of a turn
A
A
88/4 22 days to get to A
Mercurys orbital period is 88 days Mercurys
rotation period is 58 days
21
Outline for 21 November (Tuesday)
  • Planets and Moons
  • Orbits
  • Surface and Interior
  • Atmosphere
  • Rings

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Outline for 21 November (Tuesday)
  • Planets and Moons
  • Surface and Interior
  • Core
  • What surrounds core
  • Rotation period
  • Quakes
  • Tides
  • Craters
  • Recycling

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Moon
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The surface of Venus shows no evidence of plate
tectonics
  • The surface of Venus is surprisingly flat, mostly
    covered with gently rolling hills
  • There are a few major highlands and several large
    volcanoes
  • The surface of Venus shows no evidence of the
    motion of large crustal plates, which plays a
    major role in shaping the Earths surface

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Chapter 12
  • 80b. On both Earth and Venus some sulfur dioxide
    is removed from the atmosphere to be locked up in
    various rocks and minerals. On Earth this SO2 is
    recycled deep beneath the surface to be outgassed
    by volcanoes and again become part of the
    atmosphere. On Venus this SO2 is not recycled.
    Why this difference?
  • A) There are no active volcanoes on Venus.
  • B) Venus does not experience the movement of
    tectonic plates.
  • C) On Venus, the sulfur dioxide minerals are
    dissolved by acids in the atmosphere.
  • D) Because of the higher temperature on Venus,
    the SO2 minerals formed there are different from
    those on Earth, and they are essentially
    permanent and nonrecyclable.

32
Chapter 12
  • 90b. Tectonic activity on Venus differs from that
    on Earth in that
  • A) active crustal deformation appears to be
    completely absent.
  • B) the lithosphere appears to be softer or more
    plastic and cannot support the creation and
    motion of solid plates.
  • C) the lithosphere appears to be cooler and
    thicker and is therefore too rigid to break up
    into moving plates.
  • D) mantle convection appears to be more vigorous
    and has broken the lithosphere into a multitude
    of small plates instead of a few large ones.

33
Chapter 14
  • 15q. What is believed to be the most important
    source for the internal heat that Saturn radiates
    to space?
  • (a) Raindrops of liquid helium.
  • (b) The original heat of formation of the planet.
  • (c) Decay of radioactive elements in Saturn's
    large, rocky core.

34
Chapter 10
  • 7q. How do we know the lunar maria (or "seas")
    are younger than the lunar highlands?
  • (a) The maria have relatively few craters,
    whereas the highlands are very densely cratered
    from long exposure to incoming meteoroids.
  • (b) The maria are still dark, whereas the
    highlands have been lightened by a much longer
    exposure to radiation from the Sun.
  • (c) The maria are lower in elevation, whereas the
    highlands have had time to be uplifted by
    tectonic processes.

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Outline for 21 November (Tuesday)
  • Planets and Moons
  • Orbits
  • Surface and Interior
  • Atmosphere
  • Rings

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Outline for 21 November (Tuesday)
  • Planets and Moons
  • Atmosphere
  • Life
  • Shield
  • Thickness and gravity
  • Temperature and escape
  • Greenhouse effect

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Atmospheres
  • gravity and escape velocity

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Atmospheres
  • gravity and escape velocity

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The climate on Venus followed a different
evolutionary path from that on Earth
  • Venuss high temperature is caused by the
    greenhouse effect, as the dense carbon dioxide
    atmosphere traps and retains energy from
    sunlight.
  • The early atmosphere of Venus contained
    substantial amounts of water vapor
  • This caused a runaway greenhouse effect that
    evaporated Venuss oceans and drove carbon
    dioxide out of the rocks and into the atmosphere

40
The climate on Venus followed a different
evolutionary path from that on Earth
  • Almost all of the water vapor was eventually lost
    by the action of ultraviolet radiation on the
    upper atmosphere.
  • The Earth has roughly as much carbon dioxide as
    Venus, but it has been dissolved in the Earths
    oceans and chemically bound into its rocks

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Earths Atmosphere
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Mars Atmosphere
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Chapter 12
  • 12q. The temperature in the atmosphere of Venus
    decreases smoothly with increasing altitude all
    the way from the surface (hottest) to the
    outermost parts of the atmosphere (coolest). What
    does this observation tell us about the
    atmosphere of Venus? (Hint Think about why the
    temperature in the Earth's atmosphere differs
    from this.)
  • (a) Venus has no distinct layers of clouds or
    aerosols in its atmosphere.
  • (b) Venus has essentially no ozone in its
    atmosphere.
  • (c) Venus has essentially no convection in its
    atmosphere.

45
Chapter 12
  • 34b. Why is the surface of Venus hotter than that
    of Mercury, even though Mercury is much closer to
    the Sun?
  • A) Chemical reactions within the thick clouds and
    dense atmosphere are continuously supplying heat
    to the surface.
  • B) Continuous volcanic activity releases large
    quantities of hot lava onto the surface.
  • C) Venus rotates rapidly, thereby ensuring that
    its entire surface is being heated regularly and
    uniformly.
  • D) The thick CO2 atmosphere prevents re-emission
    into space of the heat absorbed from sunlight.

46
Chapter 12
  • 81b. At what point did the greenhouse effect
    cease to raise the temperature of Venus?
  • A) when all the greenhouse gases evaporated
  • B) when the radiation from Venus balanced the
    radiation absorbed by Venus
  • C) when the CO2 was dissolved in the early
    Venusian oceans
  • D) when the greenhouse gases combined with other
    chemicals

47
Key Terms
  • runaway greenhouse effect
  • retrograde rotation
  • dust devil
  • runaway icehouse effect
  • thermal radiation

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Outline for 21 November (Tuesday)
  • Planets and Moons
  • Orbits
  • Surface and Interior
  • Atmosphere
  • Rings

49
Outline for 21 November (Tuesday)
  • Planets and Moons
  • Rings
  • Why they form
  • Orbits
  • Interaction with Moons

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