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Minor Bits of the Solar System

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Even modest (100 m size) meteoroids can produce big craters (every 200,000 yr or ... Manicouagan reservoir in Quebec: 70 km in diameter: hit by meteoroid ~2x108 yr ago ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Minor Bits of the Solar System


1
Minor Bits of the Solar System
  • Asteroids, Comets and Meteoroids Extrasolar
    Planets too!

Nucleus of Comet Wild2
2
ASTEROIDS aka, Minor Planets
  • Smaller than planets, but many similarities
  • Over 75,000 cataloged over 200,000 down to 100 m
    known lots discovered by Sloan Digital Sky
    Survey
  • Most are probably solid irregular shape
  • Some are rubble piles, easily disrupted
  • Gaspra (S type) and Ida (S type, w/ moon Dactyl)

3
Asteroid Orbits
  • Most in ASTEROID BELT 2.1 AU lt a lt 3.3 AU
  • Kirkwood gaps PA 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 2/5, 3/7 PJ
    --- Jupiter prevented growth of a planet in the
    belt
  • Amor Mars-crossing Trojan near Jupiter's L4
    and L5
  • Apollo Earth-crossing, can ? big craters
    destruction

4
Kirkwood Gaps Resonances with Jupiter
5
Last Pop Quiz
  • Person at the right of each row, take out a piece
    of paper
  • Neatly print your name on it.
  • Pass it to your left.
  • If youre here, 10 pt, if not, 0.

6
Answers to Review Questions
  • T Venuss atm conducts heat rapidly
  • F Valles Marinaris Olympus Mons (but its
    inactive)
  • F MJ 318 ME but gt 2 times all others!
  • F Saturn rotates almost as fast as Jupiter and
    has differential rotation too
  • F only after Uranuss orbit wasnt explained by
    known planets gravity was Neptune predicted,
    searched for found
  • T 124 periods for Io, Europa Ganymede heat
    Io Europa a lot via elliptical orbits induced
    strong tides
  • T Saturn has 61 known moons, but only Titan is
    big
  • F ion tails point away from Sun

7
Rest of Answers
  • 9) A -- iron rust gives Mars its red color
  • 10) E -- densities between 1.3 and 2 g/cm3
    icerock
  • 11) C -- 1/D 1/R - 1/P here R2.00 d, P
    8.00 d so 1/D 1/2 - 1/8 3/8 and D 8/3 d
    2.67 d
  • 12) C -- rocky core, liquid metallic H2, liquid
    gas H2
  • 13) C -- 4 km/s and eventually escapes Vth(3kT/
    mmole)1/2 (and Vesc (2GM/R)1/2
    ) Vth(H2)/Vth(O2) (mO/mH)1/2 (32/2)1/2
    4 and as Vth(O2) 1 km/s, Vth(H2) 4 km/s
  • Since Vth(H2) gt (1/6) Vesc 2 km/s the H2 will
    eventually escape

8
Asteroid Classes and Physical Properties
  • C-type (Carbonaceous) majority, darkest,
    dominate farther out, ? ? 1.3 g/cm3, porous?
  • S-type (silicate) reflect more light, more in
    inner belt, ? ? 2.0 g/cm3
  • Biggest in the Asteroid Belt Ceres (D 940 km),
    Pallas (580 km), Vesta (540 km)--probably
    had volcanoes
  • Some are binary from Earth --- Pallas, from
    Space (Galileo) --- Ida ( Dactyl) frequent
    collisions ? moons
  • New are Quaoar past Pluto at 42 AU, (D 1300
    km), the 3rd biggest Plutino -- very icy so
    really more like comets
  • Sedna very eccentric, a ? 480 AU, D ? 1800 km --
    currently at 75 AU, most distant Kuiper belt
    object known

9
Space Mission to Asteroids
  • Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous NEAR
  • Took close-up photos of Mathilde (C-type about
    60x50 km) in 1997
  • Orbited and crash-landed into Eros
    (S-type34x11x11km) in 2001. Inset young area
    where rubble filled in craters

10
Danger from Space!!!
  • When earth crossing asteroids hit the earth, the
    energy of the impact can be huge speeds 20
    km/s
  • Even modest (100 m size) meteoroids can produce
    big craters (every 200,000 yr or so)
  • Extinctions from massive amounts of debris kicked
    into the atmosphere, blocking sunlight for years
    and killing plants (every 70,000,000 yrs or so)
    -- last one _at_ Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary
    66,000,000 yr ago

Manicouagan reservoir in Quebec 70 km in
diameter hit by meteoroid 2x108 yr ago
11
COMETS Dirty Ice-balls
Seen as bright trails across the sky COMPONENTS
  • NUCLEUS --- typically 10 km across When
    warm enough the ice SUBLIMATES
  • COMA --- gases sublimated from nucleus
  • HYDROGEN ENVELOPE --- 106 km
  • IONIZED TAIL --- pushed directly away from the
    Sun, by the SOLAR WIND up to an AU
  • DUST TAIL --- curved, due to inertia of heavier
    dust particles wanting to follow orbit

12
Cometary Structure (Halley)
13
Anatomy of a Comet Movie
14
Cometary Tails
  • Halley (last slide)
  • ?Giacobini-Zinner (1959) ion tail over 5x105 km
  • ?Hale-Bopp (1997) showed both ion and dust tails,
    streching over 40O

15
COMETARY ORBITS
  • Very elliptical orbits, many highly inclined
  • Usually FROZEN warm up near 5 AU
  • Most nuclei in OORT CLOUD 10,000 -- 50,000 AU
    originated closer, ejected by jovian planets long
    ago
  • Short period comets KUIPER BELT --- formed
    outside Neptune over 1000 known, so over 100,000
    gt 100 km
  • Many molecules found in their spectra CH4, NH3,
    CO2 H2O

16
Tail Directions and Density
  • Tails basically point away from the Sun, but dust
    tails form later and are more curved
  • As the comet recedes from Sun, its tail is in
    front of it!
  • VERY POROUS w/ ? 0.1 g/cm3

17
Comet Deep-FreezersThe Oort Cloud and Kuiper
Belt
18
Pluto King of the Kuiper Belt Objects
  • Pluto isnt much bigger than several other KBOs,
    especially Sedna, probably about the same size
    and Eris, which is probably somewhat bigger.
  • So Pluto should be called a Minor Planet (aka
    asteroid or KBO) not a (Major) Planet

19
Kuiper Belt Objects Pluto
  • Eris, Pluto other big KBOs
  • Pluto has 4 moons Charon, Nix Hydra
  • Surface in true color made during eclipses of
    Pluto by Charon (and vice versa)

20
FAMOUS COMETS Halleys
  • In 1705 Edmund Halley recognized several
    historical apparitions as recurrent 76 year
    period calculated orbit
  • Predicted its return in 1758 --- confirmed
    Newton's Laws
  • As seen in 1910 (spectacular) and 1986 (much less
    so)
  • Vega 2 Giotto flew by came very close in
    1986 showed it to be irregular (15 by 10 km),
    very dark, with jets streaming from cracked outer
    layers

21
Halleys Comets Nucleus Resolved
  • Picture taken by ESAs Giotto -- 50 m resolution.
    Brightest jets from gas and dust from nucleus

22
Hale-Bopp Nucleus Animation
23
FAMOUS COMETS Shoemaker-Levy 9
  • Discovered in 1993 while heading for Jupiter
  • Tides shredded and trapped it
  • Hit atmosphere in July 1994 big splashes above
    clouds
  • Effects in atm seen for months

24
Deep Impact Mission
  • Collision w/ Comet Tempel 1 on July 4 2005
  • Impactor gouged out a large hole while main
    satellite used photography and spectroscopy to
    probe composition

25
METEOROIDS, METEORS, METEORITES
  • METEOROID ANY DEBRIS lt 100 m SIZE
  • METEORS or Shooting Stars
  • Bright flashes in our atmosphere
  • Most completely destroyed dust or pebbles
  • Rocks are brighter, some survive to become
    METEORITES

26
METEOR SHOWERS many more than usual
  • bigger dust lost by a comet left in the same
    orbit for many years comets eventually are worn
    out
  • when Earth crosses the tail, they appear to
    RADIATE from a constellation
  • Perseid on Aug 11, 50/hr (Swift-Tuttle)
  • Draconid on Oct 9, 500/hr (Giacobini-Zimmer)
  • Leonid on Nov 16, 10/hr (up to 1000/min) (Tuttle)
  • Brightest meteors from big independent Meteoroids

27
METEORITES Messengers from Space
  • Main CLASSES
  • STONY (93 of FALLS)
    --Most are S-type, basically
    rocky w/o chondrules, or achondritic -- these are
    the most common type to land.

    --Many are Carbonaceous
    --Rare primitive
    CARBONACEOUS CHONDRITES
  • STONY-IRON
  • IRON -- very rare, but easily recognized so most
    commonly found type.
  • All have densities more like asteroids than
    comets

28
Big Meteorites
Ahnighito, about 34 tons Wabar, about 2 tons
29
Meteorite Types
  • Stony (silicate) showing a dark crust from
    melting during passage through atmosphere
  • Iron showing crystalline structure on polished
    and etched surface

30
Origins of Meteorites
  • Many left from Solar System formation 4.55 Gyr
    old
  • Primitive mainly stony which condensed in inner
    SS and carbon rich ones that formed in outer
    asteroid belt)
  • Asteroid fragments --- show evidence of heating
  • Processed from differentiated objects, some
    like lava flows, so from the surface others
    metallic, so from the cores of smashed asteroids
  • Blasted off the Moon --- many inclusions (rare)
  • Ejected from Mars --- different abundances of
    trapped gases (really rare)

31
PLANETS AROUND OTHER STARS?
  • First evidence DUST DISKS around nearby young
    stars.
  • Such disks often had holes in the center likely
    to be areas cleared out by planets.
  • Spitzer ST of Fomalhut dust disk Hubble ST of HR
    4796A

32
Resonably Direct Evidence
  • Only since 1994 (51 Pegasi)
  • Very accurate RADIAL VELOCITIES (50 m/s) of stars
    indicate tugs from much less massive objects with
    periods of days to years.

33
Doppler shifts show Extrasolar planets around 51
Pegasi Upsilon Andromedae (3)
  • SECOND WAY Very precise ASTROMETRY (0.002
    arcsec) could indicate wobbles in stars' paths
    over years which are also due to companions

34
Statistics of Extrasolar Planets
  • As of 2009, gt 400 good indirect planet detections
    Dozens of stars have multiple planets
    detected
  • Both techniques Much easier to detect close,
    multi-Jupiter mass planets, so, most found are
    more massive than Jupiter but a few Neptune
    have been estimated

35
Surprise Hot Jupiters within 1 AU!
  • Formed in situ survive heat and wind?
  • Migrated inward through nebular disk?
  • Are these the typical planetary systems or just a
    selection effect? IS OUR SOLAR SYSTEM WEIRD?
  • A few planets transits have been seen after orbit
    known from radial velocity curves, confirming
    them for sure!

36
Other Searches for Extrasolar Planets
  • Direct evidence preferred we want an IMAGE!
  • Imaging via blocking out light of star
    coronagraph (IR much better than visible since
    ratio less extreme)
  • Finally done in 2009
  • Interferometry could separate very nearby points
    Space Interferometry Mission being planned
    (2012)
  • Next stage Earths, not just Jupiters
  • Kepler mission currently looking for transits
    (2009) found 1
  • Giving info on atmospheres of jovian exoplanets
  • Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence (SETI)
  • How? radio signals, optical (laser) signals,
    visits???
  • See Astronomy 1020 (Chapter 28)

37
Congratulations!
  • Youve survived (well, only one exams left)
    Astronomy 1010.
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