Title: Minor Bits of the Solar System
1Minor Bits of the Solar System
- Asteroids, Comets and Meteoroids Extrasolar
Planets too!
Nucleus of Comet Wild2
2ASTEROIDS 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)
3Asteroid 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
4Kirkwood Gaps Resonances with Jupiter
5Last 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.
6Answers 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
7Rest 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
8Asteroid 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
9Space 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
10Danger 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
12Cometary Structure (Halley)
13Anatomy of a Comet Movie
14Cometary 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
16Tail 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
17Comet Deep-FreezersThe Oort Cloud and Kuiper
Belt
18Pluto 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
19Kuiper 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)
20FAMOUS 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
21Halleys Comets Nucleus Resolved
- Picture taken by ESAs Giotto -- 50 m resolution.
Brightest jets from gas and dust from nucleus
22Hale-Bopp Nucleus Animation
23FAMOUS 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
24Deep 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
26METEOR 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
28Big Meteorites
Ahnighito, about 34 tons Wabar, about 2 tons
29Meteorite Types
- Stony (silicate) showing a dark crust from
melting during passage through atmosphere - Iron showing crystalline structure on polished
and etched surface
30Origins 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
32Resonably 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.
33Doppler 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
34Statistics 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
35Surprise 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!
36Other 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)
37Congratulations!
- Youve survived (well, only one exams left)
Astronomy 1010.