Title: Chapter 7 Our Planetary System
1Chapter 7Our Planetary System
Earth, as viewed by the Voyager spacecraft
2What does the solar system look like?
3- Eight major planets with nearly circular orbits
- Pluto is smaller than the major planets and has a
more elliptical orbit
4- Planets all orbit in same direction and nearly in
same plane
http//observe.phy.sfasu.edu/courses/ast105/lectur
es105/chapter06/orbit_and_rotation_planets.htm
5Thought QuestionHow does the Earth-Sun distance
compare with the Suns radius
- Its about 10 times larger.
- Its about 50 times larger.
- Its about 200 times larger.
- Its about 1000 times larger.
6Thought QuestionHow does the Earth-Sun distance
compare with the Suns radius
- Its about 10 times larger.
- Its about 50 times larger.
- Its about 200 times larger.
- Its about 1000 times larger.
7Bodes Law
- a simple rule that gives the distances of the
planets from the Sun
where N0, 3, 6, 12, 24for Mercury, Venus,
Earth, Mars, etc.
8 Planet N Bodes Law Radii
True Orbital Radii
Mercury 0 (04)/10 0.4 AU 0.39 AU
Venus 3 (34)/10 0.7 AU 0.72 AU
Earth 6 (64)/10 1.0 AU 1.00 AU
Mars 12 (124)/10 1.6 AU 1.52 AU
____ 24 (244)/10 2.8 AU _______
Ceres 24 2.88 AU
Jupiter 48 (484)/10 5.2 AU 5.2 AU
Saturn 96 (964)/10 10.0 AU 9.5 AU
Uranus 192 (1924)/10 19.6 AU 19.2 AU
Neptune ? ? 30.1 AU
Pluto 384 (3844)/10 38.8 AU 39.5 AU
9What does Bodes Law tell us?
- Bode's Law predicted that there should be a
planet between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. - The "missing planet" turned out to be the
asteroid belt.
10What are the major features of the Sun and
planets?
Sun and planets to scale
11What to know
- Main features
- Rock or Gas?
- Color?
- Rings?
- Clouds?
- Moons? Names of major moons
- Anything else that is odd or intersting.
12Planets are very tiny compared to distances
between them.
13Sun
- Over 99.9 of solar systems mass
- Made mostly of H/He gas (plasma)
- Converts 4 million tons of mass into energy each
second
14Mercury
- Made of metal and rock large iron core
- Desolate, cratered long, tall, steep cliffs
- Very hot and very cold 425C (day), 170C
(night) - No atmosphere
- Only slightly larger than Earths Moon.
15Venus
- Nearly identical in size to Earth surface
hidden by clouds - Hellish conditions due to an extreme greenhouse
effect - Even hotter than Mercury 470C, day and night
16Earth
Earth and Moon to scale
- An oasis of life
- The only surface liquid water in the solar
system - A surprisingly large moon
17- The Moon
- Many craters
- Maria
18Mars
- Looks almost Earth-like, knee high atmosphere
- Giant volcanoes (Olympus Mons), a huge canyon
(Valles Marineris), and polar caps (CO2). - Water flowed in the distant past could there
have been life?
19Moons of Mars
- Two small moons
- Phobos Greek for fear
- Deimos- Greek for dread or panic
20Jupiter
- Much farther from Sun than inner planets
- Mostly H/He no solid surface
- 300 times more massive than Earth
- Great Red Spot
- Many moons (60), rings
21Jupiters moons can be as interesting as planets
themselves, especially Jupiters four Galilean
moons
- Io (shown here) Active volcanoes all over
- Europa Possible subsurface ocean
- Ganymede Largest moon in solar system
- Callisto A large, cratered ice ball
22- Jupiter has a thin ice ring.
23Saturn
- Giant and gaseous like Jupiter
- Spectacular rings Cassinis Division
- Many moons, including cloudy Titan
- Cassini spacecraft currently studying it
24Rings are NOT solid they are made of countless
small chunks of ice and rock, each orbiting like
a tiny moon.
Artists conception
25 Cassini probe arrived July 2004 (Launched in
1997)
26Uranus
- Smaller than Jupiter/Saturn much larger than
Earth - Made of H/He gas hydrogen compounds (H2O, NH3,
CH4) - Extreme axis tilt
- Moons rings
27Neptune
- Similar to Uranus (except for axis tilt)
- Great Dark Spot
- Many moons (including Triton)
28Pluto (Not a Planet and not Red)
- Much smaller than any of the planets
- Icy, comet-like composition
- Its moon Charon is similar in size
29(No Transcript)
30Thought QuestionWhat process created the
elements from which the terrestrial planets were
made?
- The Big Bang
- Nuclear fusion in stars
- Chemical processes in interstellar clouds
- Their origin is unknown
31Thought QuestionWhat process created the
elements from which the terrestrial planets were
made?
- The Big Bang
- Nuclear fusion in stars
- Chemical processes in interstellar clouds
- Their origin is unknown
32What have we learned?
- What are the major features of the Sun and
planets? - Sun Over 99.9 of the mass
- Mercury A hot rock
- Venus Same size as Earth but much hotter
- Earth Only planet with liquid water on surface
- Mars Could have had liquid water in past
- Jupiter A gaseous giant with the great red spot
- Saturn Gaseous with spectacular rings
- Uranus A gas giant with a highly tilted axis
- Neptune Gas giant with great dark spot
- Pluto An icy misfit more like a comet than a
planet
33What features of the solar system provide clues
to how it formed?
34Motion of Large Bodies
- All large bodies in the solar system orbit in the
same direction and in nearly the same plane - Most also rotate in that direction
35Two Main Planet Types
- Terrestrial planets are rocky, relatively small,
and close to the Sun - Jovian planets are gaseous, larger, and farther
from Sun
36Swarms of Smaller Bodies
- Many rocky asteroids and icy comets populate the
solar system
37Notable Exceptions
- Several exceptions to the normal patterns need to
be explained
38Special Topic How did we learn the scale of the
solar system?
39Transit of Venus
- Apparent position of Venus on Sun during transit
depends on distances in solar system and your
position on Earth
Transit of Venus June 8, 2004
40Measuring Distance to Venus
- Measure apparent position of Venus on Sun from
two locations on Earth - Use trigonometry to determine Venus distance
from the distance between the two locations on
Earth
41How do robotic spacecraft work?
42Flybys
- A flyby mission flies by a planet just once
- Cheaper than other mission but have less time to
gather data
43Orbiters
- Go into orbit around another world
- More time to gather data but cannot obtain
detailed information about worlds surface
44Probes or Landers
- Land on surface of another world
- Explore surface in detail
45Sample Return Missions
- Land on surface of another world
- Gather samples
- Spacecraft designed to blast off other world and
return to Earth - Apollo missions to Moon are only sample return
missions to date
46Combination Spacecraft
- Cassini/Huygens mission contains both an orbiter
(Cassini) and a lander (Huygens)