Title: Announcements
1Announcements
2Outline
- The structure of the solar System
3The Layout of the Solar System
- Large bodies in the Solar System have orderly
motions - planets orbit counterclockwise in same plane
- orbits are almost circular
- the Sun and most planets rotate counterclockwise
- most moons orbit counterclockwise
4Comparative Planetology
- Studying the similarities among and differences
between the planets - this includes moons, asteroids, comets
- This approach is useful for learning about
- the physical processes which shape the planets
- the origin and history of our Solar System
- the nature of planetary systems around other stars
5The Layout of the Solar System
- Planets fall into two main categories
- Terrestrial (i.e. Earth-like)
- Jovian (i.e. Jupiter-like or gaseous)
6Mars
Neptune
Terrestrial
Jovian
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8The Layout of the Solar System
- Swarms of asteroids and comets populate the Solar
System
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10A Few Exceptions to the Rules
- Both Uranus Pluto are tilted on their sides.
- Venus rotates backwards (i.e. clockwise).
- Triton orbits Neptune backwards.
- Earth is the only terrestrial planet with a
relatively large moon.
11The Sun King of the Solar System
- How does the Sun influence the planets?
- Its gravity regulates the orbits of the planets.
- Its heat is the primary factor which determines
the temperature of the planets. - It provides practically all of the visible light
in the Solar System. - High-energy particles streaming out from the Sun
influence planetary atmospheres and magnetic
fields.
12Terrestrial Planet Surfaces
How do they compare to one another?
13Inside the Terrestrial Worlds
- After they have formed, the molten planets
differentiate into three zones - core - made of metals
- mantle - made of dense rock
- crust - made of less dense rock
- Lithosphere - the rigid, outer layer
- of crust part of the mantle which
- does not deform easily
determined by composition
determined by internal heat
14Inside the Terrestrial Worlds
15Inside the Terrestrial Worlds
active geology
inactive geology
16Heating the Terrestrial Worlds
- Planetary interiors heat up through
- accretion
- differentiation
- radioactivity
Supplies all the heat at the beginning
Supplies heat throughout the planets life
17Cooling the Terrestrial Worlds
- Planets cool off through
- conduction - heat flowing on the microscopic
level - convection - heat flowing on the macroscopic
level (bulk motions) - eruptions - hot lava bursts through crust
- the larger the planet, the longer it takes to
cool off!
18Magnetic Fields
- Electric charges moving via convection in a
molten iron core and spinning acts like an
electromagnet ? magnetic field - Earth has a magnetic field
- Venus, Mars, the Moon do not
- Mercury surprisingly has a weak magnetic field ??
- To have a magnetic field a planet must have
significant rotation (which helps circulate the
molten core) as well as a significant metallic
core
19Shaping Planetary Surfaces
- Major geological processes that shape planetary
surfaces - impact cratering excavation of surface by
asteroids or comets striking the planet - volcanism eruption of lava from interior
- tectonics disruption of lithosphere by internal
stresses - erosion wearing down by wind, water, ice
20Impact Cratering
- objects hit planet at 10 70 km/s
- solid rock is vaporized
- a crater is excavated
- matter is ejected in all directions
- craters are circular
- large craters have a central peak
21Counting Craters to find Surface Age
- The older the surface, the more craters are
present. - Cratering rate decreased as Solar Systems aged.
22Volcanism
- Underground, molten rock, called magma, breaks
through cracks in the lithosphere. - Trapped gases are released
- H2O, CO2, N2 This provides planets with an
atmosphere! - Viscosity of lava (typically basalt) determines
type of volcano
23Tectonics
- convection cells in the mantle cause both
- compression in lithosphere
- mountains are produced
- extension in lithosphere
- valleys are produced
- mountains valleys appear on the surface
24Erosion
- movement of rock by ice, liquid, or gas
- valleys shaped by glaciers
- canyons carved by rivers
- sand blown by wind
- erosion not only wears down features, it also
builds them - sand dunes
- river deltas
- sedimentary rock
25The Moon (?)
highlands older surface more craters
mare (sea) younger surface 3 4 billion
yrs fewer craters dark basalt
heavily cratered, no atmosphere, geologically
inactive
26Mercury
- dead planet with no atmosphere
- has no maria, but small lava plains
- has fewer craters than the Moon
- evidence for ice at the N pole
- tectonic stresses
- 3 km-high cliffs, 100s km long
- formed when crust contracted
- no evidence for expansion features
- implies the entire planet shrunk!
27Mars
- mountains canyons
- Valles Marineris- evidence of past tectonics
- no tectonics today
- thin atmosphere (CO2)
- evidence for water erosion
- Olympus Mons
- the largest volcano in our Solar System
- it is located atop the Tharsis Bulge along with
several other volcanoes
28Four images of Mars in one Martian DaySummer in
North, Winter in South
- Mars has a rotation period axis tilt almost
identical to Earths - this implies that Mars has seasons
- look at the ice caps (CO2 H2O)
29Where are the Martians?
- These seasonal similarities fuelled speculation
that Mars could be habitable. - In 1877, Schiaparelli sketched a series of lines
on Mars which he called canali. - In the 1890s, Percival Lowell sketched a network
of canals. - Lowell published speculations about a Martian
civilization - early 20th Century conventional wisdom held that
Mars was inhabited - space probes sent to Mars in 1960s, 70s, 90s have
proved this false
30Ancient Water on Mars
- Liquid water can not exist on Mars today.
- temperatures below freezing
- air pressure too low
- Dry river channels in southern highlands
- heavily cratered terrain ( 3 billion years old)
- Some craters are eroded.
- implies rainfall
- crater lakes
- Mars was warm wet over 3 billion years ago.
31Recent Water on Mars?
- Liquid water could exist temporarily with todays
temperatures and air pressuresin a flash flood! - Underground water seeps out to form erosion
gullies - these gullies were observed on a crater wall
- at their size, sandstorms would cover them in few
million yrs - such floods have occurred within the last few
million years - Maps of the hydrogen content of the soil suggest
frozen water within a meter of the surface
32Venus
- Has a thick, cloudy atmosphere -- you can not
visually see the surface - we must image the surface using radar
- smooth plains with few mountain ranges
- few craters
- many volcanoes and domes of lava (corona)
- Venus is very active with tectonics volcanism
33Volcanism on Venus
- Impact craters are evenly spread over Venusian
surface. - implies that the planets entire surface is the
same age - crater counting suggests an age of 1 billion
years old - Volcanism paved over the surface 1 billion
years ago.
- Two types of volcanism are observed
- shield volcanoes
- stratovolcanoes
34Tectonics on Venus
- The corona is a tectonic feature.
- rising plume in mantle pushes crust up
- cause circular stretch marks
- Plume forces magma to the surface.
- volcanoes are found nearby
35Lack of Erosion on Venus
- No erosion features are seen on Venus. (so far)
- This means no wind, rain, or ice on the surface.
- Such a lack of weather can be explained
- the surface of Venus is very hot (430 C) too hot
for liquid or ice to exist - Venus rotates very slowly (P 243 days), so no
wind is generated
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38Geological Destiny
A planets fundamental properties determine its
geological fate.
- Impact cratering
- important early on
- affects all planets equally
- Volcanism Tectonics
- become dominant later on
- require internal heat
- size determines how long a planet remains hot
- Erosion
- ultimately dominant
- requires volcanism for outgassing of atmosphere
planet size determines fate
39Earth
- most active geology
- volcanoes tectonics
- ongoing plate tectonics
- moderate atmosphere
- N2 O2 H2O
- H2O exists in liquid state
- rampant erosion
- few craters
- life
40Comparing Terrestrial Atmospheres
41What is an Atmosphere?
- A layer of gas which surrounds a world is called
an atmosphere. - they are usually very thin compared to planet
radius - Pressure is created by atomic molecular
collisions in an atmosphere. - heating a gas in a confined space increases
pressure - number of collisions increase
- unit of measure 1 bar 14.7 lbs/inch2 Earths
atmospheric pressure at sea level - Pressure balances gravity in an atmosphere.
- This is called hydrostatic or gravitational
equilibrium
42Effects of an Atmosphere on a Planet
- greenhouse effect
- makes the planetary surface warmer than it would
be otherwise - scattering and absorption of light
- absorb high-energy radiation from the Sun
- scattering of optical light brightens the daytime
sky - creates pressure
- can allow water to exist as a liquid (at the
right temperature) - creates wind and weather
- promotes erosion of the planetary surface
43The Greenhouse Effect
- Visible Sunlight passes through a planets
atmosphere. - Some of this light is absorbed by the planets
surface. - Planet re-emits this energy (heat) as infrared
(IR) light. - planets temperature lower than Sun
- IR light is trapped by the atmosphere.
- its return to space is slowed
- This causes the overall surface temperature to be
higher than if there were no atmosphere at all.
44Greenhouse Gases
- Key to Greenhouse Effectgases which absorb IR
light effectively - water H2O
- carbon dioxide CO2
- methane CH4
- These are molecules which rotate and vibrate
easily. - they re-emit IR light in a random direction
- The more greenhouse gases which are present, the
greater the amount of surface warming.
45Planetary Energy Balance
- Solar energy received by a planet must balance
the energy it returns to space - planet can either reflect or emit the energy as
radiation - this is necessary for the planet to have a stable
temperature
46What Determines a Planets Surface Temperature?
- Greenhouse Effect cannot change incoming
Sunlight, so it cannot change the total energy
returned to space. - it increases the energy (heat) in lower
atmosphere - it works like a blanket
- In the absence of the Greenhouse Effect, what
would determine a planets surface temperature? - the planet's distance from the Sun
- the planets overall reflectivity
- the higher the albedo, the less light absorbed,
planet cooler - Earths average temperature would be 17º C (1º
F) without the Greenhouse Effect
47What Determines a Planets Surface Temperature?
48Greenhouse Effect on the Planets
- Greenhouse Effect warms Venus, Earth, Mars
- on Venus it is very strong
- on Earth it is moderate
- on Mars it is weak
- avg. temp. on Venus Earth would be freezing
without it
49Structure of Earths Atmosphere
- pressure density of atmosphere decrease with
altitude - temperature varies back and forth with altitude
- these temperature variations define the major
atmospheric layers
- exosphere
- low density fades into space
- thermosphere
- temp begins to rise at the top
- stratosphere
- rise and fall of temp
- troposphere
- layer closest to surface
- temp drops with altitude
50Atmospheres Interact with Light
- X rays
- ionize atoms molecules
- dissociate molecules
- absorbed by almost all gases
- Ultraviolet (UV)
- dissociate some molecules
- absorbed well by O3 H2O
- Visible (V)
- passes right through gases
- some photons are scattered
- Infrared (IR)
- absorbed by greenhouse gases
51Reasons for Atmospheric Structure
- Light interactions are responsible for the
structure we see. - Troposphere
- absorbs IR photons from the surface
- temperature drops with altitude
- hot air rises and high gas density causes storms
(convection) - Stratosphere
- lies above the greenhouse gases (no IR
absorption) - absorbs heat via Solar UV photons which
dissociate ozone (O3) - UV penetrates only top layer hotter air is above
colder air - no convection or weather the atmosphere is
stratified - Thermosphere
- absorbs heat via Solar X-rays which ionizes all
gases - contains ionosphere, which reflects back human
radio signals - Exosphere
- hottest layer gas extremely rarified provides
noticeable drag on satellites
52Structure of Terrestrial Planet Atmospheres
- Mars, Venus, Earth all
- have warm tropospheres (and greenhouse gases)
- have warm thermospheres which absorb Solar X rays
- Only Earth has
- a warm stratosphere
- an UV-absorbing gas (O3)
- All three planets have warmer surface temps due
to greenhouse effect
53Global Wind Patterns
- air heated more at equator
- warm air rises at equator heads for poles
- cold air moves towards equator along the surface
- two circulation cells are created in each
hemisphere
- cells do not go directly from pole to equator
air circulation is diverted by - Coriolis effect
- moving objects veer right on a surface rotating
counterclockwise - moving objects veer left on a surface rotating
clockwise
54Global Wind Patterns
- On Earth, the Coriolis effect breaks each
circulation cell into three separate cells - winds move either W to E or E to W
- Coriolis effect not strong on Mars Venus
- Mars is too small
- Venus rotates too slowly
- In thick Venusian atmosphere, the pole-to-equator
circulation cells distribute heat efficiently - surface temperature is uniform all over the
planet
55Four Major Factors which affect Long-term Climate
Change
56Gain Processes of Atmospheric Gas
- Unlike the Jovian planets, the terrestrials were
too small to capture significant gas from the
Solar nebula. - What gas they did capture was H He, and it
escaped - Present-day atmospheres must have formed at a
later time
- Sources of atmospheric gas
- outgassing release of gas trapped in interior
rock by volcanism - evaporation/sublimation surface liquids or ices
turn to gas when heated - bombardment micrometeorites, Solar wind
particles, or high-energy photons blast
atoms/molecules out of surface rock - occurs only if the planet has no substantial
atmosphere already
57Loss Processes of Atmospheric Gas
- Ways to lose atmospheric gas
- condensation gas turns into liquids or ices on
the surface when cooled - chemical reactions gas is bound into surface
rocks or liquids - stripping gas is knocked out of the upper
atmosphere by Solar wind particles - impacts a comet/asteroid collision with a
planet can blast atmospheric gas into space - thermal escape lightweight gas molecules are
lost to space when they achieve escape velocity
gas is lost forever!
58Origin of the Terrestrial Atmospheres
- Venus, Earth, Mars received their atmospheres
through outgassing. - most common gases H2O, CO2, N2, H2S, SO2
- Chemical reactions caused CO2 on Earth to
dissolve in oceans and go into carbonate rocks
(like limestone.) - this occurred because H2O could exist in liquid
state - N2 was left as the dominant gas O2 was exhaled
by plant life - as the dominant gas on Venus, CO2 caused strong
greenhouse effect - Mars lost much of its atmosphere through impacts
- less massive planet, lower escape velocity
59Origin of the Terrestrial Atmospheres
- Lack of magnetospheres on Venus Mars made
stripping by the Solar wind significant. - further loss of atmosphere on Mars
- dissociation of H2O, H2 thermally escapes on
Venus - Gas and liquid/ice exchange occurs through
condensation and evaporation/sublimation - on Earth with H2O
- on Mars with CO2
- Since Mercury the Moon have no substantial
atmosphere, fast particles and high-energy
photons reach their surfaces - bombardment creates a rarified exosphere
60Martian Weather Today
- Seasons on Mars are more extreme than on Earth
- Mars orbit is more elliptical
- CO2 condenses sublimes at opposite poles
- changes in atmospheric pressure drive
pole-to-pole winds - sometimes cause huge dust storms
61Martian Weather N Polar Ice Cap Dust Storm
62Climate History of Mars
- More than 3 billion years ago, Mars must have had
a thick CO2 atmosphere and a strong greenhouse
effect. - the so-called warm and wet period
- Eventually CO2 was lost to space.
- some gas was lost to impacts
- cooling interior meant loss of magnetic field
- Solar wind stripping removed gas
- Greenhouse effect weakened until Mars froze.
63Venusian Weather Today
- Venus has no seasons to speak of.
- rotation axis is nearly 90º to the ecliptic plane
- Venus has little wind at its surface
- rotates very slowly, so there is no Coriolis
effect - The surface temperature stays constant all over
Venus. - thick atmosphere distributes heat via two large
circulation cells - There is no rain on the surface.
- it is too hot and Venus has almost no H2O
- Venusian clouds contain sulfuric acid!
- implies recent volcanic outgassing?
64Climate History of Venus
- Venus should have outgassed as much H2O as Earth.
- Early on, when the Sun was dimmer, Venus may have
had oceans of water - Venus proximity to the Sun caused all H2O to
evaporate. - H2O caused runaway greenhouse effect
- surface heated to extreme temperature
- UV photons from Sun dissociate H2O H2 escapes, O
is stripped
65Earths Carbon Dioxide Concentration
- The rise of carbon dioxide concentrations as
measured on Mauna Loa, Hawaii.