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Astronomy 330

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Driven by the heat rising through the mantel. Largest and rarest are vast flows ... Collision zone - results in folded mountains (e.g. Himalayas, Appalachians) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Astronomy 330


1
Astronomy 330
  • Lecture 7

The Earth and Moon as seen by Voyager 1
2
Astronomy 330 Volcanoes
  • Driven by the heat rising through the mantel
  • Largest and rarest are vast flows of lava which
    create flat plains (Lunar maria)
  • Eruptions through fissures in the crust are more
    common

3
Astronomy 330 Volcanoes
  • Shield volcanoes - Shield shaped, caused by
    repeated eruptions of fluid lavas (e.g. Mauna Loa
    volcano in Hawaii)
  • Composite volcanoes - Steep sided, cone shaped,
    created by violent eruptions which build and
    destroy the cone (e.g. Mt. St. Helens, Mt. Fuji),
    formed by the fall-back of plumes of viscous lava

4
Astronomy 330 Other Geologic Activity
  • Glaciers, erosion by water
  • Causes sedimentation, material washed off
    continents and deposited in the oceans

5
Astronomy 330 Craters
  • Where are they on Earth ? The Moon has many
    craters, the Earth has few.
  • Earth has been cleaned of craters by erosion,
    volcanism, and mountain building through plate
    tectonics
  • Can see evidence of large impacts from space
  • Note We will discuss craters in more detail
    later, but FYI cratering events were more common
    in that past in the young solar system, the Earth
    is just as susceptible to cratering as other
    planets and their satellites

6
Astronomy 330 Craters
  • Meteors hit the Earth daily, the atmosphere
    protects the Earth and small craters do not form
  • Roughly one meteor every 100 years is large
    enough to hit the Earth and make a crater
  • Large cratering events are theorized to cause
    mass extinctions

7
Astronomy 330 Craters
  • Images from Earth Impact Database, 2003.
    lthttp//www.unb.ca/passc/ImpactDatabase/gt
    (Accessed 08/02/2005)

8
Astronomy 330 Craters
  • Images from Earth Impact Database, 2003.
    lthttp//www.unb.ca/passc/ImpactDatabase/gt
    (Accessed 08/02/2005)

9
Astronomy 330 Plate Tectonics
  • Theory first proposed by Alfred Wegener
  • Rocks on either side of the Atlantic are very
    similar
  • Continents fit together like the pieces of a
    jig-saw puzzle (e.g. Africa and South America)
  • Continents must move, Africa and Eurasia are
    separating from North and South America, there
    should be volcanic activity in the central
    Atlantic where plates are pulling apartIceland

10
Astronomy 330 Plate Tectonics
  • Observation of mid-Atlantic ridge showed
    volcanoes formed at plate boundaries are forced
    apart, lava flows in to form new crust
  • Tectonic - Any forces which stress a planet and
    how the crust of the planet responds
  • Plate tectonics appears to only operate on the
    Earth
  • Lithosphere - the upper layer of the Earth which
    comprises the continental plates, the crust plus
    the upper mantel.

11
Astronomy 330 Plate tectonics
  • Convection in the mantle drives plate tectonics
  • Detected by measurements of magnetic orientation
    of rocks on the floor of the Atlantic
  • Plates move a few centimeters a year
  • Has been measured directly using GPS

12
Astronomy 330 Plate Tectonics
Image from http//pubs.usgs.gov/publications/text
/dynamic.html
13
Astronomy 330 Plate Tectonics
  • At the boundaries between plates several
    behaviors are possible
  • Spreading creates a rift zone (e.g. in mid
    Atlantic)
  • Subduction zone - when one plate dives under
    another into the mantel (eastern Pacific)
  • Collision zone - results in folded mountains
    (e.g. Himalayas, Appalachians)
  • Fault zones - plates grind past one another (e.g.
    California)

14
Astronomy 330 The Cycle of Plate Tectonics and
Erosion
  • Sediments erode off of continents into oceans (2
    km thick in some places)
  • Crust destroyed in rift zones (the max. age of
    any oceanic crust is 100 million years)
  • Volcanoes create new crust by returning mantle
    material to the surface

15
Astronomy 330 Heat Transfer
  • Ultimately the geologic activity of the Earth is
    driven by the transfer of heat from the interior
    to the surface
  • Conduction and convection are the most important
    in the Earth (Recall convection and radiation in
    the Sun).
  • Volcanic activity is a sign of convection in the
    interior of planet
  • Plate tectonics is driven by convection in the
    mantle

16
Astronomy 330 Continental Crust
  • Composed mostly of granites
  • Lighter and less dense materialfloats on top of
    the mantle
  • The continents slowly grow, but are not destroyed
    as quickly as the oceanic crust. Material not
    eroded as quickly as material is added.
  • Over time the continents have been pushed great
    distances over the surface of the Earth. At one
    point they were all bunched together with Africa
    at the South Pole.

17
Astronomy 330 Continents
  • Formation of continents is aided by the collision
    of plates, mountain building, metamorphic rocks
    (marble) are created here

Sedimentary Rock
Igneous Rock
A typical mountain
18
Astronomy 330 The Hydrosphere
  • Covers 70 of the Earths surface
  • Comprises all oceans, lakes, rivers
  • Presence makes Earth unique among the planets

19
Astronomy 330 Ocean Composition
  • Mostly H2O plus NaCl and other soluble salts
  • Soluble salts make up 3.5 of the mass of the
    oceans - chlorine, sodium, magnesium, sulfur,
    calcium, and potassium
  • Inflow from weathering of rocks
  • Outflow - precipitation into sediments (e.g.
    calcium is incorporated in limestones, also into
    the shells of marine creatures)

20
Astronomy 330 Ocean Composition
  • Gases dissolve in the Ocean as well
  • Most important are O2 and CO2
  • O2 content in the oceans is less than in the
    atmosphere
  • There is 60 times more CO2 in the oceans than in
    the atmospherethe oceans act as an effective
    sink for CO2 in the atmosphere

21
Astronomy 330 Ocean Temperature
  • The Oceans are an immense heat reservoir
  • The average Temp. is about 4 degrees C
  • It is 30 degree C at the equator near the surface
  • Freezing or lower at the polar caps
  • 1 km deep the temp is constant
  • Water is heated near rift regions, volcanic vents
    recently discovered, new forms of life which
    thrive without the Sun. Is there a similar
    environment on Europa ?

22
Astronomy 330 Volcanic Vents
Image from http//dwb.unl.edu/Teacher/NSF/C11/C11L
inks/www.pmel.noaa.gov/vents/PlumeStudies/PlumeStu
dies1.html
23
Astronomy 330 Europa
Image from http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/pro
file.cfm?ObjectJup_Europa
24
Astronomy 330
  • Weather only has an effect on the top few meters
    of the oceans

25
Astronomy 330 The Atmosphere
  • Composition
  • N2 - 78
  • O2 - 21
  • Ar - 1
  • CO2 - 0.036
  • Pressure in the atmosphere is the product of
    surface gravity x the mass of the atmosphere
    above the point where you are measuring it, its
    the weight of the column of air above you
  • Bodies with lower surface gravities will tend to
    have low surface pressures,if they have an
    atmosphere at all

26
Astronomy 330 The Atmosphere
  • Oxygen and Carbon Dioxide are very reactive
    substances and participate in complicated cycles
  • If the Earth were slightly hotter, CO2 would be
    released from the oceans, greenhouse effect would
    warm the atmosphere even more, the oceans would
    boil away resulting in a massive heavy atmosphere
    (like on Venus)
  • If it was slightly colder, all water would
    freeze, creating a snowball Earth (like on Mars
    ?)
  • Only within a very narrow temperature range can
    the Earth have an N2 dominated atmosphere w.
    abundant liquid water.

27
Astronomy 330 Lifes Impact
  • Life has a large impact on the Earths atmosphere
  • Without it the Earths atmosphere would be mostly
    CO2 N2 Ar like Venus or Mars (In Earths
    early stage it was like this)
  • Plants absorb H2O and CO2 to produce Oxygen
  • Analysis of rock compositions shows that a
    transition from a reducing to an oxidizing
    atmosphere occurred about 1-2 billions years ago.

28
Astronomy 330 Structure of Earths Atmosphere
  • Pressure drops rapidly with height
  • Temperature also drops with height
  • Water vapor is concentrated near the Earths
    surface and drops with height

29
Astronomy 330 Structure of Earths Atmosphere
Height above surface
Ionosphere - forms space, atmosphere boundary,
ions due to solar wind and solar UV, X-rays,
electron Density reaches a maximum at about 160 km
140 km
Thermosphere - here temp begins to increase with
height
120 km
30-50 km
Stratosphere - No convection, constant
temperature, Temp -60 deg. C, No water vapor
10 km
Tropopause - -60 deg C, or 213 K
Troposphere - 90 of atmospheres mass, weather,
convection due to solar heating, Temp steadily
decreases, water cycle (clouds-rain-runoff-evapora
tion)
30
Astronomy 330 Weather and Climate
  • Weather is the short time-scale changes of the
    atmosphere ( days)
  • Climate is the long time-scale evolution (
    years, centuries)
  • Energy from the Sun which is absorbed by the
    Earths surface drives convection
  • Some energy is reflected into space, some is
    absorbed, effected by snow/ice cover, cloud cover

31
Astronomy 330 Climate and Weather
Sun light in
30 reflected (clouds, ice, deserts)
Rest radiated in IR
Energy radiated from surface is absorbed by
atmosphere, and reradiated.
32
Astronomy 330 Greenhouse Effect
  • Certain gases are very efficient at absorbing
    radiation in the IR, but are NOT opaque to light
    in the visible range
  • Greenhouse gases H2O, CO2, CFCs, other
    hydrocarbons
  • We would be dead without the greenhouse effect in
    operation !!!!

33
Astronomy 330 Atmospheric Circulation
  • Driven by heating by Sun (convection) and the
    Earths rotation
  • Heat near the equator wants to travel to the
    cold poles of the Earth
  • North-South traveling winds are deflected by the
    Coriolis Forces due to the rotation of the Earth

34
Astronomy 330 Atmospheric Circulation
Polar cells
Ferell cells
Hadley cells
Sunlight in
35
Astronomy 330 Atmospheric Circulation
  • Coriolis Forces are a consequence of conservation
    of momentum
  • Creates cyclones, counter clockwise in the
    northern hemisphere, clockwise in the southern

36
Astronomy 330 The Earths Magnetosphere
  • Formed by the interaction of the Solar wind with
    the Earths magnetic field
  • We would be dead without it !!! Composed of
  • High energy solar wind particles
  • Escaping atoms and ions from Earths atmosphere
  • Cosmic ray impacts

37
Astronomy 330 The Earths Magnetosphere
Image from http//www-istp.gsfc.nasa.gov/Educatio
n/wms2.html
38
Astronomy 330 Reading
  • Read http//science.hq.nasa.gov/missions/earth-su
    n.html to get some information about current
    science missions involving the Earth and its
    interaction with space.
  • Watch the movie at http//www.windows.ucar.edu/cs
    em/
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