Title: Vagabonds of the Solar System
1CHAPTER 9 Vagabonds of the Solar System
2WHAT DO YOU THINK?
- Are the asteroids a planet that was somehow
destroyed? - How far apart are the asteroids on average?
- Why do comets have tails?
- In which direction does a comets tail point?
- What is a shooting star?
3- You will discover
- that asteroids and meteroids are pieces of
interplanetary rock and metal - that comets are bodies containing large amounts
of ice and rocky debris - space debris that fall through the Earths
atmosphere - that impacts from space have affected past life
on Earth
4Most asteroids orbit the Sun in the asteroid belt
between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
Relative sizes of the Earth, Moon and the
asteroid Ceres
5- Asteroids are classified by their orbits.
- Belt asteroids orbit in the asteroid belt.
- Trojan asteroids orbit the Sun at special points
in Jupiters orbit. - Apollo asteroids have highly elliptical orbits in
the inner solar system.
6Discovering Asteroids Using Time Lapse
Photographs
7Jupiters gravitational attraction produces gaps
(Kirkwood gaps) in the asteroid belt, where the
orbital period of the asteroid is a simple
fraction of Jupiters.
8Close-Up Views of Asteroids Show They Also Have
Impact Craters
9Asteroids also orbit the Sun at Lagrange points,
located 60 ahead and 60 behind Jupiter in its
orbit.
10Highly Elliptical Orbits of the Apollo Asteroids
Cross Earths Path
This asteroid came closer than half the distance
to the Moon.
11MALTHIDE
Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous
ASTEROID EROS
Looking into a Crater
Just before landing
12Many Objects Exist Far Out in the Solar System
Just outside Plutos orbit is a doughnut-shaped
region of the solar system called the Kuiper
Belt. Beyond this is a spherically-shaped region
called the Oort Cloud, which contains billions of
comets.
13Minor Body Orbits in the Solar System
Because of its size and orbit, some scientists
consider Pluto to be one of the Kuiper Belt
objects instead of a planet.
14Discovery of Kuiper Belt Objects
These white lines show the movement of the Kuiper
Belt objects. There are at least 938 known
objects orbiting in the Kuiper Belt.
15Sedna is the object with the largest known orbit
in our solar system. Its orbit extends outside
the Kuiper belt, approaching the Oort cloud.
16Comets originate from the Far Outer Solar System.
Images of Comet Nuclei
17Comet Kohoutek and Its Hydrogen Envelope
When a comet approaches the Sun, liberated gases
from the surface create a tiny atmosphere called
a coma, as well as a hydrogen envelope that
cannot be seen in visible light.
In visible light
In ultraviolet
18Comets Produce Tails Streaming from the Nucleus
These tails, pushed by the solar wind, point away
from the Sun regardless of the direction the
comet is moving.
19Comets produce two tails, a gas tail (also called
an ion tail), which points directly away from the
Sun, and a dust tail, which curves.
GAS TAIL
DUST TAIL
These images show dramatic changes in the gas
tail, but the dust tail remains the same.
20STRUCTURE OF A COMET
21Comet Brooks had an exceptionally large head.
While Comet Ikeya-Seki has a very small coma, its
tail stretched to a length of more than 1AU.
22Comets are on highly elliptical orbits which, if
undisturbed, will have orbital periods of
hundreds of millions of years. These are called
long-period comets. However, a close encounter
with a large planet can deflect the comet into a
smaller orbit around the Sun. These comets are
called short-period comets.
23Some comets, like Comet Linear, which passed
within 0.74AU of the Sun, fragment into many
pieces.
Comet Hale-Bopp was observed to eject 7 to 10
times more mass than usual during its approach of
the Sun in 1997.
24Meteoroids pulled into our atmosphere by Earths
gravity heat the surrounding gases, causing them
to glow. Thus, they become meteorites.
25During certain predictable times, Earth passes
through sections of its orbit containing debris
from a comet, resulting in a meteor shower.
26(No Transcript)
27Recent Impact Sites on the Moon
On average, 300 tons of mass (the mass of the
obelisk shown above) is added to the Earth from
meteorites each day.
28Different Types of Meteorites
Stony Meteorites
Iron Meteorites
29Stony-Iron Meteorites are the Most Exotic of All
Space Debris Found on Earth
30In 1969, the Allend meteorite created a dazzling
blue display in the skies near Chihuahua, Mexico,
before impact.
SLICED OPEN
The dark blue color is due to carbon in the
meteorite.
31Trees flattened over an area 30km in diameter by
the Tunguska Impact in 1908
32Confirming an Extinction-Level Impact Site
33WHAT DID YOU THINK?
- Are the asteroids a planet that was somehow
destroyed? - No. Jupiters gravitational pull prevented
planets from forming in the asteroid belt, and
the total mass of the asteroids is much less than
even that of Pluto. - How far apart are the asteroids on average?
- 10 million kilometers
- Why do comets have tails?
- Gas and dust evaporate from a comets nucleus,
and these tails are pushed away from the Sun by
sunlight and solar wind. - In which direction does a comets tail point?
- Directly away from the Sun.
- What is a shooting star?
- A piece of space debris plunging through the
Earths atmosphere.
34Key Terms
amino acid Apollo asteroid asteroid (minor
planet) asteroid belt belt asteroid carbonaceous
chondrite coma (of a comet) comet dust tail (of a
comet) gas (ion) tail hydrogen envelope impact
crater iron meteorite Kirkwood gaps Kuiper
belt long-period comet
meteor meteor shower meteoroid nucleus (of a
comet) Oort cloud radiation (photon)
pressure short-period comet stable Lagrange
points stony meteorite stony-iron meteorite tail
(of a comet) Trojan asteroid Widmanstatten
patterns