Title: EART160 Planetary Sciences
1EART160 Planetary Sciences
Francis Nimmo
2Last Week
- Planetary mass and radius give us bulk density
- Bulk density depends on both composition and size
- Larger planets have greater bulk densities
because materials get denser at high pressures - The increase in density of a material is
controlled by its bulk modulus - Planets start out hot (due to accretion) and cool
- Cooling is accomplished (usually) by either
conduction or convection - Vigour of convection is controlled by the
Rayleigh number, and increases as viscosity
decreases - Viscosity is temperature-dependent, so planetary
temperatures tend to be self-regulating
3Talk tomorrow
- 4pm in NS101
- Matija Cuk, The lunar cataclysm
4This Week - Atmospheres
- What determines the surface temperature of a
planet? - What determines the temperature and pressure
structure of planetary atmospheres? - What are the atmospheres made of, and where do
they come from? - What determines the wind strengths?
- How do planetary atmospheres evolve?
5Surface Temperature (1)
- What determines a planets surface temperature?
Reflected energy
Incident energy
Energy re-radiated from warm surface
R
Sun
Absorbed energy warms surface
A is albedo, FE is solar flux at Earths surface,
rE is distance of Earth to Sun, r is distance of
planet to Sun, e is emissivity, s is Stefans
constant (5.67x10-8 Wm-2K-4)
- Balancing energy in and energy out gives
6Surface Temperature (2)
- Solar constant FE1300 Wm-2
- Earth (Bond) albedo A0.29, e0.9
- Equilibrium temperature 263 K
- How reasonable is this value?
s is Stefans constant 5.67x10-8 in SI units
- How to explain the discrepancies?
- Has the Suns energy stayed constant with time?
7Greenhouse effect
- Atmosphere is more or less transparent to
radiation (photons) depending on wavelength
opacity - Opacity is low at visible wavelengths, high at
infra-red wavelengths due to absorbers like water
vapour, CO2 - Incoming light (visible) passes through
atmosphere with little absorption - Outgoing light is infra-red (surface temperature
is lower) and is absorbed by atmosphere - So atmosphere heats up
- Venus suffered from a runaway greenhouse effect
surface temperature got so high that carbonates
in the crust dissociated to CO2 . . .
8Albedo effects
- Fraction of energy reflected (not absorbed) by
surface is given by the albedo A (0ltAlt1) - Coal dust has a low albedo, ice a high one
- The albedo can have an important effect on
surface temperature - E.g. ice caps grow, albedo increases, more heat
is reflected, surface temperature drops, ice caps
grow further . . . runaway effect! - This mechanism is thought to have led to the
Proterozoic Snowball Earth - How did the Snowball disappear?
- How did life survive?
- How might clouds affect planetary albedo?
9Atmospheric Structure (1)
- Atmosphere is hydrostatic
- Gas law gives us
- Combining these two (and neglecting latent heat)
Here R is the gas constant, m is the mass of one
mole, and RT/gm is the scale height of the
(isothermal) atmosphere (10 km) which tells you
how rapidly pressure increases with depth
- Result is that pressure decreases exponentially
as a function of height (if the temperature stays
constant)
10Scale Heights
- The scale height tells you how far upwards the
atmosphere extends - Scale height H RT/gm. Does this make physical
sense? - Total column mass (per unit area) r0HP0/g
(wheres this from?) - It turns out that most planets have similar scale
heights
Temperature measured at 1bar pressure
11Atmospheric Structure (2)
- Of course, temperature actually does vary with
height - If a packet of gas rises rapidly (adiabatic),
then it will expand and, as a result, cool - Work done in expanding work done in cooling
Cp is the specific heat capacity of the gas at
constant pressure
m is the mass of one mole, r is the density of
the gas
- Combining these two equations with hydrostatic
equilibrium, we get the dry adiabatic lapse rate
- On Earth, the lapse rate is about 10 K/km
- What happens if the air is wet?
12Atmospheric Structure (3)
- Lower atmosphere (opaque) is dominantly heated
from below and will be conductive or convective
(adiabatic) - Upper atmosphere intercepts solar radiation and
re-radiates it - There will be a temperature minimum where
radiative cooling is most efficient (the
tropopause)
radiation
Temperature (schematic)
mesosphere
stratosphere
tropopause
Lapse rate appx. 1.6 K/km why?
clouds
troposphere
adiabat
Measured Martian temperature profiles
13Giant planet atmospheric structure
- Note position and order of cloud decks
14Atmospheric dynamics
- Coriolis effect objects moving on a rotating
planet get deflected (e.g. cyclones) - Why? Angular momentum as an object moves
further away from the pole, r increases, so to
conserve angular momentum w decreases (it moves
backwards relative to the rotation rate) - Coriolis acceleration 2 w v sin(q)
- How important is the Coriolis effect?
Deflection to right in N hemisphere
q is latitude
is a measure of its importance (Rossby number)
e.g. Jupiter v100 m/s, L10,000km we get 30 so
important
15Hadley Cells
- Coriolis effect is complicated by fact that
parcels of atmosphere rise and fall due to
buoyancy (equator is hotter than the poles)
High altitude winds
Surface winds
- The result is that the atmosphere is broken up
into several Hadley cells (see diagram) - How many cells depends on the Rossby number (i.e.
rotation rate)
Slow rotator e.g. Venus
Fast rotator e.g. Jupiter
Medium rotator e.g. Earth
Ro0.02 (assumes v100 m/s)
Ro4
Ro30
16Zonal Winds
- The reason Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune
have bands is because of rapid rotations (periods
10 hrs) - The winds in each band can be measured by
following individual objects (e.g. clouds) - Winds alternate between prograde (eastwards) and
retrograde (westwards)
17Geostrophic balance
- In some situations, the only significant forces
acting are due to the Coriolis effect and due to
pressure gradients - The acceleration due to pressure gradients is
- The Coriolis acceleration is 2 w v sinq (Which
direction?) - In steady-state these balance, giving
Why?
L
Does this make sense?
L
wind
- The result is that winds flow along isobars and
will form cyclones or anti-cyclones - What are wind speeds on Earth?
pressure
Coriolis
isobars
H
18Where do planetary atmospheres come from?
- Three primary sources
- Primordial (solar nebula)
- Outgassing (trapped gases)
- Later delivery (mostly comets)
- How can we distinguish these?
- Solar nebula composition well known
- Noble gases are useful because they dont react
- Isotopic ratios are useful because they may
indicate gas loss or source regions (e.g. D/H) - 40Ar (40K decay product) is a tracer of
outgassing
19Atmospheric Compositions
- Isotopes are useful for inferring outgassing and
atmos. loss
20Not primordial!
- Terrestrial planet atmospheres are not primordial
(How do we know?) - Why not?
- Gas loss (due to impacts, rock reactions or Jeans
escape) - Chemical processing (e.g. photolysis, rock
reactions) - Later additions (e.g. comets, asteroids)
- Giant planet atmospheres are close to primordial
Values are by number of molecules
Why is the H/He ratio not constant?
21Atmospheric Loss
- Atmospheres can lose atoms from stratosphere,
especially low-mass ones, because they exceed the
escape velocity (Jeans escape) - Escape velocity ve (2 g R)1/2 (wheres this
from?) - Mean molecular velocity vm (2kT/m)1/2
- Boltzmann distribution negligible numbers of
atoms with velocities gt 3 x vm - Molecular hydrogen, 900 K, 3 x vm 11.8 km/s
- Jupiter ve60 km/s, Earth ve11 km/s
- H cannot escape gas giants like Jupiter, but is
easily lost from lower-mass bodies like Earth or
Mars - A consequence of Jeans escape is isotopic
fractionation heavier isotopes will be
preferentially enriched
22Atmospheric Evolution
- Earth atmosphere originally CO2-rich, oxygen-free
- How do we know?
- CO2 was progressively transferred into rocks by
the Urey reaction (takes place in presence of
water)
- Rise of oxygen began 2 Gyr ago (photosynthesis
photodissociation) - Venus never underwent similar evolution because
no free water present (greenhouse effect, too
hot) - Venus and Earth have same total CO2 abundance
- Urey reaction may have occurred on Mars (water
present early on), but very little carbonate
detected
23Summary
- Surface temperature depends on solar distance,
albedo, atmosphere (greenhouse effect) - Scale height and lapse rate are controlled by
bulk properties of atmosphere (and gravity) - Terrestrial planetary atmospheres are not
primordial affected by loss and outgassing - Coriolis effect organizes circulation into
cells and is responsible for bands seen on
giant planets - Isotopic fractionation is a good signal of
atmospheric loss due to Jeans escape - Significant volatile quantities may be present in
the interiors of terrestrial planets
24Key Concepts
- Albedo and opacity
- Greenhouse effect
- Snowball Earth
- Scale height
- Lapse rate
- Tropopause
- Coriolis effect
- Hadley cell
- Geostrophic balance
- Jeans escape
- Urey reaction
- Outgassing
H RT/gm
2 w v sin(q)
25(No Transcript)
26Thermal tides
- These are winds which can blow from the hot
(sunlit) to the cold (shadowed) side of a planet
Solar energy added
trotation period, Rplanet radius, rdistance
(AU)
4pR2CpP/g
Atmospheric heat capacity
Wheres this from?
Extrasolar planet (hot Jupiter)
So the temp. change relative to background
temperature
Small for Venus (0.4), large for Mars (38)