Title: The Terrestrial Planets: Earth, Moon, and Their Relatives
1Chapter 6
- The Terrestrial Planets Earth, Moon, and Their
Relatives
2Introduction
- Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars share many
similar features. - Small compared with the huge planets beyond
them, these inner planets also have rocky
surfaces surrounded by relatively thin and
transparent atmospheres, in contrast with the
larger, gaseous/liquid planets. - Together, we call these four the terrestrial
planets (from the Latin terra, meaning earth),
which indicates their significance to us in our
attempts to understand our own Earth. - In this chapter, we discuss each of these rocky
bodies, as well as their moons.
3Introduction
- Venus and the Earth are often thought of as
sister planets, in that their sizes, masses,
and densities are about the same (see figure). - But in many respects they are as different from
each other as the wicked stepsisters were from
Cinderella.
4Introduction
- The Earth is lush it has oceans of water, an
atmosphere containing oxygen, and life. - On the other hand, Venus is a hot, foreboding
planet with temperatures constantly over 750 K
(900F), a planet on which life seems unlikely to
develop. - Why is Venus like that?
- How did these harsh conditions come about?
- Can it happen to us here on Earth?
- The one Solar-System body other than Earth that
humans have visited is our Moon. - It is so large relative to Earth that it joins us
as a type of a double-planet system. - We will see how space exploration has revealed
many of its secrets.
5Introduction
- Mars is only 53 per cent the diameter of Earth
and has 10 per cent of Earths mass. - Its atmosphere is much thinner than Earths, too
thin for visitors from Earth to rely on to
breathe. - But Mars has long been attractive as a site for
exploration. - We remain interested in Mars as a place where we
may yet find signs of life or, indeed, where we
might encourage life to grow. - Marss two tiny moons are but chunks of rock in
orbit. - Mercury, the innermost planet, is more like our
Moon than like our own Earth. - Its atmosphere is negligible and its surface is
seared by solar radiation. - An American spacecraft is en route there.
- A European /Japanese spacecraft is to be launched
to Mercury in 2011 or 2012.
66.1 Earth Theres No Place Like Home
- On the first trip that astronauts ever took to
the Moon, they looked back and saw for the first
time the Earth floating in space.
- Nowadays we see that space view every day from
weather satellites, so the views from the
Jupiter-bound Galileo spacecraft and the
Saturn-bound Cassini spacecraft as they passed
allowed us to test the instruments on known
objects, the Earth and Moon (see figure).
76.1 Earth Theres No Place Like Home
- The realization that Earth is an oasis in space
helped inspire our present concern for our
environment. - Until fairly recently, we studied the Earth only
in geology courses and the other planets only in
astronomy courses, but now the lines are very
blurred. - Not only have we learned more about the interior,
surface, and atmosphere of the Earth but we have
also seen the planets in enough detail to be able
to make meaningful comparisons with Earth. - The study of comparative planetology is helping
us to understand weather, earthquakes, and other
topics. - This expanded knowledge will help us improve life
on our own planet.
86.1a The Earths Interior
- The study of the Earths interior and surface
(see figure) is called geology. - Geologists study, among other things, how the
Earth vibrates as a result of large shocks, such
as earthquakes. - Much of our knowledge of the structure of the
Earths interior comes from seismology, the study
of these vibrations.
- The vibrations travel through different types of
material at different speeds.
96.1a The Earths Interior
- From seismology and other studies, geologists
have been able to develop a picture of the
Earths interior. - The Earths innermost region, the core, consists
primarily of iron and nickel. - Outside the core is the mantle, and on top of the
mantle is the thin outer layer called the crust. - The upper mantle and crust are rigid and contain
a lot of silicates, while the lower mantle is
partially melted. - Such a layered structure must have developed when
the Earth was young and molten the denser
materials (like iron) sank deeper than the
less-dense ones, as discussed below. - But from where did Earth get sufficient heat to
become molten?
106.1a The Earths Interior
- Such a layered structure must have developed when
the Earth was young and molten the denser
materials (like iron) sank deeper than the
less-dense ones, as discussed below. - But from where did Earth get sufficient heat to
become molten? - The Earth, along with the Sun and the other
planets, was probably formed from a cloud of gas
and dust. - Some of the original energy, though not enough to
melt the Earths interior, came from
gravitational energy released as particles came
together to form the Earth such energy is
released from gravity between objects when the
objects move closer together and collide. - The water at the base of a waterfall, for
example, is slightly (unnoticeably) hotter than
the water at the top part of the falling waters
energy of motion, gained by the pull of gravity,
is converted to heat by the collision on the
rocks or water at the waterfalls base.
116.1a The Earths Interior
- Also, the young Earth was subject to constant
bombardment from the remaining debris (dust and
rocks), which carried much energy of motion. - This bombardment heated the surface to the point
where it began to melt, producing lava. - However, scientists have concluded that the major
source of energy in the interior, both at early
times and now, is the natural radioactivity
within the Earth. - Certain forms of atoms are unstablethat is, they
spontaneously change into more stable forms. - In the process, they give off energetic particles
that collide with the atoms in the rock and give
some of their energy to these atoms. - The rock heats up.
126.1a The Earths Interior
- The Earths interior became so hot that the iron
melted and sank to the center since it was
denser, forming the core. - Eventually other materials also melted.
- As the Earth cooled, various materials, because
of their different densities (density is mass
divided by volume and freezing points (the
temperature at which they change from liquid to
solid), solidified at different distances from
the center. - This process, called differentiation, is
responsible for the present layered structure of
the Earth.
136.1a The Earths Interior
- Geologists have known for decades that the
Earths iron center consists of a solid inner
core surrounded by a liquid outer core. - The inner core is solid, in spite of its high
(5000C) temperature, because of the great
pressure on it. - A new study of 30 years worth of earthquake waves
that passed through the Earths core revealed in
2002 that the inner core has a different inner
region, like the pit in a peach. - This inner region is less than 10 per cent of the
diameter of the inner core, to continue to use
that technical term.
146.1a The Earths Interior
- Why does this peach pit innermost core make
earthquake waves act differently than they do in
the surrounding inner core? - It could be because this innermost core is a
remnant of the original ball of material from
which the Earth formed 4.6 billion years ago. - Less exciting is the possibility that iron
crystals deposited on it had a different
orientation after the innermost core reached a
critical size. - Perhaps the temperature and pressure in that
innermost region pack iron crystals differently.
156.1a The Earths Interior
- The rotation of the Earths metallic core helps
generate a magnetic field on Earth. (The
discovery in 2005 that the Earths inner core
spins 0.009 seconds per year faster than the rest
of our planet, giving it an extra full revolution
in about 900 years, may affect models of how the
magnetic field is generated.) - The magnetic field has a north magnetic pole and
a south magnetic pole that are not quite where
the regular north and south geographic poles are. - The Earths magnetic north pole is in the Arctic
Ocean north of Canada. - The location of the magnetic poles wanders across
the Earths surface over time. - The north magnetic pole is currently moving
northward at an average speed of 15 km /year.
166.1b Continental Drift
- Some geologically active areas exist in which
heat flows from beneath the surface at a rate
much higher than average (see figure). - The outflowing geothermal energy, sometimes
tapped as an energy source, signals what is below.
- The Earths rigid outer layer is segmented into
plates, each thousands of kilometers in extent
but only about 50 km thick. - Because of the internal heating, the top layers
float on an underlying hot layer (the mantle)
where the rock is soft, though it is not hot
enough to melt completely.
176.1b Continental Drift
- The mantle beneath the rigid plates of the
surface churns very slowly, thereby carrying the
plates around. - This theory, called plate tectonics, explains the
observed continental driftthe drifting of the
continents, over eons, from their original
positions, at the rate of a few centimeters per
yearabout the speed your fingernails grow.
(Tectonics comes from the Greek word meaning
to build.) - Although the notion of continental drift
originally seemed unreasonable, it is now
generally accepted. - The continents were once connected as two
super-continents, which may themselves have
separated from a single super-continent called
Pangaea (all lands).
186.1b Continental Drift
- Over the past two hundred million years or so,
the continents have moved apart as plates have
separated. - We can see from their shapes how they once fit
together (see figure). - We even find similar fossils and rock types along
two opposite coastlines that were once adjacent
but are now widely separated. - Remnants of the magnetic field as measured in
rocks laid down when the Earths magnetic poles
had flipped, north and south magnetic poles
interchanging (as they do occasionally), are also
among the strongest evidence.
196.1b Continental Drift
- Pangaea itself probably formed from the collision
of previous generations of continents. - The coming together and breaking apart of
continents may have had many cycles in Earths
history. - In the future, we expect part of California to
separate from the rest of the United States,
Australia to be linked to Asia, and the Italian
boot to disappear.
- The boundaries between the plates are
geologically active areas (see figure).
206.1b Continental Drift
- Therefore, these boundaries are traced out by the
regions where earthquakes and most of the
volcanoes occur. - The boundaries where two plates are moving apart
mark regions where molten material is being
pushed up from the hotter interior to the
surface, such as the mid-Atlantic ridge (see
figure).
- Molten material is being forced up through the
center of the ridge and is being deposited as
lava flows on either side, producing new seafloor.
216.1b Continental Drift
- The motion of the plates relative to each other
is also responsible for the formation of most
great mountain ranges. - When two plates come together, one may be forced
under the other and the other rises. - The great Himalayan mountain chain, for example,
was produced by the collision of India with the
rest of Asia. - The ring of fire volcanoes around the Pacific
Ocean (including Mt. St. Helens in Washington)
were formed when molten material made its way
through gaps or weak points between plates.
226.1c Tides
- It has long been accepted that tides are most
directly associated with the Moon and to a lesser
extent with the Sun. - We know of their association with the Moon
because the tideslike the Moons passage across
your meridian (the imaginary line in the sky
passing from north to south through the point
overhead) occur about an hour later each day. - Tides result from the fact that the force of
gravity exerted by the Moon (or any other body)
gets weaker as you get farther away from it. - Tides depend on the difference between the
gravitational attraction of a massive body at
different points on another body.
236.1c Tides
- To explain the tides in Earths oceans, suppose,
for simplicity, that the Earth is completely
covered with water. - We might first say that the water closest to the
Moon is attracted toward the Moon with the
greatest force and so is the location of high
tide as the Earth rotates. - If this were the whole story, high tides would
occur about once a day. - However, two high tides occur daily, separated by
roughly 12½ hours.
246.1c Tides
- To see why we get two high tides a day, consider
three points, A, B, and C, where B represents the
solid Earth (which moves all together as a single
object and is marked by a point at its center), A
is the ocean nearest the Moon, and C is the ocean
farthest from the Moon (see figure). - Since the Moons gravity weakens with distance,
it is greater at point A than at B, and greater
at B than at C.
256.1c Tides
- If the Earth and Moon were not in orbit around
each other, all these points would fall toward
the Moon, moving apart as they fell because of
the difference in force. - Thus the high tide on the side of the Earth that
is near the Moon is a result of the water being
pulled away from the Earth. - The high tide on the opposite side of the Earth
results from the Earth being pulled away from the
water. - In between the locations of the high tides the
water has rushed elsewhere (to the regions of
high tides), so we have low tides.
266.1c Tides
- Since the Moon is moving in its orbit around the
Earth, a point on the Earths surface has to
rotate longer than 24 hours to return to a spot
nearest to the Moon. - Thus a pair of tides repeats about every 25
hours, making 12½ hours between high tides. - The Suns effect on the Earths tides is only
about half as much as the Moons effect. - Though the Sun exerts a greater gravitational
force on the Earth than does the Moon, the Sun is
so far away that its force does not change very
much from one side of the Earth to the other. - And it is only the difference in force from one
place to another that counts for tides.
276.1c Tides
- Nonetheless, the Sun does matter.
- We tend to have very high and very low tides when
the Sun, Earth, and Moon are aligned (as is the
case near the time of full moon or of new moon),
because their effects reinforce each other. - Conversely, tides are less extreme when the Sun,
Earth, and Moon form a right angle (as near the
time of a first-quarter or third-quarter moon). - The effect of the tides on the EarthMoon system
slows down the Earths rotation slightly, by
about 1 second per 100,000 years, as we can
verify from the timing of solar eclipses that
took place thousands of years ago. - Also, the interaction is leading to a gradual
spiraling away of the Moon from the Earth, though
the rate is only centimeters per year. - Thus, far in the future (about a billion years
from now), it will not be possible to witness a
total solar eclipse from Earth the Moons
angular diameter will be less than that of the
Suns photosphere.
286.1d The Earths Atmosphere
- We name layers of our atmosphere (see figure)
according to the composition and the physical
processes that determine their temperatures. - The atmosphere contains about 20 per cent oxygen,
the gas that our bodies use when we breathe
almost all of the rest is nitrogen. - Later, we will see how the small amounts of
carbon monoxide, of carbon dioxide, of methane,
and of other gases are affecting our climate.
- When we find a planet around another star
(Chapter 9) whose spectrum shows such a high
percentage of oxygen, we will infer the presence
there of life-forms making the oxygen.
296.1d The Earths Atmosphere
- The Earths weather is confined to the very thin
troposphere. - The ground is a major source of heat for the
troposphere, so the temperature of the
troposphere decreases as altitude increases. - The rest of the Earths atmosphere, as well as
the Earths surface, is heated mainly by solar
energy from above. - A higher layer of the Earths atmosphere is the
thermosphere. - It is also known as the ionosphere, since many of
the atoms there are ionizedthat is, stripped of
some of the electrons they normally contain. - Most of the ionization is caused by x-ray and
ultraviolet radiation from the Sun, as well as
from solar particles. - Thus the ionosphere forms during the daytime and
diminishes at night. - The free electrons in the ionosphere reflect
very-long-wavelength radio signals. - When the conditions are right, radio waves bounce
off the ionosphere, which allows us to tune in
distant radio stations.
306.1d The Earths Atmosphere
- Observations from high-altitude balloons and
satellites have greatly enhanced our knowledge of
Earths atmosphere. - Scientists carry out calculations using the most
powerful supercomputers to interpret the global
data and to predict how the atmosphere will
behave. - The equations are essentially the same as those
for the internal temperature and structure of
stars, except that the sources of energy are
different, with stars heated from below and the
Earths atmosphere mostly heated from above.
316.1d The Earths Atmosphere
- Winds are caused partly by uneven heating of
different regions of Earth. - The rotation of the Earth also has a very
important effect in determining how the winds
blow. - Comparison of the circulation of winds on the
Earth (which rotates in 1 Earth day), on slowly
rotating Venus (which rotates in 243 Earth days),
and on rapidly rotating Jupiter and Saturn (each
of which rotates in about 10 Earth hours) helps
us understand the weather on Earth. - Our improved understanding allows forecasters of
weather (day to day) and climate (long term) to
be more accurate.
326.1d The Earths Atmosphere
- Comparison with the planet Venus (Section 6.4d)
led to our realization that the Earths
atmosphere traps some of the radiation from the
Sun, and that we are steadily increasing the
amount of trapping. (The word trapping is used
here in a figurative rather than a literal sense
the energy is actually transformed from one kind
to another when air molecules absorb it, and no
particular light photons are physically
trapped.)
- The process by which light is trapped, resulting
in the extra heating of Earths atmosphere and
surface, is similar to the process that is
generally (though incorrectly) thought to occur
in terrestrial greenhouses it is thus called the
greenhouse effect. - It is caused largely by the carbon dioxide in
Earths atmosphere (see figure), the amount of
which is growing each year because of our use of
fossil fuels.
336.1d The Earths Atmosphere
- Section 6.4d more fully describes the greenhouse
effect, which greatly affects the temperature of
Venus. - In brief, Earths atmosphere is warmed both from
above by solar radiation, and from below by
radiation from the Earths surface, which is
itself warmed by solar radiation. - Most solar radiation is in the visible,
corresponding to the peak of the Suns black-body
radiation (recall the discussion of this
radiation in Chapter 2). - The radiation from the Earths surface is in the
form of infrared, which corresponds to the peak
wavelength of the black-body curve at Earths
temperature. - Some of this infrared radiation is absorbed in
the atmosphere by carbon dioxide, water, and, to
a lesser extent, by other greenhouse gases such
as methane.
346.1d The Earths Atmosphere
- The greenhouse effect itself is good it warms us
by about 33C, bringing Earths atmospheric
temperature to the livable range it is now. - The important question is whether the amount of
greenhouse warming is increasing, progressively
raising the Earths temperature. - Such a phenomenon is known as global warming.
356.1d The Earths Atmosphere
- Quite a separate problem is a discovery about the
ozone (O3) in our upper atmosphere. - This ozone becomes thinner over Antarctica each
Antarctic spring, a phenomenon known as the
ozone hole. - The ozone hole apparently started forming only in
the mid-1980s, but its maximum size has been
larger almost every year since then (see figure).
366.1d The Earths Atmosphere
- The ozone hole is caused by the interaction in
the cold upper atmosphere of sunlight with
certain gases we give off near the ground, such
as chlorofluorocarbons used in air conditioners
and refrigerators. - International governmental meetings have arranged
cutbacks in the use of these harmful gases. - Some success has been achieved, but we have far
to go to protect our future atmosphere.
376.1e The Van Allen Belts
- In 1958, the first American space satellite
carried aloft, among other things, a device to
search for particles carrying electric charge
that might be orbiting the Earth. - This device, under the direction of James A. Van
Allen of the University of Iowa, detected a
region filled with charged particles having high
energies. - Two such regionsthe Van Allen beltswere found
to surround the Earth, like a small and a large
doughnut, containing protons and electrons (see
figure).
- They start a few hundred kilometers above the
Earths surface and extend outward to about 8
times the Earths radius. - A more recently discovered third, innermost belt
contains mainly ions of heavier elements from
interstellar space.
386.1e The Van Allen Belts
- The particles in the Van Allen belts are trapped
by the Earths magnetic field. - Charged particles preferentially move in the
direction of magnetic-field lines, and not across
the field lines. - These particles, often from solar magnetic
storms, are guided by the Earths magnetic field
toward the Earths magnetic poles. - When they interact with air molecules, they cause
our atmosphere to glow, which we see as the
beautiful northern and southern lightsthe aurora
borealis and aurora australis, respectively (see
figures).
396.2 The Moon
- The Earths nearest celestial neighborthe
Moonis only 380,000 km (238,000 miles) away from
us, on the average. - At this distance, it appears sufficiently large
and bright to dominate our nighttime sky. - The Moons stark beauty has captured our
attention since the beginning of history. - Now we can study the Moon not only as an
individual object but also as an example of a
small planet or a large planetary satellite,
since spacecraft observations have told us that
there may be little difference between small
planets and large moons.
406.2a The Moons Appearance
- Even binoculars reveal that the Moons surface is
pockmarked with craters. - Other areas, called maria (pronounced mar'ee-a
singular mare, pronounced mar'eyh), are
relatively smooth and dark. - Indeed, the name comes from the Latin word for
sea (see figure). - But there are no ships sailing on the lunar seas
and no water in them the Moon is a dry, airless,
barren place. - The gravity at the Moons surface is only
one-sixth that of the Earth.
- Typically you would weigh only 20 or 30 pounds
there if you stepped on a scale! - The gravity is so weak that any atmosphere and
any water that may once have been present would
long since have escaped into space.
416.2a The Moons Appearance
- The Moon rotates on its axis at the same rate
that it revolves around the Earth, thereby always
keeping the same face in our direction. (To
understand this idea, put a quarter on your desk
and then slide a dime around it, keeping both
flat on the desk and keeping the top of the head
on the dime always on the side that is away from
you. Notice that though the dime isnt rotating
as seen from above, a viewer on the quarter would
see the dime at different angles. Then move the
dime around the quarter so that the same point on
the dime always faces the quarter. Notice that
as seen from above the dime rotates as it
revolves around the quarter.) - Over time, the Earths gravity locked the Moon in
this pattern, pulling on a bulge in the
distribution of the lunar mass to prevent the
Moon from rotating freely. - As a result of this interlock (known as
synchronous rotation) we always see essentially
the same side of the Moon from our vantage point
on Earth.
426.2a The Moons Appearance
- When the Moon is full, it is bright enough to
cast shadows or even to read by. - But a full moon is a bad time to try to observe
lunar surface structure, for any shadows we see
are short, and lunar features appear washed out. - When the Moon is a crescent or even a quarter
moon, however, the sunlighted part of the Moon
facing us is covered with long shadows. - The lunar features then stand out in bold relief.
- Shadows are longest near the terminator, the line
that separates day from night. - Note that nature photographers on Earth,
concluding that views with shadows are more
dramatic, generally take their best photos when
the Sun is low.
436.2a The Moons Appearance
- Six teams of astronauts in NASAs Apollo program
landed on the Moon in 19691972. - In some sense, before this period of exploration,
we knew more about bright stars than we did about
the Moon. - As a relatively cold, solid body, the Moon
reflects the spectrum of sunlight rather than
emitting its own optical spectrum, so we were
hard pressed to determine even the composition or
the physical properties of the Moons surface
(such as whether you would sink into it!).
446.2b The Lunar Surface
- The kilometers of film exposed by the astronauts,
the 382 kg of rock brought back to Earth, the
lunar seismograph data recorded on tape,
meteorites from the Moon that have been found on
Earth, and other sources of data have been
studied by hundreds of scientists from all over
the world. (Meteorites are rocks from space that
have landed on Earth see Chapter 8 for more
details.) - The data have led to new views of several basic
questions, and have raised many new questions
about the Moon and the Solar System.
456.2b The Lunar Surface
- The rocks that were encountered on the Moon are
types that are familiar to terrestrial geologists
(see figure). - Almost all the rocks are the kind that were
formed by the cooling of lava, known as igneous
rocks. - Basalts are one example.
- The Moon and the Earth seem to be similar
chemically, though significant differences in
overall composition do exist. - Some elements that are rare on Earthsuch as
uranium and thoriumare found in greater
abundances on the Moon. (Will we be mining on the
Moon one day?) - None of the lunar rocks contain any trace of
water bound inside their minerals.
466.2b The Lunar Surface
- Meteoroids, interplanetary rocks that we will
discuss in Chapter 8, hit the Moon with such high
speeds that huge amounts of energy are released
at the impact. - The effect is that of an explosion, as though TNT
or an H-bomb had exploded. - As a result of the Apollo missions, we know that
almost all the craters on the Moon come from such
impacts. - One way of dating the surface of a moon or planet
is to count the number of craters in a given
area, a method that was used before Apollo. - Surely those locations with the greatest number
of craters must be the oldest. - Relatively smooth areaslike mariamust have been
covered over with molten volcanic material at
some relatively recent time (which is still
billions of years ago, though).
476.2b The Lunar Surface
- Obvious rays of lighter-colored matter splattered
outward during the impacts that formed a few of
the craters. - Since these rays extend over other craters, the
craters with rays must have formed more recently.
- The youngest rayed craters may be very young
indeedperhaps only a few hundred million years. - The rays darken with time, so rays that may have
once existed near other craters are now
indistinguishable from the rest of the surface. - Crater counts and the superposition of one crater
on another give only relative ages. - We found the absolute ages only when rocks from
the Moon were physically returned to Earth.
486.2b The Lunar Surface
- Scientists worked out the dates by comparing the
current ratio of radioactive forms of atoms to
nonradioactive forms present in the rocks with
the ratio that they would have had when they were
formed. (Varieties of the chemical elements
having different numbers of neutrons are known as
isotopes, and radioactive isotopes are those
that decay spontaneously that is, they change
into other isotopes even when left alone. Stable
isotopes remain unchanged. For certain pairs of
isotopesone radioactive and one stablewe know
the proportion of the two when the rock was
formed. Since we know the rate at which the
radioactive one is decaying, we can calculate how
long it has been decaying from a measurement of
what fraction is left.) - The oldest rocks that were found on the Moon
solidified 4.4 billion years ago. - The youngest rocks ever found solidified 3.1
billion years ago.
496.2b The Lunar Surface
- The observations can be explained on the basis of
the following general sequence (see figure) - The Moon formed about 4.6 billion years ago.
- From the oldest rocks, we know that at least the
surface of the Moon was molten about 200 million
years later. - Then the surface cooled.
- From 4.2 to 3.9 billion years ago, bombardment by
interplanetary rocks caused most of the craters
we see today. - About 3.8 billion years ago, the interior of the
Moon heated up sufficiently (from radioactive
elements inside) that volcanism began.
506.2b The Lunar Surface
- Lava flowed onto the lunar surface and filled the
largest basins that resulted from the earlier
bombardment, thus forming the maria (see figure). - By 3.1 billion years ago, the era of volcanism
was over. - The Moon has been geologically pretty quiet since
then.
516.2b The Lunar Surface
- Up to this time, the Earth and the Moon shared
similar histories. - But active lunar history stopped about 3 billion
years ago, while the Earth continued to be
geologically active. - Almost all the rocks on the Earth are younger
than 3 billion years of age the oldest single
rock ever discovered on Earth has an age of 4.5
billion years, but few such old rocks have been
found. - Erosion and the remolding of the continents as
they move slowly over the Earths surface have
taken their toll. - So we must look to extraterrestrial bodiesthe
Moon or meteoritesthat have not suffered the
effects of plate tectonics or erosion (which
occurs in the presence of water or an atmosphere)
to study the first billion years of the Solar
System.
526.2b The Lunar Surface
- Not until the 1990s did spacecraft revisit the
Moon. - The Clementine spacecraft (named after the
prospectors daughter in the old song, since the
spacecraft was looking for minerals) took
photographs and other measurements. - Photographs of the far side of the Moon (see
figure) have shown us that the near and far
hemispheres are quite different in overall
appearance. - The maria, which are so conspicuous on the near
side, are almost absent from the far side, which
is cratered all over. - We shall see in the next section that the
difference probably results from the different
thicknesses of the lunar crust on the sides of
the Moon nearest Earth and farthest from Earth. - The difference was first seen in the fuzzy
photographs of the far side that were taken by
the Soviet Lunik 3 Spacecraft in 1959.
536.2b The Lunar Surface
- In the 1990s, NASAs Lunar Prospector and
Clementine spacecraft mapped the Moon with a
variety of instruments (see figure).
- Lunar Prospector confirmed indications from the
Clementine spacecraft that there is likely to be
water ice on the Moon, by detecting more neutrons
coming from the Moons polar regions than
elsewhere. - Clementine and Lunar Prospector scientists think
that these neutrons are given off in interactions
of particles coming from the Sun with hydrogen in
water ice in craters near the lunar poles, where
they are shaded from the Suns rays.
546.2b The Lunar Surface
- But the detection is not of water directly, and
Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt, the only
geologist ever to have walked on the Moon, told
one of the authors (J.M.P.) in 1999 that the
neutrons may instead have come from the solar
wind (see figure), though as of 2005 most
scientists do not agree. - He would love to find water there, because it
would increase the chance that a crewed Moon base
could be supplied on the Moon itself, much easier
than bringing everything from Earth. - In his estimation, it would take about 10 years
to set up such a base, once basic funding is
available on Earth.
- An attempt to test the idea of water in the
crater was made by crashing Lunar Prospector into
the most likely spot in 1999, but none of the
spectrographs on Earth viewing the event detected
any signal from the crash.
556.2b The Lunar Surface
- The European Space Agency has a spacecraft in
orbit around the moon. - Their SMART-1 (Small Mission for Advanced
Research and Technology) spacecraft is basically
meant to test new technology, but they may as
well test it in lunar orbit.
- It uses, for the first time, an electric engine,
in which a weak but steady puff of ions ejected
out the back of the spacecraft accelerated the
spacecraft at a slow but steady rate, eventually
bringing it into its final lunar orbit in 2005. - It is sending back images that include
perpetually shaded polar regions where water ice
may be found (see figure).
566.2c The Lunar Interior
- Before the Moon landings, it was widely thought
that the Moon was a simple body, with the same
composition throughout. - But we now know it to be differentiated (see
figure), like the planets. - Most experts believe that the Moons core is
molten, but the evidence is not conclusive. - The lunar crust is perhaps 65 km thick on the
near side and twice as thick on the far side. - This asymmetry may explain the different
appearances of the sides, because lava would be
less likely to flow through the far sides
thicker crust.
576.2c The Lunar Interior
- The Apollo astronauts brought seismic equipment
to the Moon (see figure). - One type of earthquake wave moves material to the
side.
- Only if the Moons core were solid would the
material move and then return to where it
started, continuing the wave. - Since that type of wave doesnt come through the
Moon, scientists deduce that the Moons core is
probably molten. - New computer analysis methods were applied in
2004 to the old data, and thousands of additional
moonquakes were discovered.
586.2c The Lunar Interior
- Tracking the orbits of the Apollo Command Modules
and more recently the Clementine and Lunar
Prospector spacecraft that orbited the Moon told
us about the lunar interior. - If the Moon were a perfect, uniform sphere, the
spacecraft orbits would have been perfect
ellipses. - But they werent.
- One of the major surprises of the lunar missions
of the 1960s, refined more recently, was the
discovery in this way of mascons, regions of mass
concentrations near and under most maria. - The mascons may be lava that is denser than the
surrounding matter, providing a stronger
gravitational force on satellites passing
overhead.
596.2c The Lunar Interior
- We also find out about the lunar interior by
bouncing powerful laser beams off the Moons
surface. - This laser ranging (where ranging means
finding distances) uses several sets of
reflectors left on the Moon by the Apollo
astronauts. - The laser ranging programs find the distance to
the Moon to within a few centimeterspretty good
for an object about 400,000 km away! - Variations in the distance result in part from
conditions in the lunar interior.
606.2d The Origin of the Moon
- The leading models for the origin of the Moon
that were considered at the time of the Apollo
missions were as follows. - 1. Fission. The Moon was separated from the
material that formed the Earth the Earth spun up
and the Moon somehow spun off - 2. Capture. The Moon was formed far from the
Earth in another part of the Solar System, and
was later captured by the Earths gravity and - 3. Condensation. The Moon was formed near to (and
simultaneously with) the Earth in the Solar
System.
616.2d The Origin of the Moon
- But work over the last three decades has all but
ruled out the first two of these and has made the
third seem less likely. - The model now strongly favored, especially
because of computer simulations, is - 4. Ejection of a Gaseous Ring. A planet-like body
perhaps twice the size of Mars hit the young
Earth, ejecting matter in gaseous (and perhaps
some in liquid or solid) form (see figure). - Although some of the matter fell back to Earth,
and part escaped entirely, a significant fraction
started orbiting the Earth, probably in the same
direction as the initial incoming body. - The orbiting material eventually coalesced to
form the Moon.
626.2d The Origin of the Moon
- Comparing the chemical composition of the lunar
surface with the composition of the Earths
surface has been important in narrowing down the
possibilities. - The mean lunar density of 3.3 grams/cm3 is close
to the average density of the Earths major upper
region (the mantle), and the Moon seems
especially deficient in iron. - This fact favors the fission hypothesis had the
Moon condensed from the same material as Earth,
as in the condensation scenario, it would contain
much more iron. - However, detailed examination of the lunar rocks
and soils indicates that the abundances of
elements on the Moon and Earths mantle are
sufficiently different from each other to
indicate that the Moon did not form directly from
the Earth. - In the collision hypothesis, on the other hand,
such differences are expected because of
contaminant material from the impactor.
636.2d The Origin of the Moon
- Calculations considering angular momentum (recall
the discussion of this concept in Chapter 5)
strongly suggest that the fission mechanism
doesnt work. - Plate-tectonic theory now explains the formation
of the Pacific Ocean basin. - Before the ejection-of-a-ring theory was
considered most probable, it seemed possible that
the Pacific Ocean could be the scar left behind
when the Moon was ripped from the Earth according
to the fission hypothesis. - We are obtaining additional evidence about the
capture model by studying the moons of Jupiter
and Saturn. - The outermost moon of Saturn, for example, is
apparently a captured asteroid (small bodies
orbiting the Sun, mostly between Mars and
Jupiter see Chapter 8). - However, the similarities in composition between
the Moons and the Earths mantles argue against
the capture hypothesis for the EarthMoon system. - Thus as of now, ejection of a gaseous ring is the
most accepted model.
646.2e Rocks from the Moon
- A handful of meteorites found in Antarctica,
Australia, and Africa have been identified by
their chemical composition as having come from
the Moon (see figure). - They presumably were ejected from the Moon when
craters formed. - So we are still getting new moon rocks to study!
- A few other meteorites have even been found to
come from Mars, as we shall discuss later in this
chapter.
656.3 Mercury
- Mercury is the innermost of our Suns nine
planets. - Its average distance from the Sun is of the
Earths average distance, or 0.4 A.U. - Except for distant Pluto, its elliptical orbit
around the Sun is the most elongated (eccentric). - Since we on the Earth are outside Mercurys orbit
looking in at it, Mercury always appears close to
the Sun in the sky (see figure). - At times Mercury rises just before sunrise, and
at times it sets just after sunset, but it is
never up when the sky is really dark.
666.3 Mercury
- The Sun always rises or sets within an hour or so
of Mercurys rising or setting. - As a result, whenever Mercury is visible, its
light has to pass obliquely through the Earths
atmosphere. - This long path through turbulent air leads to
blurred images. - Thus astronomers have never had a really clear
view of Mercury from the Earth, even with the
largest telescopes. - Even the best photographs taken from the Earth
show Mercury as only a fuzzy ball with faint,
indistinct markings. - Most people have never seen it at all.
676.3 Mercury
- On rare occasions, Mercury goes into transit
across the Sun that is, we see it as a black dot
crossing the Sun. - Transits of Mercury occurred in 1999 (see figure)
and 2003. - The next transit of Mercury will occur on
November 28, 2006. - The entire transit will be visible from the
U.S.s west coast, and the Sun will set during
the transit for observers on the east coast. - Understanding what we see as Mercury transits
helps us understand the much rarer transits of
Venus, which we will discuss later in this
chapter.
686.3a The Rotation of Mercury
- From studies of ground-based drawings and
photographs, astronomers did as well as they
could to describe Mercurys surface. - A few features seemed to be barely distinguished,
and the astronomers watched to see how long those
features took to rotate around the planet. - From these observations they decided that Mercury
rotates in the same amount of time that it takes
to revolve around the Sun in its orbit, 88 Earth
days. - Thus they thought that one side always faces the
Sun and the other side always faces away from the
Sun. (Recall that one side of the Moon always
faces the Earth, a similar phenomenon.) - This discovery led to the fascinating conclusion
that Mercury could be both the hottest planet (on
the Sun-facing side) and the coldest planet (on
the other side) in the Solar System.
696.3a The Rotation of Mercury
- But when the first measurements were made of
Mercurys radio radiation, the planet turned out
to be giving off more energy than had been
expected. - This meant that it was hotter than expected.
- The dark side of Mercury was too hot for a
surface that was always in the shade. (The
visible light we see is merely sunlight reflected
by Mercurys surface and doesnt tell us the
surfaces temperature. The radio waves are
actually being emitted by the surface, as part of
its thermal or nearly black-body radiation see
the discussion in Chapter 2.)
706.3a The Rotation of Mercury
- Later, we became able to transmit radar from
Earth to Mercury. (Radarradio detection and
rangingis sending out radio waves so that they
bounce off another object, allowing you to study
their reflection.) - Since one edge of the visible face of Mercury is
rotating toward Earth, while the other edge is
rotating away from Earth, the reflected radio
waves were slightly smeared in wavelength
according to the Doppler effect (recall the
description of this effect in Chapter 2). - This measurement allowed astronomers to determine
Mercurys rotation speed, similarly to the way
that radar is used by the police to tell if a car
is breaking the speed limit. - Knowing the rotation speed and Mercurys radius,
we could determine the rotation period.
716.3a The Rotation of Mercury
- The results were a surprise it actually rotates
every 59 days, not 88 days. - Mercurys 59-day period of rotation with respect
to the stars is exactly ? of the 88-day orbital
period, so the planet rotates three times for
every two times it revolves around the Sun. - Mercurys rotation and revolution combine to give
a value for the rotation of Mercury relative to
the Sun (that is, a mercurian solar day) that is
neither 59 nor 88 days long (see figure).
726.3a The Rotation of Mercury
- If we lived on Mercury we would measure each
day (that is, each day/night cycle) to be 176
Earth days long. - We would alternately be fried for 88 Earth days
and then frozen for 88 Earth days. - Since each point on Mercury faces the Sun at some
time, the heat doesnt build up forever at the
place under the Sun, nor does the coldest point
cool down as much as it would if it never
received sunlight. - The hottest temperature is about 700 K (800F).
- The minimum temperature is about 100 K (280F).
736.3a The Rotation of Mercury
- No harm was done by the scientists original
misconception of Mercurys rotational period, but
the story teaches all of us a lesson we should
not be too sure of so-called facts. - Dont believe everything you read in this book,
either. - It should be fun for you to look back in 20 years
and see how much of what we now think we know
about astronomy actually turned out to be wrong. - After all, science is a dynamic process.
746.3b Mercury Observed from the Earth
- Even though the details of the surface of Mercury
cant be seen very well from the Earth, other
properties of the planet can be better studied. - For example, we can measure Mercurys albedo, the
fraction of the sunlight hitting Mercury that is
reflected (see figure). - We can measure the albedo because we know how
much sunlight hits Mercury (we know the
brightness of the Sun and the distance of Mercury
from the Sun). - Then we can easily calculate at any given time
how much light Mercury reflects, knowing how
bright Mercury looks to us and its distance from
the Earth. - Comparison with the albedoes of materials on the
Earth and on the Moon can teach us something of
what the surface of Mercury is like.
756.3b Mercury Observed from the Earth
- Let us consider some examples of albedo.
- An ideal mirror reflects all the light that hits
it its albedo is thus 100 per cent. (The very
best real mirrors have albedoes of as much as 96
per cent.) - A black cloth reflects essentially none of the
light that hits it its albedo (in the visible
part of the spectrum, anyway) is almost 0 per
cent. - Mercurys overall albedo is only about 10 per
cent. - Its surface, therefore, must be made of a dark
(that is, poorly reflecting) material (though a
few regions are very reflective, with albedoes of
up to 45 per cent). - The albedoes of the Moons maria are similarly
low, 6 to 10 per cent. - In fact, Mercury (or the Moon) appears bright to
us only because it is contrasted against a
relatively dark sky if it were silhouetted
against a white bedsheet, it would look
relatively dark.
766.3c Mercury from Mariner 10
- In 1974, we learned most of what we know about
Mercury in a brief time. - We flew right by it.
- The tenth in the series of Mariner spacecraft
launched by the United States went to Mercury
with a variety of instruments on board. - First the 475-kg spacecraft passed by Venus and
had its orbit changed by Venuss gravity to
direct it to Mercury. - Tracking its orbit improved our measurements of
the gravity of these planets and thus of their
masses. - The most striking overall impression is that
Mercury is heavily cratered (see figure). - At first glance, it looks like the Moon!
- But there are several basic differences between
the features on the surface of Mercury and those
on the lunar surface.
776.3c Mercury from Mariner 10
- Mercurys craters seem flatter than those on the
Moon, and they have thinner rims (see figure). - Mercurys higher gravity at its surface may have
caused the rims to slump more. - Also, Mercurys surface may have been softer,
more plastic-like, when most of the cratering
occurred. - The craters may have been eroded by any of a
number of methods, such as the impacts of
meteorites or micrometeorites (large or small
bits of interplanetary rock). - Alternatively, erosion may have occurred during a
much earlier period when Mercury may have had an
atmosphere, undergone internal activity, or been
flooded by lava.
786.3c Mercury from Mariner 10
- Most of the craters seem to have been formed by
impacts of meteorites. - The Caloris Basin, in particular, is the site of
a major impact. - The secondary craters, caused by material ejected
as primary craters were formed, are closer to the
primaries than on the Moon, presumably because of
Mercurys higher surface gravity. - In many areas, the craters appear superimposed on
relatively smooth plains. - The plains are so extensive that they are
probably volcanic. - Their age is estimated to be 4.2 billion years,
the oldest features on Mercury.
796.3c Mercury from Mariner 10
- Smaller, brighter craters are sometimes, in turn,
superimposed on the larger craters and thus must
have been made afterward. - Some craters have rays of higher albedo emanating
from them (see figure), just as some lunar
craters do. - The ray material represents relatively recent
crater formation (that is, within the last
hundred million years). - The ray material must have been tossed out in the
impact that formed the crater.
806.3c Mercury from Mariner 10
- Lines of cliffs hundreds of miles long are
visible on Mercury on Mercury, as on Earth, such
lines of cliffs are called scarps. - The scarps are particularly apparent in the
region of Mercurys south pole (see figure). - Unlike fault lines on the Earth, such as
Californias famous San Andreas fault
(responsible for the 1906 San Francisco
earthquake), on Mercury there are no signs of
geologic tensions like rifts or fissures nearby. - These scarps are global in scale, not just
isolated. - The scarps may actually be wrinkles in Mercurys
crust.
- Perhaps Mercury was once molten, and shrank by 1
or 2 km as it cooled. - This shrinking would have caused the crust to
buckle, creating the scarps in the quantity that
we now observe.
816.3c Mercury from Mariner 10
- Judging by the fact that Mercurys average
density is about the same as the Earths, its
core is probably iron and takes up perhaps 50 per
cent of the volume, or 70 per cent of the mass, a
much greater proportion than in the case of
Earths core. - Data from Mariners infrared radiometer indicate
that the surface of Mercury is covered with fine
dust, as is the surface of the Moon, to a depth
of at least several centimeters. - Astronauts sent to Mercury, whenever they go,
will leave footprints behind. - Part of Mercurys surface is very jumbled,
probably from the energy released by an impact
(see figure).
826.3c Mercury from Mariner 10
- The biggest surprise of the mission was the
detection of a magnetic field in space near
Mercury. - The field is weak, only about 1 per cent of the
Earths surface field. - It had been thought that magnetic fields were
generated by the rapid rotation of molten iron
cores in planets, but Mercury is so small that
its core should have quickly solidified after
forming. - So the magnetic field is probably not now being
generated. - Perhaps the magnetic field has been frozen into
Mercury since the time when its core was molten.
836.3d Mercury Research Rejuvenated
- After decades with no additional images of
Mercury, in 2000 two teams of scientists released
their composite images. - Each is better than any previous ground-based
image (see figure). - A dozen years after Mariner 10 sent back data
about Mercury, an important new discovery about
Mercury was made with a telescope on Earth
Mercury has an atmosphere!
- The atmosphere is very thin, but is still easily
detectable in spectra. - It was a surprise that Mercury has an atmosphere
because it is so hot, since it is relatively
close to the Sun. - Hot means that the individual atoms or
molecules are moving rapidly in random
directions, and to keep an atmosphere a planet
must have enough gravity to hold in the particles
moving in its atmosphere. - Since Mercury has relatively little mass but is
hot, the atmospheric particles escape easily and
few are leftnone from long ago.
846.3d Mercury Research Rejuvenated
- Mercurys atmosphere contains more sodium than
any other element150,000 atoms per cubic
centimeter compared with 4500 of helium and
smaller amounts of oxygen, potassium, and
hydrogen. - At first, it appeared that the sodium was ejected
into Mercurys atmosphere when particles from the
Sun or from meteorites hit Mercurys surface. - Newer evidence that the potassium and sodium are
enhanced when the Caloris Basin is in view
indicates, instead, that Mercurys atmosphere may
have diffused up through Mercurys crust the
crust is thinner than average in the Caloris
Basin.
856.3d Mercury Research Rejuvenated
- Mercurys surface features can be mapped from
Earth with radar. - The radar observations provide altitudes and the
roughness of the surface. - The radar features show, in part, the half of
Mercury not imaged by Mariner 10. - It, too, is dominated by intercrater plains,
though its overall appearance is different. - The craters, with their floors flatter than the
Moons craters, show clearly on the radar maps. - The scarps are obvious as well.
- The highest-resolution images (see figure) reveal
probable water-ice deposits near Mercurys poles.
- They have been shielded from sunlight