Title: Terrestrial Planetary Geology: Basic Processes
1Terrestrial Planetary GeologyBasic Processes
Earth
2What are terrestrial planets like on the inside?
Planets (inc. Moon) to scale, with typical
surface features
3Earths Interior
- Core Highest density nickel and iron
- Mantle Moderate density silicon, oxygen, etc.
- Crust Lowest density granite, basalt, etc.
- Other terrestrial planets have similar layers
4Terrestrial Planet Interiors
- Applying what we have learned about Earths
interior to other planets tells us what their
interiors are probably like
5Differentiation
- Gravity pulls high-density material to center
- Lower-density material rises to surface
- Material ends up separated by density
- This generates heat inside planet
6Lithosphere
- A planets outer layer of cool, rigid rock is
called the lithosphere crust outer mantle - It floats on the warmer, softer rock that lies
beneath most of the mantle is plastic-- the
rock slowly deforms
7Strength of Rock
- Rock stretches when pulled slowly but breaks when
pulled rapidly--like Silly Putty but MUCH slower - The gravity of a large world pulls slowly on its
rocky content, shaping the world into a sphere if
bigger than about 300 km in diameter - Rapid shear, like an earthquake or impact breaks
rock
8Seismic Waves Let UsKnow Whats Inside a Planet
- P (primary) waves push matter back and forth
(longitudinal like sound waves) - S (secondary) waves shake matter side to side
(transverse, like water waves)
9SEISMIC WAVES REVEAL INTERIOR
- SEISMOGRAPHS detect EARTHQUAKES, VOLCANOS, and
EXPLOSIONS at varied distances. - Long surface (L) waves travel fastest, but are
not very useful as they don't probe the interior. - P-waves, PRIMARY, (push-pull waves) are
COMPRESSIONAL, LONGITUDINAL waves. Propagate
through liquids as well as solids. VP
function of (compressibility composition, T,
P) - S-waves, SECONDARY, (side-slip) are SHEAR,
TRANSVERSE waves. CANNOT propagate through
liquids (OUTER core). VS (a new) function of
(rigidity composition, T, P) - We have some seismic measurements for the Moon
too seismometers left by Apollo astronauts
10Seismic Wave Paths
- Both S and P waves can be detected from
earthquakes on the same side of the earth, - ONLY P waves are detected on the opposite side of
the earth - shadow zone region where no S (absorbed)
only weak P (refracted) waves are detected. - Tells us the outer core of the earth is LIQUID
11 Seismographic measurements have found for Earth
- Boundaries between inner/outer
core outer core/mantle composition
changes in mantle (600 km) oil and natural gas
deposits in crust. - Seismic measurements can even detect excess
rotation of earths inner core, upwellings and
sideways motions in the mantle. - MODERN SEISMOLOGY CAN GIVE A 3-D PICTURE,
CHANGING IN TIME, OF THE EARTH'S INTERIOR! ---
Tomography - There is a good analogy with 3-D images of
people's interiors from MRI or CAT scans.
12Thought Question
- What is necessary for differentiation to occur
in a planet? - a) It must have metal and rock in it
- b) It must be a mix of materials of different
density - c) Material inside must be able to flow
- d) All of the above
- e) b and c
13Thought Question
- What is necessary for differentiation to occur
in a planet? - a) It must have metal and rock in it
- b) It must be a mix of materials of different
density - c) Material inside must be able to flow
- d) All of the above
- e) b and c
14Causes of Geologic Activity
- Heating of Interior
- Accretion and differentiation when planets were
young - Radioactive decay is most important heat source
today
15Cooling of Interior
- Convection transports heat as hot material rises
and cool material falls (outer core inner
mantle) - Conduction transfers heat from hot material to
cool material (lithosphere) - Radiation sends energy into space (surface
atmosphere)
16Role of Size is Dominant
- Smaller worlds cool off faster and harden earlier
- Moon and Mercury are now geologically dead
- Mars lasted longer Venus may still be active
- Earth is VERY active
17Surface Area to Volume Ratio Gives Cooling Time
- Heat content depends on volume
- Loss of heat through radiation depends on surface
area - Time to cool depends on surface area divided by
volume
- Larger objects have smaller ratio and cool more
slowly
18Why do some planetary interiors create magnetic
fields?
Iron filings follow the magnetic field lines of a
bar magnet
19Sources of Magnetic Fields
- Motions of charged particles create magnetic
fields - Electromagnets via currents in coil of wire
(usually amplified by magnetic material, like
iron) - Permanent magnets electron spins act as currents
in iron or nickel
20Sources of Magnetic Fields in Planets
- A world can have a magnetic field if charged
particles are moving inside - 3 requirements
- Molten interior
- Convection
- Moderately rapid rotation
Earth has molten iron outer core Outer planets
have metallic hydrogen Stars have ionized H
21Practice Question Answers
- True a CCD is more linear and preferred over
film. - False Jupiter is 11.2 Earth radii but 318 Earth
masses, not about 100. - True oldest rocks on Earth 4 Gyr, oldest on
moon from Apollo 4.4 Gyr - False While most large telescopes are
reflectors, they spend most of their time taking
spectra, not pictures. - False The earths magnetic field is generated in
its liquid outer core. (Mantle is rocky and
plastic.) - False Twice the wavelength means 1/2 the energy
E hf hc/? - True liquids, solids dense gases give
continuum thermal spectrum
22More practice answers
- True this is stimulated emission
- B 293 K is earth or body temp. and thermal
emission peaks in IR - D 500 atoms after 1 half-life of 30 yrs, 250
after 2, 125 after three half-lives, or 90 years - E angular momentum conservation means
flattening, gravity means condensation,
collisions meant extra flattening as vertical
energy is lost. - A getting above atmosphere means less turbulence
and less absorption by water vapor - D LA/LB(RA/RB)2(TA/TB)4 22(1/2)44/161/4
23What processes shape planetary surfaces?
Their surfaces are amazingly different, yet same
forces act!
24Key Processes that Shape Surfaces
- Impact cratering
- Impacts by asteroids or comets
- Volcanism
- Eruption of molten rock onto surface
- Tectonics
- Disruption of a planets surface by internal
stresses - Erosion
- Surface changes made by wind, water, or ice
25Impact Cratering
- Most cratering happened soon after solar system
formed the heavy bombardment era - Craters are about 10 times wider than object that
made them - Small craters greatly outnumber large ones
- Areas with many craters are old those with few
were repaved
26Impact Craters Classical
Tycho (Moon)
Barringer Meteor Crater (Arizona)
Rim at edge of shock rebound makes peak in center
27Impact Craters on Mars Evidence for
Liquid Water in the Past
standard crater
impact into icy ground
eroded crater
Cratering History Movie
28Volcanism
- Volcanism happens when molten rock (magma) finds
a path through lithosphere to the surface - Molten rock is called lava after it reaches the
surface - It solidifies to create volcanoes
29Lava Properties Volcano Types
Runny lava makes flat lava plains
Slightly thicker lava makes broad shield volcanoes
Thickest lava makes steep stratovolcanoes
30Outgassing
- Volcanism also releases gases from Earths
interior into atmosphere in the past for other
terrestrial planets - Well talk more about this later
31Tectonics
- Convection of the mantle creates stresses in the
crust called tectonic forces - Compression forces make mountain ranges
(Appalachian Mts on Earth on left) - Valley can form where crust is pulled apart
(Ceraunius Valleys on Mars on right)
32Plate Tectonics on Earth
- Earths continents slide around on separate
plates of crust - Plate Tectonics Applet
- Tectonics Mantle Convection
33Erosion
- Erosion is a general term for weather-driven
processes that break down or transport rock - Processes that cause erosion include
- Glaciers
- Rivers
- Wind (which demands an atmosphere!)
34Erosion by Water
- Colorado River continues to carve Grand Canyon
- Land has been uplifted, but river manages to wear
it down
35Erosion by Ice
- Glaciers carved the Yosemite Valley
- They covered most of the Northern US and Europe
in recent ice ages
36Erosion by Wind
- Wind wears away rock and builds up sand dunes
- Frequent on Earth, also seen on Mars
37Erosional Debris
- Erosion can create new features by depositing
debris - Again, frequent on Earth, but remnants seen on
Mars too
38The Earth as a Planet
- You gotta love it, it's our pretty home!
- You gotta know something about it too!
- (At least to pass this class.)
39The Earth is (nearly) a Sphere and it Rotates
- Proofs (other than Greek) Masts of ships
visible before their decks. Cicumnavigation in
1522! Distances corresponding to degree of
latitude change bulges near equator. - Newton realized that a rotating object has extra
support perpendicular to its axis - Re 6.378136 x 106 m
- Rp 6.356753 x 106 m
- ELLIPTICITY (Re -Rp )/Re 1/298.3
0.0033528. If the earth were mushier, the same
rotation speed would yield a higher ellipticity.
40More Proofs of Earths Rotation
- FOUCAULT PENDULUM --- fixed plane of
oscillation, with the Earth rotating underneath
it. - Satellites in POLAR ORBIT see different sections
every 90 minutes as the Earth rotates under the
satellite's FIXED path.