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Origin of solar system

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Title: Origin of solar system


1
Origin of solar system
  • Big Bang theory
  • Broadly accepted theory for the origin and
    evolution of our universe
  • Postulates that the observable universe started
    from an instantaneously expanding point 13 to 14
    billion years ago
  • Since then, the universe has continued to expand
  • Prior to Big Bang, all matter and energy were
    compacted into single, inconceivably small dense
    point

2
Evidence for Expanding Universe
  • Astronomers looking at distant galaxies directly
    observe this expansion
  • Originally detected by Edwin Hubble
  • The expansion of the universe "stretches" light
    rays converting blue light into red light and red
    light into infrared light
  • Example of a Doppler effect
  • Thus, distant galaxies, which are rapidly moving
    away from us appear redder
  • Geologists look to the formation of the solar
    system to understand formation of the Earth

3
Evidence for Big Bang
  • Expansion of the Universe
  • Abundance of helium, deuterium and lithium
  • Thought to be synthesized primarily in the first
    three minutes of the universe
  • Thermal spectrum of cosmic microwave background
    radiation
  • The universe is filled with the remnant heat from
    the Big Bang called the "cosmic microwave
    background radiation
  • Today, this radiation is very cold only 2.728
    degrees above absolute zero. It fills the
    universe and can be seen almost everywhere we
    look
  • Cosmic microwave background radiation appears
    hotter in distant clouds of gas
  • Since light travels at a finite speed, we see
    these distant clouds at an early time in the
    history of the universe, when it was denser and
    thus hotter

4
What Big Bang does not Explain
  • Origin of galaxies and the observed large-scale
    clustering of galaxies
  • Astronomers observe considerable structure in the
    universe, from stars to galaxies to clusters and
    superclusters of galaxies
  • "Deep Field Image" taken by the Hubble Space
    Telescope, provides a view of such structure
  • How did these structures form?
  • Most astrophysicists believe that the galaxies
    that we observe today grew gravitationally out of
    small fluctuations in the nearly-uniform density
    of the early universe
  • These fluctuations leave an imprint in the cosmic
    microwave background radiation in the form of
    temperature fluctuations from point to point
    across the sky
  • Origin of the uniform distribution of matter on
    very large scales

5
Origin of solar system
  • Pick a theory, any theory, but it must be
    consistent with these facts
  • Planets all revolve around the Sun in the same
    direction in nearly circular orbits
  • Counterclockwise direction
  • The angle between the axis of rotation and the
    plane of orbit is small (except Uranus)
  • Roughly perpendicular to the plane of orbit

6
Origin of solar system
  • Pick a theory, any theory, but it must be
    consistent with these facts
  • All planets (except Venus and Uranus) rotate in
    the same direction as their revolution their
    moons do, too
  • Counterclockwise direction
  • Each planet is roughly twice as far as the next
    inner planet is from the Sun

7
Origin of solar system
  • 99.9 of mass is in the Sun 99 of angular
    momentum is in the planets
  • Sun rotates very slowly
  • Planets in two groups with different chemical and
    physical properties
  • terrestrial (inner) Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars
    Mercury is mostly Fe (? 5.4)
  • Jovian (outer) Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus,
    Neptune. Jupiter mostly gas and ice ( ? 0.7)
    Pluto ????

8
Origin of solar system
  • Terrestrial planets are mostly O, Si, Fe, Mg.
    The Sun is almost entirely H He (also important
    in Jovian planets)
  • Interplanetary material
  • Existence of asteroid belt between terrestrial
    and Jovian planets
  • Existence of planetary dust

9
Nebular hypothesis
  • Primeval nebula (slowly rotating cloud of He and
    H gases dust)
  • Initially cloud are stable and move slowly
  • Occasionally they are disrupted by shock waves
    from exploding star called a Supernova

10
Nebular hypothesis
  • Massive explosions create turbulence in the dust
    cloud induce gravitational instabilities
  • Gas cloud contracts under the force of gravity
    and flattens
  • As a result the cloud starts to rotate in order
    to conserve its original angular momentum

11
Nebular hypothesis
  • Eventually, the increasing speed of rotation
    causes the cloud to collapse into a flat disk

12
Nebular hypothesis
  • Sun forms and dust particles collide and clump
    together to form planetesimals

13
Nebularhypothesis
14
Our Solar System
15
Evidence for the Nebular Hypothesis
  • Because of the original angular momentum and
    subsequent evolution of the collapsing nebula,
    this hypothesis provides a natural explanation
    for some basic facts about the Solar System
  • The orbits of the planets lie nearly in a plane
    with the sun at the center (neglecting the slight
    eccentricity of the planetary orbit)
  • The planets all revolve in the same direction
  • The planets mostly rotate in the same direction
    with rotation axes nearly perpendicular to the
    orbital plane
  • The nebular hypothesis explains many of the basic
    features of the Solar System, but we still do not
    understand fully how all the details are
    accounted for by this hypothesis

16
Collision hypothesis
  • Portions of the Sun were torn off by a passing
    star planetesimals then collided to form
    planets.
  • Problems gases coming from Sun would be too hot
    to condensestellar collision exceedingly rare.

17
Protoplanet hypothesis
  • Large gas cloud begins to condense.
  • Most mass in center, turbulence in outer parts.
  • Turbulent eddies collect matter meter across
    small chunks grow and collide, eventually
    becoming large aggregates of gas and solid
    chunks.
  • Protoplanets, much bigger than present planets,
    eventually contracted due to their own gravity.

18
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19
The Moon
  • Only a little smaller than Mercury (small planet
    in two-planet system).
  • Surface of the moon very different from the
    surface of Earth.
  • No atmosphere, therefore, no weathering.

20
Formation of the Moon
  • Mars-sized body collides with Earth 4.5 Billion
    yr BP
  • Debris ejected to form Moon

21
A catastrophic impact between theproto-Earth and
a Mars-sized impactor
22
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23
Timeline for the Sun, Earth, and Moon
24
Why worry about the beginning?
  • The evolutionary course is significantly
    influenced by the initial state.
  • We know the state of the Earth today relatively
    well knowing the beginning will help constrain
    the in between.

25
A Differentiating Planet
26
Heating of Planet
  • Accretion. Impacting bodies bombard the Earth and
    convert their energy of motion into heat
  • Gravity. As the Earth gets bigger, the extra
    gravity forces the mass to contract into a
    smaller volume, producing heat
  • Just like a bicycle pump gets hot on compression
  • Radioactive Disintegration. The surrounding
    material absorbs the energy released in
    radioactivity, heating up
  • This is a very slow but steady source of heat
  • About 20 calories of heat are generated by 1
    cubic centimeter of granite in the course of a
    million years
  • It would take this amount of rock 500 million
    years to brew a cup of coffee!

27
An Early Homogeneous Earth
Early Earth was a homogenous body
28
Differentiation
  • Rock is a very poor conductor of heat
  • So heat continued to build up until some
    materials started to melt
  • Calculations have been carried out to determine
    what happened to the early "homogenous" earth
    before differentiation
  • At some point, probably during the first few
    hundred million years of Earth history a region
    at a depth of 500 km became so hot that iron (a
    plentiful element) started to melt
  • The molten iron collected and began to sink under
    its own weight.
  • About one third of the primitive planet's
    material sank to the center and in the upheaval
    heating rates increased and a large part of the
    body was liquefied

29
Differentiation Begins
Irons sinks to the interior and lighter
material floats upward
30
Differentiation
  • The formation of a molten iron core was the first
    stage of the differentiation
  • Converted Earth from a homogenous body with
    roughly the same kind of material at all depths
    to a zoned, or layered body with a dense iron
    core, a crust composed of lighter materials with
    lower melting points and between them the mantle
  • The first stage of differentiation iron melting
    (which took a long time to occur) led to the
    onset of a mechanism that speeded up the
    differentiation
  • Convective overturn -- a process whereby molten
    material may overturn, transferring heat buried
    deeply within the planet to the outer layers

31
Present day Earth
Now Earth is a zoned planet with a dense core
and lighter crust
32
Differentiation
  • Perhaps the most significant event in the history
    of the Earth
  • It led to the formation of a crust and eventually
    the continents
  • Differentiation probably initiated the escape of
    gases from the interior
  • eventually led to the formation of the atmosphere
    and oceans

33
Origins of the Atmosphere
  • Some geologists believer that most of the air and
    water on Earth came from volatile-rich matter of
    the outer solar system that impacted Earth as it
    formed
  • Countless comets may have bombarded Earth
    bringing water and gas that gave us our oceans
    and atmosphere
  • The very hot young Earth would also have lots of
    volcanic activity leading to outgassing of
    volatile gases from within the magma
  • Originally water and gases were locked up in
    minerals
  • There is evidence that the hot outgassing that
    occurred during the first billion years also led
    to the first atmosphere of the Earth

34
Interacting Earth SystemsVolcanoes contribute
gases to the atmosphere and solids to the crust
35
Atmospheric Gases
  • Did not inherit all our atmosphere from ancestral
    bodies
  • Water vapor and other gasses released from rocks
    by outgassing
  • Outgassing by volcanic emission occurs today
  • Water vapor, H, HCl, CO, CO2, N2
  • Early atmosphere higher H content
  • Possibly also ammonia and methane
  • Gasses from modern volcanoes from recycled rocks
  • Reasonably sure early atmosphere not from
    accretion
  • i.e., accumulation of light volatiles from nebula
  • Relative scarcity of inert gasses in modern
    atmosphere
  • Ar, Ne, Krypton
  • Too heavy to escape from earths gravity
  • Less abundant than in atmosphere of stars
  • Our atmosphere not residue of gasses from nebula

36
Rapid Degassing
  • Rapid degassing must have produced much water
    vapor
  • Condense to form seas when earth cooled
    sufficiently
  • Know oceans formed early
  • Water laid sediments
  • Metamorphosed sediments date 3.8 by
  • Detrital grains 4.4 by

37
Big Burp
  • If the Big Bang led to all the universe
  • The "Big Burp" of differentiation led to much of
    the environment we live in
  • It could have occurred over millions of years or
    it could have been a more catastrophic event
  • The earliest Earth was probably an unsorted
    conglomeration
  • Mostly silicon compounds, iron and magnesium
    oxides and smaller amounts of all the natural
    elements

38
Relative Abundance of Elements
39
Earth System Science
  • Earth should be studied as a unified system
  • Interactions and interrelationships between all
    Earth systems
  • Earth can be divided into 4 subsystems
  • Biosphere
  • Lithosphere
  • Hydrosphere
  • Atmosphere
  • Materials and energy cycle among these these
    subsystems

40
Lithosphere, Hydrosphere, Atmosphere, Biosphere
and Uniformitarianism
41
Interacting Earth Systems
42
Kinds of Systems
43
Example of an Open System
44
Another view of the hydrologic cycle
45
The Earth is a Closed System
46
CO2 and Long-Term Climate
  • What has moderated Earth surface temperature over
    the last 4.55 by so that
  • All surface vegetation did not spontaneously
    catch on fire and all lakes and oceans vaporize?
  • All lakes and ocean did not freeze solid?

47
Greenhouse Worlds
  • Why is Venus so much hotter than Earth?
  • Although solar radiation 2x Earth, most is
    reflected but 96 of back radiation absorbed

48
Energy Budget
  • Earths temperature constant 15?C
  • Energy loss must incoming energy
  • Earth is constantly receiving heat from Sun,
    therefore must lose equal amount of heat back to
    space
  • Heat loss called back radiation
  • Wavelengths in the infrared (long-wave radiation)
  • Earth is a radiator of heat
  • If T gt 1?K, radiator of heat

49
Energy Budget
  • Average Earths surface temperature 15?C
  • Reasonable assumption
  • Surface of Earth radiates heat with an average
    temperature of 15?C
  • However, satellite data indicate Earth radiating
    heat average temperature -16?C
  • Why the discrepancy?
  • What accounts for the 31?C heating?

50
Energy Budget
  • Greenhouse gases absorb 95 of the long-wave,
    back radiation emitted from Earths surface
  • Trapped radiation reradiated down to Earths
    surface
  • Accounts for the 31?C heating
  • Satellites dont detect radiation
  • Muffling effect from greenhouse gases
  • Heat radiated back to space from elevation of
    about 5 km (top of clouds) average 240 W m-2
  • Keeps Earths temperature in balance

51
Energy Balance
52
Greenhouse Worlds
  • Why is Venus so much hotter than Earth?
  • Although solar radiation 2x Earth, most is
    reflected but 96 of back radiation absorbed

53
What originally controlled C?
  • In solar nebula most carbon was CH4
  • Lost from Earth and Venus
  • Earth captured 1 in 3000 carbon atoms
  • Tiny carbon fraction in the atmosphere as CO2
  • 60 out of every million C atoms
  • Bulk of carbon in sediments on Earth
  • CaCO3 (limestone and dolostone) and organic
    residues (kerogen)
  • Venus probably had similar early planetary
    history
  • Most carbon is in atmosphere as CO2
  • Venus has conditions that would prevail on Earth
  • All CO2 locked up in sediments were released to
    the atmosphere

54
Earth and Venus
  • Water balance different on Earth and Venus
  • If Venus and Earth started with same components
  • Venus should have either
  • Sizable oceans
  • Atmosphere dominated by steam
  • H present initially as H2O escaped to space
  • H2O transported "top" of the Venusian atmosphere
  • Disassociated forming H and O atoms
  • H escaped the atmosphere
  • Oxygen stirred back to surface
  • Reacted with iron forming iron oxide

55
Planetary Evolution Similar
  • Although Earth and Venus started with same
    components
  • Earth evolved such that carbon safely buried in
    early sediments
  • Avoiding runaway greenhouse effect
  • Venus built up CO2 in the atmosphere
  • Build-up led to high temperature
  • High enough to kill all life
  • If life ever did get a foothold
  • Once hot, could not cool

56
Why Runaway Greenhouse?
  • Don't know for sure why Venus climate went
    haywire
  • Extra sunlight Venus receives?
  • Planet too hot for liquid water
  • Life perhaps never got started?
  • No sink for carbon in organic matter
  • Was the initial component of water smaller than
    that on Earth?
  • Did God make Venus as a warning sign?
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