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If one body is more massive, then gravitational force is increased ... Rotating body, disk forms. Moons generally along plane of rotation of planet. Gas Giants ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Today


1
Today
  • Today
  • Review of Parts 4 5 of the text (Weeks 8-12)
  • Cover the last of the material
  • Next week
  • Assignment covering Weeks 8-13 due
  • Projects also due next week
  • Class summary
  • Any student presentations

2
Review Weeks 8-12
  • History of our Planetary system
  • Planets Other than Our Own in our Solar System
  • Habitability of places other than Earth
  • Finding Planets outside of the Solar System
  • Visiting or Communicating?

3
Our Solar System
  • Orbits and Gravity
  • Planetary System Formation

4
Orbits
  • Planets are falling towards Sun due to
    gravitational acceleration
  • Moving toward the side fast enough that they miss
  • Moving too fast escape entirely, leave Sun
  • Move too slowly fall into Sun
  • Same with satellites circling Earth, or Sun
    orbiting in our galaxy, or...

5
Gravity
  • Gravity acts between all massive objects
  • Gravitational force is equal on both objects
  • If orbiting, both objects move, not just one,
    since both are being acted on by gravity
  • Both orbit the center of mass of the system
  • Equal mass objects center of mass is at the
    center of the two objects

6
Gravity
  • If one body is more massive, then gravitational
    force is increased
  • Center of mass tilts towards more massive body
  • Forces still equal
  • Equal force on lighter body moves it more than
    the same force on the heavier body
  • Lighter object moves larger distance than heavier
    object

7
Gravity
  • Force of gravity also increases as objects get
    nearer
  • Inverse Square Law (same as light)

8
Orbits
  • Kepler's Laws (EMPERICAL)
  • Planets travel in ellipses, with sun at one focus
    of ellipse
  • Area swept out by radius is equal over any equal
    amount of time
  • Square of the planet's period (the year' for
    that planet) proportional to the distance to the
    sun cubed.
  • P2 a3

9
Planets
  • Almost all planets are in same plane
  • All planets (except Uranus) rotate more or less
    in the same plane, as does Sun
  • Very suggestive of the idea that planets, Sun
    formed from a disk, as we discussed before
  • Suggested by Laplace in 1600s.
  • Disk near star is depleted in Hydrogen, Helium by
    evaporation

10
Planet Formation
  • As disk cools, gas/dust disk can begin condensing
  • Grains form, which themselves agglomerate to
    larger particles
  • Regions where disk is originally dense condense
    faster, gravitationally attract more material
  • Process of continued agglomeration can form
    planets

11
Instability
  • Some processes are naturally stable
  • Burning in main sequence stars
  • Core heats up outer layers puff up core cools
    down
  • Automatically stabilizes itself
  • Ball in a right-side-up bowl
  • Once there's a region of high density in a gas
    cloud or disk, increase in gravitational
    attraction to that region...
  • Unstable
  • Ball on an up-side-down bowl

12
Planet Formation
  • Proto-planetary-core starts sweeping out material
    and planetesimals at its radius
  • Accrete material streams in from just outside or
    inside its radius
  • There is a limit to this process if there are
    planets forming on either side, eventually the
    gaps collide no more new material
  • This process of slowly sweeping up and accreting
    material can take millions of years

13
Mystery Hot Jupiters'
  • A Jupiter couldn't form at 1AU evaporation would
    prevent such a gas giant from forming
  • Many of the extra-solar planets observed are gas
    giants at distances 1AU
  • What happened?
  • Two possibilities
  • Migration
  • Different formation mechanism

14
Planet Formation
  • Migration is possible
  • As planets form and accrete material, they
    experience a drag force
  • Drag takes energy from planets motion and they
    fall inwards

15
Planet Formation
  • Fast formation is also possible
  • In sufficiently massive disk, instabilities can
    occur much faster, and on larger scales
  • Can happen quickly enough that perhaps giants can
    form near star

16
Our Solar System
  • Other Bodies
  • Mercury
  • The Moon
  • Venus
  • Mars
  • Gas Giants
  • Gas Giant Moons

17
The Moon
  • No atmosphere
  • No geological activity
  • No water
  • -gt no erosion
  • Can provide information about formation of solar
    system that is absent from Earth

18
Mercury
  • Similar to moon
  • Similar size
  • Small, empty, simple
  • Very close to Sun
  • No atmosphere to mediate temperature swings
  • 750o F in sun
  • -230o F in shade

19
Moon's Cratering
  • Nothing to alter surface
  • Complete history of cratering in Moon's history
  • From predicted cratering rate, one expects that
    crust of moon formed very quickly in solar system
    history

20
Possible Moon Formation Scenario
21
Possible Moon Formation Scenario
  • Explains similar Oxygen abundances
  • Very different from meteorites
  • Explains fewer volatiles
  • If Earth's iron core had already settled, impact
    would have dislodged crust material
  • Heat of impact would have vaporized volatiles

22
Venus
  • Closest to Earth
  • ¾ as far away from Sun as Earth is
  • Very similar to Earth's size, density
  • Covered by thick, opaque clouds

23
Venus
  • Runaway greenhouse effect
  • Hot very near sun
  • Water begins to evaporate
  • Water vapor is a greenhouse gas!
  • Surface gets hotter, more water evaporation
  • Surface is hundreds of degrees
  • No liquid water

24
Mars
  • Red planet between Earth and Asteroid Belt
  • Half again as far away from Sun as the Earth is
  • Expect it to be 100o F colder than Earth on
    average
  • Average too cool for water
  • Peak temps 70o F (but -130 at night!)

25
Mars
  • Near asteroid belt
  • Likely more collisions than Earth
  • Large impacts can blow off significant rocky
    material
  • Meteorites
  • As well as gases (atmosphere)

26
Mars
  • 1/2 radius of Earth
  • 1/10 mass
  • 40 surface gravity
  • Force of a 1 lb weight less than ½ lb on Mars
  • Less gravity holding the atmosphere in place

27
Mars
  • Too little gravity to be able to hold onto a
    significant atmosphere
  • Atmospheric pressure less than 1 of Earth's

28
Evaporation
  • What causes evaporation of liquid, and what
    prevents it?

29
Evaporation
  • What causes evaporation of liquid, and what
    prevents it?
  • Fastest moving water (say) molecules can escape
    into atmosphere
  • Water molecules in atmosphere can collide into
    water and become part of the liquid
  • Balance is reached when evaporating water
    condensing water

30
Evaporation
  • Can change balance
  • Little water in atmosphere, evaporation happens
    faster
  • (Why feel so sticky on a humid day)
  • If air pressure is very low, evaporated water
    molecules can move very far away from pool of
    water
  • Fewer around to condense
  • Faster evaporation

31
Evaporation
  • Effect of atmospheric pressure happens on our own
    planet
  • Reason for high-altitude cooking instructions'
    on some boxes
  • Higher altitude -gt lower air pressure -gt
    evaporation is easier -gt lower boiling point

32
Evaporation
  • Martian atmospheric pressure lt 1 of Earth's
  • (Earth's atmosphere at 15 miles / 80,000 ft)
  • Water boiling point is so low that any liquid
    water evaporates immediately
  • No free water possible on surface

33
Evaporation
  • But water ice DOES exist on Mars
  • Polar ice caps
  • Mostly (on top) dry ice (frozen CO2)
  • Underneath, visible when CO2 has sublimated,
    water ice
  • Quite likely some trapped under surface
    permafrost'

34
The Giants
  • The Giants are sometimes all called Jovian'
    planets after Jupiter
  • After more exploration showed their diversity,
    this term lost favour

35
The Giants
  • The giant planets can be weighed very accurately
    by measuring the speed of their moons.
  • Much heavier than Earth, but not so heavy
    considering their size
  • Densities 600 1600 kg/m3, compared with Earth's
    5700 kg/m3
  • Mostly made of gas/liquids?

36
The Birth of Giants
  • In outer solar system, cooler
  • Less evaporative stripping of volatile gases
  • If sufficiently massive cores form, can keep even
    volatile gases
  • These gases will be representative of the very
    early solar system

37
The Birth of Giants
  • Since early solar system is largely composed of
    Hydrogen, so will gas giants
  • Rocky or Icy or Slushy core
  • High-hydrogen atmosphere has some similarities to
    atmosphere in Miller-Urey experiment
  • Can form lots of organics

38
The Birth of Giants
  • Large mass -gt high pressure, temperature at
    centre
  • Temperature at centre of Jupiter 4 times
    surface of Sun!
  • Collapse from origin of planet still slowly
    continuing
  • Releases heat energy
  • These planets have a source of heat

Jupiter in Infra-red
39
The Birth of Giants
  • Gas giants emit more heat than they absorb from
    Sun
  • At earlier times, would have been much hotter
  • Moons, which are nearby, heated by their nearby
    planet
  • Many of these moons are large (planet-sized)
  • Moons might be interesting for life?

Jupiter in Infra-red
40
The Moons of Giants
  • Planets large enough that many moons were also
    formed
  • Many of them planet sized in their own right
  • Get heat from planet
  • Some (Io/Jupiter) effected by planets magnetic
    field
  • Atmosphere? (Titan, Saturn)
  • Water? (Europa, Jupiter)

41
The Moons of Giants
  • Formation like planets around sun
  • Rotating body, disk forms
  • Moons generally along plane of rotation of planet

42
Gas Giants
  • Convection is a fundamental process
  • Happens everywhere
  • Fluid heated at bottom rises, cools, falls back
    down
  • Gas giants have hot centres
  • Large-scale motions
  • Mix material

43
Gas Giants
  • Makes it difficult to imagine life forming
  • No real surface to live on
  • Chemicals constantly being mixed around
  • No originally contained environment (protocell')

44
Moons
  • Gas giants have planet-sized moons
  • At least one (Titan) has a significant atmosphere
  • Another (Europa) very likely has liquid salty
    water under a layer of ice

45
Europa
  • Very suggestive it has a liquid underneath
  • No cratering
  • Many fractures, ridges on surface
  • What would this mean for life?
  • If some source of energy on inside (geothermal,
    chemical), very real possibility of some sort of
    life

46
Titan
  • Very Cold
  • Massive, Cold enough to have an atmosphere (1.5 x
    as dense as ours!)
  • No oxygen
  • No liquid water
  • Hydrogen rich
  • Interesting organic chemistry
  • Lakes of hydrocarbons?
  • Huygens probe 2005

47
How Unique is Earth?
  • What is special about Earth?
  • How important/rare are those things?
  • How many such planets are there likely to be?

48
Earth
  • Atmosphere
  • Large surface gravity
  • Reasonable temperature
  • Rocky surface
  • Large moon
  • Lots of heavy elements

49
How Important/Rare are these?
  • Heavy elements
  • Likely ubiquitous in planets around Pop I stars

50
How Important/Rare are these?
  • Rocky Surface
  • Can happen if there is heavy elements (see above)
  • Probably true of all planets close enough to have
    liquid water
  • (But planet migration)

51
How Important/Rare are these?
  • Atmosphere
  • Requires not too close to sun
  • Requires massive enough planet

52
How Important/Rare are these?
  • Reasonable Temperature
  • Goldilocks zone
  • Needs to be right distance to star

53
How Important/Rare are these?
  • So we require
  • Rocky Planet
  • Of the right mass
  • At the right distance from the star

54
Habitable Zone
  • Corresponds to further than Venus to about Mars
    distance for our Sun
  • Using inverse-square law, could calculate for
    other stars
  • Main requirement liquid water in the presence of
    an atmosphere.

55
Habitable Zone Binary Stars
  • About half of all stars are in binary systems
  • Stars orbit a common centre of mass (more on that
    next week)
  • Can planets have reasonable orbits in such
    systems?
  • Yes, but must orbit one star or be far away from
    both
  • Figure 8 orbits arent stable

56
Finding Other Planets
  • Light from planet
  • Reflected visible light
  • Reflectedgenerated infrared
  • Dark from planet
  • Transits (shadows from planets)
  • Light bent by planet
  • Gravitational Lensing
  • Star's Motion from planet
  • Proper Motions
  • Doppler Shift

57
Light from the planet
  • Stars observed by emitting their own light
  • Planets don't emit light, but do reflect sunlight
  • Problem reflect a billionth or less of the light
    from the companion star

Small brown dwarf (not planet) companion to a
star directly imaged
58
Light from the planet
  • Has yet to be observed
  • What sort of planets/systems does this work best
    for?

59
Light from the planet
  • Would work best for
  • Large planets (more reflecting surface)
  • Reflective planets (ammonia clouds?)
  • Near enough star to reflect lots of light
  • Far enough not to be overwhelmed by light from
    star

Small brown dwarf (not planet) companion to a
star directly imaged
60
Light from the planet
  • Large planets near star Hot Jupiters'
  • Gas giants (presumably) very near star

Small brown dwarf (not planet) companion to a
star directly imaged
61
Light from the planet
  • How observed?
  • Very careful imaging of nearby stars
  • Probably with telescopes above atmosphere
    (Hubble)
  • As long as planet isn't in front of/behind star,
    will be reflecting light towards Earth
  • Just a question of being able to observe it

62
Light from the planet
  • This is actually an infrared image
  • Jupiter-type planets may emit their own infrared
    light
  • Terrestrial planets reflect a lot of infrared
  • Star emits most of its light in visible
  • Better chance in IR

Small brown dwarf (not planet) companion to a
star directly imaged
63
Planetary Transits/Occultations
  • Light from planet can be blocked by orbiting
    planet
  • Careful measurement of total light from star can
    show this
  • Can't see directly the star is just a point

Brightness
Time
64
Planetary Transits/Occultations
  • If period is measured (multiple transits) and
    mass estimate for star exists, have
  • Planet's distance
  • Planet's size
  • Planet's orbital period
  • Star's size

?
Brightness
Time
65
Planetary Transits/Occultations
  • How are these observed?
  • Fairly rare events
  • Has to be exactly along line of sight
  • Only planetary systems aligned along line of
    sight
  • Planet directly in front of star only very
    briefly (Jupiter 1 day / 11 yrs)
  • Fairly careful measurements must be made
  • Jupiter 1 decrease in Sun's brightness

66
Planetary Transits/Occultations
  • Large survey
  • Dedicated telescope
  • Look at large fraction of sky every night (or
    nearly)

67
Planetary Transits/Occultations
  • Works best for
  • Large planets (blocks more of star)
  • Planets near star (shorter period easier to
    observe)
  • Hot Jupiters
  • Has been used to find planets

68
Gravitational lensing
  • A very powerful technique to measure dim objects
  • Used in searches for brown dwarfs or other large
    clumps of dark matter'
  • Requires
  • distant, bright, source star,
  • very accurate measurements of the brightness of
    the source star over time

69
Gravitational lensing
  • At least one planet has been seen' this way
  • Results
  • Mass of planet, star
  • Distance to star
  • Distance planet lt-gt star
  • Difficult, because only get one chance at
    measuring system

70
Gravitational lensing
  • Works best for what systems?
  • Dim Stars
  • Massive planets
  • (relatively) insensitive to distance between star
    and planet
  • Jupiters at any radii / temperature

71
Astrometry Proper Motions
  • Stars motion towards/away from us can be measured
    very accurately
  • Doppler Shift
  • Motions side-to-side' on the sky take VERY long
    time to make noticeable changes

72
Astrometry Proper Motions
  • If star has a large enough proper motion
  • (probably means very near us)
  • Wobble in the star's motion could indicate that
    the star is being tugged on by a nearby planet

73
Astrometry Proper Motions
  • Has been successfully used to detect white-dwarf
    companions
  • Shown below Sirius
  • No successful measurement of planets however

74
Astrometry Proper Motions
  • Would work best for?

75
Astrometry Proper Motions
  • Would work best for?
  • Nearby stars
  • Large mass companion
  • Distant from planet can pull further distance
  • Near planet faster orbit, more visible wobble

76
Doppler Shifting
  • Star has slight motion in orbit
  • If that motion is largely towards/away from us,
    might be detected by Doppler shift
  • Motions towards/away can be very accurately
    measured (few meters/sec)

77
Doppler Shifting
  • Has so far been extremely successful
  • If can watch for several periods, can get very
    accurate period measurements
  • Sine wave circular orbit
  • Tilted' sine wave elliptical orbit
  • Get period, total velocity induced by planet

78
Doppler Shifting
  • Works best for

79
Doppler Shifting
  • Works best for
  • Large planets
  • Close in
  • Faster period (easier to detect)

80
Interstellar Travel, Interstellar Communication
  • Interstellar Travel
  • Rockets
  • Fuel
  • Speeds
  • Time Dilation
  • Interstellar Communication
  • What frequencies do we use?
  • Meaningful signals
  • SETI_at_home

81
Rockets
  • Have to exert force to overcome that of gravity
  • Reactions from some sort of fuel
  • Chemical
  • Electrical...
  • Propel exhaust downwards
  • By Newton's 3rd law, propel rocket upwards

Net Force -gt acceleration
Gravitational Force
Force exerted by exhaust
82
  • Easy to accelerate upwards
  • Hard to keep from falling back down!
  • Can either
  • Accelerate very quickly to escape vel (25,000
    mph) and coast up
  • Gravity will keep decelerating you but never
    quite pull you back
  • Or accelerate slowly through ascent
  • Luckily, further up you get, weaker force from
    Earth's gravity becomes

Net
Grav Force
exhaust
83
Rockets Fuel
  • Takes a lot of fuel to move something into
    Earth's orbit or further
  • Would take about as much fuel to launch me into
    orbit as it takes to heat a Chicago home through
    an entire winter
  • Unlike a car trip, fuel starts weighing a lot,
    even compared to rocket
  • Shuttle launch
  • Empty Shuttle 230,000 lb
  • Fuel 2,700,000 lb

84
Fuel along the way?
  • Interstellar medium VERY tenuous
  • Sprinkled with hydrogen
  • Could it be collected and then burned (nuclear
    fusion?)
  • Hard to see how
  • Drag on ship
  • Power to magnetic fields
  • But would solve enormous fuel problem

85
Special Relativity
  • Einstein
  • Physics is the same in all inertial frames of
    reference
  • Speed of light in a vacuum is a fundamental
    physical constant of the Universe

86
Special Relativity
  • But for higher velocities, can be significant!
  • Astronaut goes to Alpha Centauri and back at 95
    of speed of light
  • Astronaut ages 3 years, people back home 9
  • At closer and closer to speed of light, effect
    gets bigger and bigger.

87
Special Relativity
  • Speed of light becomes moving target
  • Astronaut can put more and more energy into
    traveling faster
  • But because can never pass light (light must
    always travel at same velocity!) can never pass
    speed of light
  • Takes infinite amount of energy to even get to
    speed of light

88
Automated Probes?
  • High-tech Voyagers or Pioneers
  • Aim towards nearby stars
  • Enough fuel to accelerate
  • Enough smarts to navigate toward system
  • Get solar power once near star
  • Send message
  • To nearby planets
  • To us

89
Travel Difficult
  • Communication much simpler than Transportation.

90
Messages
  • Its a lot easier sending signals than things
  • Messages
  • Have no mass
  • Don't require fuel
  • Don't require food/provisions for long journey
  • Cheap to produce
  • Travel at speed of light

91
What frequencies to use?
  • Two choices for long-distance forces
  • Gravity (difficult)
  • Electromagnetic
  • But there's an essentially infinite range of
    frequencies to examine
  • Radio waves
  • Easy/cheap to generate, focus

92
SETI_at_home
  • Several different SETI listening experiment
  • One is called Project SERENDIP'
  • Listen in' on other astronomical uses of the
    Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico
  • Can't choose where the observers are looking, but
    can listen (nearly) 24x7
  • Receiver installed which listens to 168 million
    narrow channels near 21cm Hydrogen line

93
SETI_at_home
  • Done as part of screen saver on thousands of
    volunteer's computers

94
Results
  • Several candidate signals discovered
  • 2500 persistent gaussians (longish spikes seen at
    least twice)
  • Need to be checked to make sure not
    interference/noise
  • Also searching data for persistent spikes,
    pulses, triplets...

95
Has the Search Happened Already?
  • UFO sightings
  • What Evidence is Necessary?
  • If no UFOs yet, why not?

96
UFO Sightings
  • No shortage of UFO observation stories, photos
  • A moment spent with google provides thousands of
    ernest, probably mostly honest web pages
    describing
  • UFO sightings
  • Abductions

97
What Evidence is Required?
  • Large amount of documentary evidence that the
    Universe has apparently searched for life here
  • Why not accept this as truth?

98
Extrordinary Claims require Extrordinary Evidence
  • Let me make two claims
  • This morning, violence broke out in an up-til-now
    quiet region of Iraq, in the southern town of
    Rajaf. Four US soldiers were killed.
  • With great effort, I can fly short distances
    (10-20 ft) using the power of my mind.
  • Which (if either) do you believe?

99
Extrordinary Claims require Extrordinary Evidence
  • You have exactly the same evidence for both
    claims my say-so.
  • Clearly, the Iraq claim has more serious
    immediate consequences (death, future violence)
  • Why is the same evidence more likely to be
    sufficient in one case (the more serious, even)
    than in the other?

100
What Evidence is Required?
  • Photographs are easily misinterpreted
  • Photographs also easily faked
  • These Robert Schaefer

101
What Evidence is Required?
  • Eyewitness evidence notoriously unreliable
  • Human brain very good at seeing patterns, filling
    in blanks
  • Too good, in fact, to be good at mundanely
    reciting uninterpreted observations

102
Observation Test
  • Quantitative test
  • Count basketball passes by one team (dressed in
    white) in a complicated, dynamic scene
  • http//viscog.beckman.uiuc.edu/grafs/demos/15.html

103
Same lab change blindness'
  • http//viscog.beckman.uiuc.edu/grafs/demos/10.html

104
Post-event Suggestibility
  • Elizabeth Loftus
  • Film shown of car accident
  • Questionaire after film
  • Followup questionaire afterwards
  • Leading questions, misinformation in questions
    could cause people to misremember event
    afterwards
  • Wrong color of car
  • Remembering' stop signs, buildings that weren't
    there
  • ...

105
What Evidence is Required?
  • This doesn't mean that all the evidence is proven
    wrong/mistaken
  • Not enough evidence to be convincing
  • What would be convincing evidence?

106
What Evidence is Required?
  • This doesn't mean that all the evidence is proven
    wrong/mistaken
  • Not enough evidence to be convincing
  • What would be convincing evidence?
  • Chunk of spacecraft material/technology
  • Cheek swab from alien
  • ...

107
Fermi's Paradox
  • No signals from aliens yet.
  • No visitors yet either, perhaps.
  • Why not?

108
Fermi's Paradox
  • Even if 1,000,000 civilizations in our galaxy
    today, that's one per 300,000 stars
  • Would have to explore by chance to find Earth
  • Radio signals identifying Earth are very new
    1960s or so
  • Even if travel speed of light, on has been time
    for 20ly round trip
  • Only a handful of stars that close

109
Next week
  • Assignment covering Weeks 8-13 due
  • Projects also due next week
  • Class summary
  • Any student presentations
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