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1445 Introductory Astronomy I

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Title: 1445 Introductory Astronomy I


1
1445 Introductory Astronomy I
  • Chapter 9
  • Asteroids, Comets Objects Beyond Neptune
  • R. S. Rubins
    Fall, 2009

2
Asteroids 1
  • Asteroids are rocky objects (planetesimals)
    orbiting the Sun, typically over about 100 meters
    across. They are thought to be the building
    blocks of planets, which were formed about 4.6
    billion years ago at the same time as the Sun.

3
Asteroids 2
  • There are probably billions of asteroids less
    than 1 km (1000 m) across, millions larger than 1
    km, with about 200 larger than 100 km (60 miles)
    across.
  • The main asteroid belt lies between Mars and
    Jupiter, at 2.2 AU and 3.3 AU from the Sun.
  • Asteroids have distinctly elliptical orbits about
    the Sun, moving in the same sense as the planets,
    and inclined to the ecliptic by as much as 30o.
  • As of 2005, more than 3300 asteroids, with orbits
    intersecting the Earths orbit, have been found.
  • Together, all the material in the asteroid belt
    would form a single planet of diameter of about
    half that of the Moon.
  • Within the asteroid belt, the average distance
    between asteroids is about ten million km, so
    that the possibility of a collision with a
    passing spacecraft is negligible.

4
Asteroid Orbits
5
Asteroids 3
  • Asteroids are thought to be the building blocks
    of planets, which were formed with the Sun about
    4.6 billion years ago.
  • No major planet was formed in the asteroid belt
    because of Jupiters immense gravity, which also
    created gaps in the asteroid belt, and forced the
    Trojan asteroids to orbit in two clusters in
    roughly the same orbit as Jupiter.
  • The largest asteroid, Ceres , now classified as a
    dwarf planet, is almost spherical, with a
    diameter of 930 km (580 miles), making it a
    little smaller than Plutos satellite, Charon.
  • Smaller asteroids, Pallas and Vesta, have
    diameters of roughly 600 km and 530 km (330
    miles) respectively.

6
The Asteroid Belt
  • The Trojan asteroids lie in the range 5.0 to
    5.5 AU, level with Jupiters orbital path.

7
Dawn Asteroid Mission 2007-2015 1
  • The Dawn asteroid mission was launched in July
    2007, and is scheduled to use Mars for a
    slingshot in 2009, orbit Vesta in 2011, and reach
    Ceres in 2015.
  • Vesta, the 4th largest asteroid, was hot and
    volcanic early in its life, so that its original
    surface has probably been obliterated by ancient
    lava flows.
  • Vestas surface is dominated by a giant crater at
    its south pole, about 285 miles across and 8
    miles deep.
  • Ceres is the more interesting object of study,
    since it is should be close to its original state
    of 4.6 billion years ago.
  • Ceres is thought to contain a layer of water ice
    (and possibly liquid water) 40 to 80 miles thick,
    which has kept its surface cool, and eliminated
    volcanic activity.

8
Dawn Asteroid Mission 2007-2015 2
  • Unlike the chemical rockets of past use, which
    provide bursts of rapid acceleration, Dawn uses
    the gentle, continuous and energy-efficient
    propulsion, provided by xenon ions in an electric
    field, known as ion drive propulsion.
  • Taking about 4 days to reach 60 mph, and 1 year
    to reach 5500 mph, it will ultimately escape into
    space at 89,000 mph.
  • It will test its instruments during the Mars
    flyby in 2009, and orbit Vesta for 9 months,
    beginning in 2011.
  • On hopefully reaching Ceres in 2015, it will
    orbit the dwarf planet for at least 5 months.
  • Dawn carries an optical camera, gamma ray and
    neutron detectors, and a mapping spectrometer.

9
Ceres, the Largest Asteroid
  • Ceres and the Moon have diameters of 930 km
    and 3480 km respectively.

10
Asteroid Mathilde
11
Ida (53 km across) and its Tiny Moon, Dactyl
Several asteroids have been found to have
orbiting moons.
12
Meteoroids, Meteors and Meteorites
  • A meteoroid is a small asteroid, which becomes a
    meteor or shooting star as it penetrates the
    Earths atmosphere.
  • While there is no precise definition for the size
    of an meteoroid, objects smaller than about 100 m
    across are typically termed meteoroids .
  • Most vaporize completely before striking the
    ground.
  • A meteorite is a portion of a meteor reaching the
    ground intact, possibly producing an impact
    crater.
  • A meteor shower occurs when the Earth moves
    through the debris left behind by a comet.
  • Carbon dating shows that the oldest meteorites
    are about 4½ billion years old i.e. the same age
    as the solar system.

13
80-Ton Asteroid Hits the Nubian Desert
  • In October 2008, an asteroid (which could also be
    called a meteorite) about 12 ft across with a
    mass of about 80,000 kg (80 metric tons) exploded
    at an altitude of about 37 km, the parts
    scattering in the Nubian desert of Sudan.
  • By a lucky accident, asteroid 2008 TC3 became the
    first such object to be observed before impact.
  • Fifteen fragments were recovered were later
    recovered over a region of length 29 km.
  • The black jagged rocks collected contained
    metals, such as iron and nickel, graphite, and
    nanodiamonds.

14
Stony Meteorite Found in Texas
Stony meteorites look like ordinary rocks,
often covered with a dark crust, caused by
the melting of the outer surface during its
descent through the atmosphere.
15
Iron Meteorite Found in Australia
  • Iron meteorites contain iron-nickel compounds.

16
Impact Crater Formed by a 12 kg Meteorite
17
Meteor Crater, Arizona
  • Caused some 50,000 years ago by a meteoroid about
    50 m in diameter.
  • Meteor crater is about 1.2 km across and 200 m
    deep.

18
Pluto Data
  • Average distance from Sun 39.5 AU.
  • Mass 0.2 of Earth (0.002 ME).
  • Diameter 2370 km (19 of Earth, 49 of Mercury).
  • Average density 36 Earth density.
  • Orbital eccentricity 0.25.
  • Siderial revolution period 248 Earth years.
  • Rotation period 6.4 Earth days (retrograde).
  • For 20 years of its 248 year orbit, Pluto is
    closer to the Sun than Neptune, to which it is
    locked in a 32 orbital resonance.

19
Plutos Orbit
There is an angle of 17o between the orbits of
Pluto and Neptune.
20
Pluto and Neptunes Orbits
21
About Pluto and Charon 1
  • Plutos orbit is significantly more elliptical
    and more tilted with respect to the ecliptic than
    is any other planet.
  • Plutos satellite Charon has a diameter of 1190
    km (just half that of Pluto), and its distance
    from Pluto is less than 5 of the Moon-Earth
    distance.
  • Plutos surface contains frozen nitrogen, methane
    and carbon monoxide (CO), while Charons may be
    covered with water ice.
  • Pluto and Charon move in a unique form of
    synchronous rotation, in which each has a face
    locked to the other body.
  • Thus, observed from Pluto, Charon, would appear
    to hover in the sky, and vice-versa.

22
Discovery of Charon, 1978
23
Images of Pluto and Charon 1
  • These 2006 Hubble images were the first to
    show two tiny moons orbiting Pluto and Charon.

24
Dwarf Planets
  • In an astronomical conference, held in Prague in
    2006, the as smaller planet-like objects, such as
    Pluto, Eris and Ceres were termed Dwarf Planets.
  • The largest of the dwarf planets is the Kuiper
    belt object Eris, which is currently at its
    aphelion, about 100 AU from the Sun.
  • Eriss orbit is very elliptical, and at its
    perihelion in about 280 years, it will reach 38
    AU from the Sun, which is not much larger than
    Neptunes distance of 30 AU.
  • The most recent objects to be identified as dwarf
    planets are Makemake and Haumea, the latter
    having been first observed in 2003.
  • Haumea has the elongated shape of an American
    football, possibly due to its rapid rotation,
    with a period of about 4 hours.

25
Dwarf Planet Haumea
  • Haumea has about 1/3 the mass of Pluto and two
    moons.
  • It is a trans-Neptunian object (TNO), with a very
    elliptical orbit, varying between 35 AU to 50 AU
    from the Sun.

26
Plutoids, Plutinos and SSSBs
  • The International Astronomical Union (IAU)
    adopted other definitions in 2006, which are
    somewhat simplified below.
  • Plutoids are dwarf planets with mean orbits
    around the Sun, further than that of Neptune, so
    that all the dwarf planets except Ceres are
    plutoids.
  • There are, probably, well over 100 plutoids.
  • Plutinos are those objects of the Kuiper Belt,
    which (like Pluto) have a 23 orbital resonance
    with Neptune.
  • About 25 of the known Kuiper Belt objects,
    including Charon, are plutinos.
  • Small solar-system bodies (SSSBs) refer to all
    objects in the solar system that are not planets,
    dwarf planets, or moons.

27
Eris and its Moon, Dysnomia
  • Artists rendition of Eris and its moon, which
    are roughly at 100 AU (9 billion miles) from the
    Sun.

28
New Horizons Pluto Mission
  • This mission should reach Pluto-Charon in
    2015.

29
What are the Planets?
  • Historically, the Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus,
    Mars, Jupiter and Saturn were considered planets
    circling the Earth. Following Copernicus work in
    1543, scientists placed the Sun at the center of
    our universe, so that the Sun and the Moon were
    dropped as planets and the Earth included.
    Uranus was added in 1781, and Neptune in 1846.
    Pluto was considered a normal planet from 1930
    to 2006.
  • An answer to the question,how does one define
    planets planets?, was given in a 2007 Scientific
    American article. Not only must they be massive
    enough for gravity to give them an essentially
    spherical shape, but it must also sweep up or
    scatter most of their immediate neighbors, at the
    same time holding smaller bodies (moons) in
    stable orbits.

30
Maria Mitchell, Astronomer
  • Maria Mitchell (1818-1889) was the first
    woman elected to the American Academy of Arts and
    Sciences, after she discovered a new comet in
    1847, using her familys 2 inch telescope.
  • She received a medal from the King of Denmark
    for her discovery, which was known as Miss
    Mitchells Comet.
  • In 1848, she became the first female
    astronomy prof. in the US, when she joined the
    faculty of Vassar College.
  • In addition to her scientific work, she was
    outspoken in her opposition to slavery, and as an
    advocate of womens rights.
  • Mitchell Crater on the Moon is named after
    her.

31
Comets 1
  • A comet consists of a solid nucleus, surrounded
    by a gaseous coma, distinguished by a long dust
    and ion tails, which are caused by the
    vaporization of the nucleus when it approaches
    the Sun.
  • Comets passing the Sun lose between 1 and 2 of
    their masses to evaporation during each passage
    by the Sun, so that they would be expected to
    make fewer than 100 orbits.
  • The nucleus (10-20 km across), is a fluffy
    amalgum of rock, dust and water ice, with a
    density about 1/5 th that of ice.
  • The coma (about 100,000 km in diameter) consists
    of very low pressure gas and dust surrounding the
    nucleus.
  • UV light breaks water molecules into hydrogen and
    oxygen, so that the coma is surrounded by an
    invisible H2 envelope.

32
Comets 2
  • The low pressure gas and dust also form two
    diaphanous tails an ion (or plasma) tail and a
    dust tail (each about 100 million km long).
  • Because of pressure of the solar wind, which
    consists of fast-moving charged particles from
    the Sun, comet tails point away from the Sun.
  • The less massive plasma tail, which often emits
    the blue light of carbon monoxide (CO) ions,
    always points away from the Sun because of the
    pressure of the Suns radiation, regardless of
    the direction of the comets motion.
  • The heavier dust tail also points away from the
    Sun, but because of the inertia of the dust
    particles, bends away from the direction of the
    comets motion.

33
Comets 3
  • In August 2009, extraterrestrial amino acid
    glycene was reported in material obtained from a
    comet.
  • The material was collected in 2004, when the
    spacecraft Stardust through the dust and gas
    tails of the comet Wild 2, and analyzed later
    after the samples were parachuted to the ground.
  • Amino acids, of which glycene is the simplest,
    when strung together in chains, form a diversity
    of proteins.
  • The research group at The Goddard Flight Center
    in Maryland, were able to confirm that the
    carbon-isotope concentrations in the samples were
    typical of an extraterrestrial origin, and so
    could not have been contamination, coming from
    the Earth.

34
Comet Orbit and Tails
35
Structure of a Comet
36
Two Tails of Comet Mrkos
37
Comet Kohoutek by Visible Light
38
Comet Kohoutek by UV Showing H Cloud
39
Comet Ikeya-Seki, 1965
40
Comet West, 1976
41
Comet Hayakutake, 1996
42
Two Tails of Comet Hale-Bopp
43
Kuiper Belt
  • The solar system appears to contain two comet
    reservoirs.
  • The Kuiper Belt, estimated to contain over a
    hundred million comets, begins near Neptune in
    the plane of the ecliptic, extending from 30 AU
    to at least 55 AU from the Sun.
  • For reasons not yet known, Kuiper Belt objects
    show a wide range of color, from slightly blue to
    very red.
  • The dwarf planets, Pluto, Eris, Makemake and
    Haumea are Kuiper Belt objects.
  • Eris, which is about 50 larger than Pluto, is
    further from the Sun, with an elliptical orbit,
    of period about 650 years.
  • Other large objects in the Kuiper Belt are Sedna
    and Quaoarh.

44
Oort Cloud
  • The Oort cloud is a spherical distribution of icy
    bodies orbiting the Sun, which extends from about
    10,000 AU to about 100,000 AU.
  • 100,000 AU is about 9.3 trillion miles (or 1.6
    ly), which is almost 40 of the way to the
    nearest star, Proxima Centauri.
  • The periods of most comets from the Oort cloud
    may be millions of years, compared to about 100
    years for the Kuiper belt comets.
  • The Oort cloud is estimated to contain trillions
    of comets, only very few of which get
    gravitational pushes into the inner solar system,
    where there become short-period comets with
    altered orbits, such as Comet Halley.

45
Kuiper Belt
  • Pluto is the second largest known object in the
    Kuiper belt.

46
The Oort Cloud
47
Oort Cloud and Kuiper Belt
48
Changing a Comets Orbit
49
The Heliosphere 1
50
The Heliosphere 2
  • The heliosphere is a bubble in space produced by
    the Suns solar wind, which is an outward flow of
    plasma (largely protons and electrons) from the
    Sun.
  • In addition, the heliosphere contains the solar
    magnetic field and the solar system, and extends
    well beyond the orbit of Pluto.
  • The particles are bound together by the magnetic
    field surrounding them, while the pressure of the
    solar wind depends on the particle density and
    the strength of the magnetic field, both of which
    get weaker as the plasma spreads out from the
    Sun.
  • The outer boundary of the heliosphere would be
    expected to occur when the pressure of the solar
    wind is balanced by that of the surrounding
    interstellar medium.

51
The Heliosphere 3
52
Termination Shock and Voyager Spacecraft 1
  • The speed of the solar wind in the vicinity of
    the Earth is about a million mph, but slows down
    as it moves away from the Sun.
  • The first boundary of the heliosphere occurs when
    the solar wind drops from supersonic to subsonic
    speeds, producing a shock wave, known as the
    termination shock.
  • Voyager 1, launched in 1977, traveling north from
    the Sun, passed through the termination shock in
    2004, at a distance of about 94 AU (almost 9
    billion miles) from the Sun, as indicated by
    changes in its magnetic readings.
  • Voyager 2, also launched in 1977, traveling
    south, reached the termination shock in 2006, at
    a distance of about 76 AU (7 billion miles) from
    the Sun.
  • Voyager 2 made about five shock crossings in a
    couple of days.
  • Voyager 2, unlike Voyager 1, has the advantage of
    having a plasma measuring instrument, which is
    still functioning.

53
Termination Shock and Voyager Spacecraft 2
54
Termination Shock and Voyager Spacecraft 3
55
The Heliosheath and Heliopause
  • The Heliosheath is the region of thr heliosphere
    beyond the termination shock.
  • Here, the solar wind is slowed, compressed and
    made turbulent by interacting with the
    interstellar medium.
  • The Heliosheath is shaped like the coma of a
    cometand bulges out in the direction opposite to
    the Suns path through space.
  • Its closest distance from the Sun lies roughly
    between 80 AU and 100 AU.
  • The Heliopause is the theoretical boundary at
    which the solar wind is finally stopped by the
    interstellar medium.

56
The Bow Shock
  • The bow shock is associated with the slowing of
    the interstellar medium as it comes into contact
    with the heliosphere.
  • The bow shock is so-called because of its
    resemblance to the wake left by a ships prow,
    which its projecting front part.
  • The bow shock has been suggested to lie at about
    230 AU (22 billion miles) from the Sun.
  • Experimentally, a bow shock has been observed by
    the NASA orbiting GALEX telescope, ahead of the
    star Mira in the constellation Cetus.

57
The IBEX Mission
  • Launched in 2008, the Interstellar Boundary
    Explorer (IBEX) is finding results which do not
    fit the current theoretical models.
  • IBEX measures energetic neutral atoms (ENAs)
    which are created, when the solar wind and the
    interstellar medium interact in the heliosheath,
    and are emitted in all directions.

IBEX is 23 high and 38 Across about the size
of two stacked bus tires. It orbits the Earth
at 5/6 of the distance to the Moon.
58
IBEX Data
  • The initial IBEX data reveals a narrow ribbon,
    which is two to three times brighter than the
    surrounding regions.
  • The IBEX results do not match the current
    theoretical models.

59
The Earth
  • There is a photograph taken from one of the
    early interplanetary probes, looking back toward
    Earth. Earth appears as a tiny blue sphere
    surrounded by an immensity of blackness. It is
    a photograph that makes tears flow. There is no
    sharper visual statement of the loneliness of our
    planet. Earth is an insignificant speck in a
    vast and overwhelmingly hostile universe.
  • Bryce DeWitt in
    Gods Rays, 2004

60
(No Transcript)
61
Epilogue I am a
theoretical physicist, and it is common knowledge
that theoretical physicists often start out as
amateur theologians.Albert Einstein said The
Lord God is subtle, but He is not malicious. I
like to turn this around by saying, The Lord God
is not malicious, but he is subtle.There is
nothing to suggest that human beings have a
special role to play in this universe. Steven
Weinberg is absolutely right when he says The
more the universe is comprehensible, the more it
also seems pointless.love..that raises our
existence above the level of farce. And it
needs no religious framework whatever to exert
its power.
Bryce DeWitt in Gods
Rays, 2004
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