Earth and The Terrestrial Worlds

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 7 Earth and the Terrestrial Worlds
Advertisements

The Living Earth Chapter Nine.
ASTR100 (Spring 2008) Introduction to Astronomy Earth as a Planet Prof. D.C. Richardson Sections
Clicker Questions Chapter 5 Earth and Its Moon Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.
Planetary Geology. Layering of Terrestrial Worlds The process of differentiation separates materials with different densities Dense metals fall.
ASTR100 (Spring 2008) Introduction to Astronomy Earth as a Planet Prof. D.C. Richardson Sections
The Solar System.
Space Ch 3 Notes. Bell Work 2/23/10 Draw a diagram showing the orbit of Earth and the orbit of Earth’s Moon. Label the Sun, Earth, the Moon, Earth’s orbit,
Lecture Outlines Physical Geology, 14/e Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Plummer, Carlson &
Chapter 7 Earth and The Terrestrial Worlds Principles of Comparative Planetology Comparative Planetology is the study of the solar system through examining.
Lecture 22. Terrestrial Planets What are they like? Why? MercuryEarthVenusMars.
Chapter 9 Planetary Geology Earth and the Other Terrestrial Worlds.
Homework #5 due next Tuesday, 4:00 pm. Interactions between the surfaces of planets and moon and their interiors play a large role in determining their.
Inner Planetary Geology I. Terrestrial Planets  The Terrestrial Planets cooled from molten masses  Acquired structure during cooling  Made primarily.
Chapter 7 Earth and the Terrestrial Worlds. Mercury craters smooth plains, cliffs.
WARM UP Can you list the planets in order?. Our Solar System.
Lecture 5 6/8/07 AST1001.
Weather and Climate These are Earth’s global wind patterns or circulation - local weather systems move along with them -weather moves from W to E at mid-
1 Inner or Terrestrial Planets All the inner planets formed at the same time. Their composition is also very similar. They lack the huge atmospheres of.
The Inner Planets Chapter Terrestrial Planets Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars Mostly solid rock with metallic cores Impact craters.
Intro to Our Solar System. Our Solar System Most of the planets in our solar system can be seen without a telescope. Uranus and Neptune are the only two.
The Solar System a1 Mercury Sun Venus Earth Mars Asteroids Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Other objects Observe our solar system Four inner planets.
Earth and the Other Terrestrial Worlds
INNER PLANETS Terrestrial Planets are the Four planets closest to the sun. These planets have rocky terrain, and have higher temperatures due to receiving.
NEW CHAPTER Our Solar System CHAPTER the BIG idea Planets and other objects form a system around our Sun. Planets orbit the Sun at different distances.
Mars Geology Dr. Ganna (Anya) Portyankina September, 2015.
Planetary Chart PlanetAUMassTypeAtmosphereMoons Mercury Venus Earth Mars Inner Planets Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune *Pluto.
© Sierra College Astronomy Department Terrestrial Geology Basics.
Chapter 5 Terrestrial Worlds. What are terrestrial planets like on the inside?
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 9 Planetary Geology (abridged): Earth and the Other Terrestrial Worlds.
Sponge: List the six layers of the Earth.
The Solar System.
EARLY HISTORY OF THE TERRESTRIAL PLANETS
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
Our Solar System.
Chapter 29 The Solar System
14 – 2 The Solar System Warm - Up
Mars eccentricity = Mass = 0.11 MEarth
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
THE INNER PLANETS.
Mars.
The Solar System.
Lecture 23.
Ch. 9 and 10: the other Terrestrial Planets
Ch. 8: Earth as a Planet.
Chapter 9 Planetary Geology: Earth and the Other Terrestrial Worlds
Section 3 – pg 552 The Inner Planets
Characteristics of Inner and Outer Planets Pages
MARS.
The Solar System.
Planet Highlights.
The Solar System.
Planet Highlights.
Astronomy 04 The Solar System
A double ringed basin on Mercury image last week by the Messenger spacecraft during a swing past Mercury. Double and multiple ringed basins, although.
The Solar System.
An overview of the Solar System
Our Solar System.
Notes: Our Solar System
Earth: The Standard of Comparative Planetology
The Terrestrial Planets
The Solar System.
The Solar System.
Brief Summary.
The Solar System.
The Solar System.
Chapter 20 Section 3: Inner planets
Planetary Surfaces 4 major processes affect planetary surfaces:
Walter S. Kiefer Lunar and Planetary Institute
Ch. 10: Earthlike Planets: Venus and Mars
Presentation transcript:

Earth and The Terrestrial Worlds Chapter 7 Earth and The Terrestrial Worlds

Principles of Comparative Planetology Comparative Planetology is the study of the solar system through examining and understanding the similarities and differences among the planets. Planetary Geology: The study of surface features and the processes that create them is called geology. Today, we speak of planetary geology, the extension of geology to include all the solid bodies in the solar system.

Viewing the Terrestrial Worlds Spacecraft have visited and photographed all of the terrestrial worlds. Some have even been landed on! Because surface geology depends largely on a planet’s interior, we must first look inside the terrestrial worlds.

Global views and surface close-ups Venus’ surface- atmosphere is not shown. Surface mapped from Megellan spacecraft radar data

Surface Views of some of the terrestrial worlds. Venus, the Moon and Mars have all been landed on successfully by spacecraft from Earth. Venus – Venera Missions (1961-1983) Links Mars Exploration Rover Mission: The Mission Mars Pathfinder Apollo Lunar Missions (1969-1972) Mars Pathfinder Mission (1996-1997)

Inside the Terrestrial Worlds When subjected to sustained stress over millions to billions of years, rocky material slowly deforms and flows. Rock acts more like Silly PuddyTM , which stretches when you pull it slowly but breaks if you pull it sharply. The rocky terrestrial worlds became spherical because of rock’s ability to flow. When objects exceed about 500 km in diameter, gravity can overcome the strength of solid rock and make a world spherical

Gravity also gives the terrestrial worlds similar internal structures. Distinct layers are formed by differentiation. Differentiation is the process by which gravity separates materials according to their density. This resulted in three layers of differing composition within each terrestrial planet. Core Mantle Crust

Lithosphere: Outer layer of relatively rigid rock that encompasses the crust and the uppermost mantle.

Heat flows from the hot interior to the cool exterior by conduction and convection. Conduction: Heat transfer as a result of direct contact. Convection: Heat transfer by means of hot material expanding and rising and cool material contracting and sinking. A small region of rising and falling material is called a convection cell.

Shaping Planetary Surfaces There are four main geological processes Impact Cratering: the excavation of bowl-shaped depressions (impact craters) by asteroids or comets striking a planet’s surface. Volcanism: the eruption of molten rock, or lava, from a planet’s interior onto it’s surface. Tectonics: the disruption of a planet’s surface by internal stresses. Erosion: the wearing down or building up of geological features by wind, water, ice, and other phenomena of planetary weather.

Impact Process Ejecta Impact Ejecta Blanket

Cratering

Volcanism

c) “Sticky” lava makes steep-sloped stratovolcanoes. (Mount St. Helens) c) “Sticky” lava makes steep-sloped stratovolcanoes. Picture by US Geological Survey scientist, Austin Post, on May 18, 1980.

Tectonic Forces at work. Convection Cells

Comparing Planetary Atmospheres

Atmospheric Structure

Visible Light: Warming the Surface and Coloring the Sky Atmospheric gases scatter blue light more than they scatter red light. Longer wavelength red light is more penetrating

Infrared Light: the Greenhouse Effect, and the Tropsosphere The Troposphere becomes warmer than it would if it had no greenhouse gases. Greenhouse gases include: CO2 Water Vapor (H2O) Methane (CH4)

The Greenhouse Effect

Temperatures of the Terrestrial Worlds

Ultraviolet light is absorbed in the Stratosphere. X-Rays are absorbed in the Thermosphere and Exosphere.

The Magnetosphere The Magnetosphere blocks the Solar Wind This produces two regions where the charged particles get trapped – Van Allen Belts.

The interaction of the charged particles from the solar wind near the poles, produces the: Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights) Aurora Australis (Southern Lights)

Aurora Borealis – Northern Lights

Atmospheric Origins and Evolution Outgassing from Volcanic activity was most responsible for producing the earth’s early atmosphere. (Volcanoes give off H2O, CO2, N2, and sulfur compounds.) As life developed, it too influenced the atmosphere of the Earth, allowing it to become what it is today. (e.g. plants give off O2 and consume CO2)

Many gases can escape from the planet if their thermal speed is greater than the escape speed of the planet. Five Major Processes By Which Atmospheres Lose Gas.

A Tour of the Terrestrial Worlds

The Moon 1,738-km radius, 1.0AU from the Sun Astronaut explores a small crater An ancient lava river

Mercury (2,440-km radius, 0.39AU from the Sun)

Mars (3,397-km radius, 1.52 AU from the Sun) Dust Storm over northern ice cap, Mars Global Surveyor Polar Ice Cap (Mars) Viking Orbiter Edge of polar ice cap showing layers of ice and dust. Mars (3,397-km radius, 1.52 AU from the Sun)

Cratering, Volcanism and Tectonics Valles Marineris Heavy cratering in Southern Hemisphere (Mars) Olympus Mons: – largest shield volcano in the solar system

Outflow channels indicate catastrophic flooding Ancient River beds Martian outflow channels and flood planes Outflow channels indicate catastrophic flooding Water eroded crater Gullies on a crater wall formed by water flows?

Venus (6,051-km radius, 0.72 AU from Sun) Shield Volcanoes are common Impact craters on Venus are rare Fractured and twisted crust

Earth (6, 378 km radius, 1.0 AU from the Sun)

Time-Line of Geologic Activity

Which planet has been landed on by a space craft? Jupiter Pluto Venus Mercury Saturn

End of Section