Ice in our Solar System International Polar Year Web Presentation Gregory A. Neumann NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD 20771

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Solar System Chapter 12 Section 1 Pgs
Advertisements

 Our Solar System.
Chapter 7 Our Planetary System Earth, as viewed by the Voyager spacecraft.
THE OUTER PLANETS. The first four outer planets- Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune- are much larger and more massive than Earth, and they do not have.
4.5 The Outer Planets What Do the Outer Planets Have in Common?
 It is the hottest star. All the planets rotate around the sun. Years ago people thought that all of the planets, including the sun, revolved around.
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter NASA’s Next First Step To The Moon Noah E. Petro NASA Goddard Space Flight Center May 12 th, 2009.
1 The Jovian Planets. 2 Topics l Introduction l Images l General Properties l General Structure l Jupiter l Summary.
Jupiter and Saturn’s Satellites of Fire and Ice Chapter Fifteen.
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) is the first mission in NASA's Vision for Space Exploration, a plan to return to the moon and then to travel to.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. The Formation of the Solar System.
THE PLANETS OF THE MILKY WAY SOLAR SYSTEM
 Mercury Venus  Earth Mars Small in size Made of rock and metal. Few satellites. Slow rotation.
The Solar System. The Sun  Temperature: 6,000c (11,000 F)  Made mostly of hydrogen and helium.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 11 Jovian Planet Systems.
Lecture 34 The Outer Planets. The Moon. The Origin of the Moon The Outer Planet Family Chapter 16.9 
The Nine Planets (13.14).
The sun The sun is a star. It is a huge, spinning, glowing sphere of hot gas. The sun is just like the stars that you see in the night sky. It appears.
The Gas Giant Planets Chapter 29 Section 3
Our Solar System.
Comparative Planetology I: Our Solar System
The Beginning of the Universe The universe was created billion years ago in an event known as the big bang The universe started at an incredibly.
The Sun The Sun is made mostly of a gas called hydrogen
The Inner Planets Mercury Closest planet to the sun Surface has many craters and looks like the moon Cliffs that may have formed from the iron rich.
There are two broad categories of planets: Earthlike and Jupiter like
O UTER P LANETS. L ETS REVIEW Name the four inner planets? What was there surface consisting of? What name were the four inner planets known as? Hint.
Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.
By: Andrew, Radit, kevin/6B
Comparative Planetology I: Our Solar System Chapter Seven.
Uranus and Neptune Uranus: general information –Discovered in 1781 (Herschel) –Radius about 4x that of Earth –Mass about 14.5x that of Earth –Nearly featureless.
Our Solar System and Its Origin. 6.1 A Brief Tour of the Solar System Our Goals for Learning What does the solar system look like?
Sin’Kira Khan & Dane Fujinaka
Notes 14-3 and 14-4 The Planets. Order of Planets Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto “My Very Excellent Mother Just.
 Mercury is the planet nearest to the sun.  Mercury is a little bit larger than the Earth’s moon.  It has no atmosphere (means almost no air) 
Earth, as viewed by the Voyager spacecraft. © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. 7.1 Studying the Solar System Our goals for learning:  What does the solar.
Solar System Inner planets Outer planets.
Our Solar System A Write On Activity EARTH AND SPACE SCIENCE Tennessee Standard: Content Standard: 7.0 Earth and Its Place in the Universe The student.
WARM UP Can you list the planets in order?. Our Solar System.
The Solar system.
Comparative Planetology I: Our Solar System. Guiding Questions 1.Are all the other planets similar to Earth, or are they very different? 2.Do other planets.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Solar System Overview Earth, as viewed by the Voyager spacecraft.
The Sun Solar Wind Our Solar System’s Star Current Age- 5 Billions years old Life Time Expectancy- 10 Billions years 99.8 % of our solar systems total.
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.
Planets 6th grade Science.
By: Rhyz Abella.  How big is our solar system?  Our solar system is really too big for us to imagine.  The solar system really IS too big for us to.
THE SOLAR SYSTEM. UNITS OF MEASURMENT IN ASTRONOMY ASTRONOMICAL UNIT, AU = 93,000,000 MILES = 150,000,000 km = AVERAGE DISTANCE FROM EARTH TO THE SUN.
The Outer Planets The Gas Giants.
PLANETS NOTES. Mercury 1 st planet from the Sun About 1/3 the size of Earth No moons No rings It is rocky Unlike Earth, it has very little atmosphere…but.
Comparative Planetology I: Our Solar System Chapter Seven.
Planets of the Solar system Section 4 Key Ideas Identify the basic characteristics that make the outer planets different from terrestrial planets. Compare.
Topic 5: Ken Nealson, Imre Friedmann Topic 6: Peter Ward and Donald Brownlee Bennett Ch. 9 &10 Goldsmith and Owen Ch Suggested reading for next HW.
Earth and the Other Terrestrial Worlds
By: Whitney Lane. The Sun The sun is the largest object in our solar system. It is made up of a big ball of gas, and is very hot. The sun is what heats.
The Solar System. The Sun Temperatures: – core is 15,000,000 C – corona is 5,000 C Evidence of water? – yes What is the atmosphere made of? – hydrogen.
The Outer Planets - Jupiter Jupiter, the largest of the planets, is 2.5 times more massive than all the other planets combined It is covered by clouds.
The Outer Planets Section Standard e. Students know the appearance, general composition, relative position and size, an motion of objects.
Space… The Final Frontier By: Mrs. Cosnowski. Inner Planets There are 4 inner planets MercuryVenusEarthMars All 4 of these planets are called terrestrial.
Earth Compared to Other Planets and Moons
The Planets Mrs. Cothery’s 7 th grade class. The Solar System  Our solar system is made up of eight individual and unique planets and is nearly five.
Planet Facts. Planet Size Vocabulary Surface Pressure (bars or atmospheres) - This is the atmospheric pressure (the weight of the atmosphere per.
By: Mrs. Crisp The Inner Planets S.P.I – Distinguish among the planets according to their known characteristics such as appearance, location,
THE SOLAR SYSTEM BY MARIA DOMINGUEZ MARIA DOMINGUEZ.
PLANETS What is an AU? An astronomical unit (AU) is the average distance of the Earth from the sun. 1 AU = 150 million kilometers.
Earth Science An overview of the Solar System. The Sun The sun is the biggest, brightest, and hottest object in the solar system. The sun is the biggest,
An overview of the Planets. *******Add to your notes: Ecliptic Plane - plane of the Earth's orbit around the Sun. Most objects in the solar system.
Unit 5 Lesson 2. Vocabulary  Solar System: A star and all the planets and other objects that revolve around it.  Planet: A body that revolves around.
Ptolemy: Geocentric Earth-Centered Universe Copernicus: Heliocentric Sun-Centered Universe.
Ice At the Moon - How the Moon Mineralogy Mapper on Chandrayaan-1 Will Help Noah E. Petro NASA Goddard Space Flight Center March 4 th, 2009.
The Planets in our Solar System. The Planets Do you know a saying to remember the planets in order? My Very Eager Mother Just Severed Us Nine Pizzas Do.
Comparative Planetology I: Our Solar System
Presentation transcript:

Ice in our Solar System International Polar Year Web Presentation Gregory A. Neumann NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD

What are ices made of? Solar system is 99% hydrogen, helium, carbon and oxygen, with >0.1% of neon, iron, and nitrogen Some elements form compounds (H 2 O, CO 2, CH 4, NH 3... ) Ices are solidified compounds that are gases at standard (room) temperature and pressure (1 bar), called ‘STP’ Most familiar is water ice, which is a fluid at STP, but has at least nine polymorphs and several isotopes diffraction pattern from deuterated water at ~ 8 kbar Fortes, A. D.

Interior of gas giants? At Jovian pressures, interior hydrogen becomes metallic! Uranus and Neptune probably contain water, ammonia, and methane ices, as does Titan

Where can ice reside on terrestrial planets? Distance from sun? Inclination and shadowing? Greenhouse atmosphere? Water concentration? Too dry! Too hot! ??! !!

We all know what snow and ice looks like, don’t we?

Polar cold traps Scientists use the Kelvin absolute temperature scale, where ice melts at K. Dry ice forms at Mars atmospheric pressure at 145 K, water ice clouds form at ~ K. Liquid oxygen (1 bar): 90 K Liquid nitrogen (1 bar): 77 K Temperatures in Shackleton Crater: 88 K No surface ices exposed?

Ice on Mercury Earth-based radar observations to present 900 kW transmitted from the 306-m Arecibo telescope Volume backscattering in ice inverts circular polarization

The case for the existence of polar ice on Mercury Radar Circular Polarization Ratios μ c = σ sc /σ oc specular: no depolarization ( μ c = 0), rough: μ c < 1 ice: polarization inversion ( μ c > 1). observed: μ c = 1.25 Orbit 0.37 AU, but near-zero inclination to sun Radar scattering characteristics similar to those of the icy Galilean satellites and Mars’southern ice cap Strong reflections located in permanently shaded floors of polar craters. Arecibo S-band radar map High-Resolution Radar Imaging of Mercury’s North Pole J. K. Harmon, P. J. Perillat, and M. A. Slade, 2000.

Ice on the Moon Lunar Prospector Neutron Spectrometer looks for "slow" (or thermal) and "intermediate" (or epithermal) neutrons which result from collisions of normal "fast" neutrons with hydrogen atoms. The ice was thought to be spread over 10,000 to 50,000 square km and amount to 6 billion metric tons. A significant amount of hydrogen would indicate the existence of water - 4.6% over the north polar region and 3% over the south, at a depth of about 40 centimeters beneath dry regolith. 1) Fluxes of fast and epithermal neutrons from Lunar Prospector: Evidence for water ice at the lunar poles, Feldman et al., Science, v. 281, p. 1496, 1998 Moon’s inclination to the Sun is only 1.5°, allowing permanently shadowed regions inside craters No water (as OH-) was detected from the July 31, 1999 crash of Lunar Prospector into the Moon.Possible reasons: might have missed the target area; might have hit a rock; crash had too little energy to separate water from minerals; plume hidden from telescopes by crater walls; telescopes mispointed; or hydrogen simply may not be in the form of water ice.

Clementine bistatic radar experiment S-band radar, 6 W, right circular polarized, transmitted by Clementine Signals received by 70-m Deep Space Network antenna showed reflection characteristics suggestive of water ice in permanently shadowed areas near the south pole Arecibo radio telescope studies using the same radio frequency as Clementine showed similar reflection patterns from areas which are not permanently shadowed. This experiment’s conclusion remains controversial. The Clementine bistatic radar experiment, Nozette et al., Science, v. 274, p. 1495, 1996

Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter / Chandrayaan-1 Two most recent (late ) spacecraft orbiting Moon Powerful, modern radar experiments (Forerunner, Mini-RF) will image PSR’s in detail Lyman-Alpha Mapping Project (LAMP) will see interiors of PSRs by galactic far-ultraviolet light (hydrogen emissions) Lunar Orbiter Laser Altimeter will measure albedo on 5-m footprint scales, detecting 4% ice Neutron spectrometer (LEND) will resolve hydrogen atoms DIVINER will measure surface temperatures and rock environments

Polar ice on Mars The seasonal polar caps of Mars were once thought to melt and cause the seasonal changes in appearance (dust, really) Present-day caps are too cold to melt Altimetry and radar shows caps are nearly pure water ice, covered by seasonal CO 2 frost MOLA Science Team MARSIS Team

Water ice on Mars Ice is buried in regolith and glaciers at temperate latitudes Phoenix lander scooped it up! Could Mars once have been wet?

Outer Icy Moons Exploration has only begun Enceladus, Titan, Europa are prime targets Distance, time, power, radiation...

Jupiter’s Moons - Europa Europa is in synchronous rotation with Jupiter with a period of 3.55 days. Europa has a diameter of about 3130 km and is nearly spherica The exterior surface is believed to be ice of unknown thickness. Europa is suspected of having a water ocean beneath its ice crust. If so, a potentially habitable environment in the outer solar system

Saturn’s smaller moons Enceladus is known to have water ice geysers Energy source is likely tidal, but interior structure is poorly understood Another habitable environment?