Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado MESSENGER Teacher Workshop Denver.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Mercury & the Moon Mercury & the Moon. Mercury and the Moon: What can we learn? What do we know? What do we know? Why is it important? Why is it important?
Advertisements

Chapter 6 The Earth and Moon. Distance between Earth and Moon has been measured to accuracy of a few centimeters using lasers (at McDonald Observatory)
Clicker Questions Chapter 6 The Terrestrial Planets Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.
Investigating the Near-Earth Object Population William Bottke Southwest Research Institute William Bottke Southwest Research Institute.
Mercury Astronomy 311 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 10.
The Moon Astronomy 311 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 13.
Mercury Astronomy 311 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 10.
April 4, 2006Astronomy Chapter 8 Cratered Worlds: The Moon and Mercury The Moon is an object of lore and superstition. The Moon is our nearest neighbor,
Mercury Astronomy 311 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 10.
Mercury. Vital statistics l R = x 10 6 m l M = 3.30 x kg l R orbit = 5.79 x m l T = l Eccentricity =.206 l 0.38 R  l
Mercury, seen from Earth through a moderate telescope.
Pic/Puzzle of the Day & Announcements for Nov 3, 2008 Quiz #4: Wednesday Other: Office hours today, until 3 (other by appt) Guest Lecture on Mars! (Wednesday/Monday)
Planetary Geology. Layering of Terrestrial Worlds The process of differentiation separates materials with different densities Dense metals fall.
Mercury Astronomy 311 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 10.
Our Solar System National College Iasi. Our Planets Sun Mercury Venus Earth Earth`s Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Pluto Others Asteroids Meteor.
OUR SOLAR SYSTEM By Joey Quattrini
Solar System, Earth, & All About the Moon!. The Solar System Consists of: – Sun – 8 planets Pluto is now considered a Dwarf – About 90 satellites of the.
Planets in The Solar System
GEOL3045: Planetary Geology Lysa Chizmadia Mercury From Mariner 10 to Messenger Lysa Chizmadia Mercury From Mariner 10 to Messenger.
Chapter 9a Remnants of Rock and Ice Asteroids, Comets, and Pluto.
1/30/20081 MESSENGER First Mercury Flyby First Mercury Flyby January 14, 2008 Speaker: Marilyn Lindstrom Program Scientist, NASA Headquarters NASA Museum.
The Earth-Moon-Sun System
Exam 2 Tuesday Covers Chapters 7-10, & 14 One sheet of notes with writing on one side only.
The geological history of the Moon. The last blast-off from the Moon =channel.
Made by: Anuuke Vannavong. Facts Diameter (km) km Distance from Sun (km)- 57,900,000 Mass (kg)- 33 x 10 to the power of 22 (kg) Surface Gravity.
Lecture 19. Outline Discuss Quiz Mercury Venus Outline For Rest of Semester Oct. 29 th Chapter 9 (Earth) Nov 3 rd and 5 th Chapter 9 and Chapter 10 (Earth.
Earth and Other Planets Chapter 16 Great Idea: Earth, one of the planets that orbit the Sun, formed 4.5 billion years ago from a great cloud of dust.
Astronomy 1. Weekly Quiz  In place of a quiz this week, you must be able to identify each inner planet and give several facts for each.  So pay attention!!!!
Moons Features and Phases Chapter 28. General Information Satellite: a body that orbits a larger body. Seven planets in our solar system have smaller.
Sin’Kira Khan & Dane Fujinaka
Review 2 What was the solar nebula? What was it made of? How did gravitational collapse affect the Solar nebula? How does conservation of energy and angular.
Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado American Geophysical Union meeting.
Planetary Motion By Carol Greco. Why do planets move the around the sun the way they do? First you need to understand that scientists have discovered.
Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado The MESSENGER Mission to Mercury.
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.
Mercury Venealus Chew Traneeka Brooks. Mercury Mercury is the closest to the sun and the eighth largest planet. Mercury is in many ways is similar to.
Chase George Landon.  Closest planet to the sun sitting 36 million miles away.  Smallest planet in solar system  1 year on Mercury is 88 Earth days.
NASA Returns To Mercury in 2011 with MESSENGER. This is the first mission to Mercury since Mariner 10 in 1975 It will fully map the entire surface of.
The Innermost Planet MERCURY.
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.
Mercury Shenitha Mccargo. Deviation of Name 4 th century B.C.-Greek astronomers believed Mercury was two separate objects. Apollo- visible only at sunrise.
Astronomy 405 Solar System and ISM Lecture 5 Mercury January 25, 2013.
The Earth-Moon System The Earth’s Atmosphere
Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado, USA (member, MESSENGER Science Team) Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado,
Lecture Outlines Astronomy Today 7th Edition Chaisson/McMillan © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 8.
The Moon and Mercury: Airless Worlds Please take your assigned transmitter And swipe your student ID for attendance tracking.
Earth-rise on Moon. The Moon A12 A14 A15 A17 A11 A16 L24 L20 L16 Apollo and Luna Landing Sites.
Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado MESSENGER Fellows Program Awaiting.
Mercury. Basic Info  Named for the Roman Messenger god.  Second closest planet to the earth (48 million miles; Mars is 225 million)  But it is so.
The Moon and Mercury. Distance between Earth and Moon measured accurately using lasers Viewed from Earth, Mercury is never far from the Sun Orbital Properties.
 The planet Mercury is the closest of the planets to the Sun. Because this planet lies so close to the Sun, and as a result somewhat near to Earth, it.
Sun-Scorched Mercury.
Intro to Space: Our Solar System.
Mercury. Similarities to the Moon The Moon and Mercury have several similarities: Both have heavily cratered surfaces Both are virtually unchanging Both.
Sun-Scorched Mercury Chapter Eleven. Guiding Questions 1.What makes Mercury such a difficult planet to see? 2.What is unique about Mercury’s rotation?
Mercury By: Edwin C. Devon S. Eduardo B.. Mercury Mercury is the smallest planet in our solar system, and it is closest to the sun, although it is the.
The Solar System. What’s in Our Solar System? Our Solar System consists of a central star (the Sun), the eight planets orbiting the sun, moons, asteroids,
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. The Terrestrial Planets.
Lecture Outlines Astronomy Today 8th Edition Chaisson/McMillan © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 8.
The Terrestrial Planets Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars.
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.
1 Earth and Other Planets 3 November 2015 Chapter 16 Great Idea: Earth, one of the planets that orbit the Sun, formed 4.5 billion years ago from a great.
Ptolemy: Geocentric Earth-Centered Universe Copernicus: Heliocentric Sun-Centered Universe.
Created By Emily.M, Maccy, Jordan.G, Meltem. Earth Jupiter Saturn Pluto Sun Mercury Venus Mars Uranus Neptune.
Overview of the Solar System
Sun-Scorched Mercury Chapter Eleven
Mercury and Venus Not to scale, but full view of both planets
Part II: Solar System Mercury Draft: Nov 06, 2010.
Rising Carbon Dioxide Levels
Chapter 9: Cratered Worlds -The Moon and Mercury
Presentation transcript:

Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado MESSENGER Teacher Workshop Denver Museum of Nature & Science August 1, 2005 (awaiting Earth fly-by) MESSENGER Teacher Workshop Denver Museum of Nature & Science August 1, 2005 (awaiting Earth fly-by) The Planet Mercury and the Science Goals of the MESSENGER Mission

Mercury: an extreme planet Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun Mercury is the smallest planet except for Pluto Mercury is like a “Baked Alaska”: extremely hot under the Sun, extremely cold at night Mercury is made of the densest materials of any planet: it is mostly iron Mercury’s size compared with Mars

Mercury is Difficult (but Possible) to See for Yourself Mercury is visible several times a year just after sunset (especially in the spring) fall: just before sunrise (around Aug. 22 nd would be best, about 5:30 a.m.; Mercury will be about 12 Moon diameters below Saturn, in the constellation Cancer) It is always close to the Sun, so it is a “race” between Mercury being too close to the horizon and the sky being too bright to see it…use a star chart to see where it is with respect to bright stars and planets Through a telescope, Mercury shows phases like the Moon (Tonight, Mercury is very near the Sun and cannot be seen.)

Mercury’s Strange “Day” Mercury does not keep one face to the Sun like the Moon does to the Earth… but it is trapped by huge solar tides into a 2/3rds lock: its DAY is 2/3rds of its 88-(Earth)day YEAR, or 59 days. But that’s its “day” (time it spins) with respect to the stars. Its “solar day” (time between two sunrises) takes two Mercurian years (176 Earth-days). This was explained 4 decades ago by the Italian physicist, Bepi Colombo Bepi Colombo A prospective ESA mission to Mercury is named after him Bepi Colombo A prospective ESA mission to Mercury is named after him {Interesting Fact: Over Mercury’s “hot pole,” when Mercury is closest to the Sun (like 10 suns!), the Sun stops moving west overhead, reverses back east, then moves west again, shrinks in size, and finally sets.}

First (and last, so far) Mission to Mercury: Mariner 10 This early spacecraft made 3 flybys of the same side of Mercury in 1974 and 1975 It took what are still the best pictures we have of its surface and made many discoveries: Mercury has a magnetic field Mercury’s crust has buckled Mercury’s geology is much like the Moon’s

Other Mariner 10 Views of Mercury Artist’s view of Discovery Scarp [extreme right]

MESSENGER: A Discovery Mission to Mercury MESSENGER is a low-cost, focused Discovery spacecraft, built at Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory It was launched one year ago, flies by Earth tomorrow It flies by Venus twice ( ) and Mercury 3 times ( ) Then, starting 2011, it orbits Mercury for a full Earth-year, observing the planet with sophisticated instruments Designed for the harsh environs MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry and Ranging Important science instruments and spacecraft components

Caloris Basin

MESSENGER’s Trajectory

MESSENGER’s Earth Fly-by Closest approach: 1:13 pm MDT, Tuesday, 2 Aug Will take images of South America, look-back movie Calibrate instruments (Moon) Gravity-assist (orbit change) toward Venus Launch on Delta II from Cape Canaveral, Florida, 4 August 2004 Image of Earth taken by MESSENGER narrow-angle-camera on 24 July 2005

Some MESSENGER Science Goals Determine if Mercury’s polar ice deposits are made of ice or sulfur Study Mercury’s interaction with the nearby Sun: magnetic field, “atmosphere” Study structure of core

Mercury’s Surface and Interior: Clues to How and Where it Formed Can we learn Mercury’s bulk composition from observing its surface? Where did planetesimals accrete to form Mercury, what were they made of? Core Mantle Optical surface Regolith probed by long- wavelength sensing Crust [Not to scale]

Is there or isn’t there: ferrous iron? Or is Mercury’s surface reduced? Putative 0.9μm spectral feature appears absent (spectra of reflected sunlight observed with telescopes on Earth) Other modeling of color/albedo/near-to-mid-IR-spectra yield FeO + TiO 2 of 2 - 4% SVST data (big boxes) compared with earlier spectra Vilas (1985): all glass

Recent Color Processing of Mariner 10’s Images Although Mariner 10’s vidicon system was primitive, enhanced colors (reflecting different minerals) provide clues about whether volcanism has occurred on Mercury. MESSENGER has many state-of-the-art instruments sensitive to composition. MASCS instrument will map Mercury’s surface in the IR; also X-ray, gamma-ray, neutron spectrometers

Introduction to Impact Cratering on Mercury Only direct evidence is from Mariner 10 images of mid-70s (and recent radar) Theoretical and indirect studies Comparative planetology (Moon, Mars, …) Calculations/simulations of impactor populations (asteroids, comets, depleted bodies, vulcanoids) Theoretical studies of cratering physics, how ejected material is distributed, evolution of the surface soil, etc. Clearly, impact cratering dominates Mercury’s geology today, was important in the past Impact processes range from solar wind and micrometeoroid bombardment to huge basin- forming impacts MESSENGER will address cratering issues

Origins for Mercury’s Craters Primary impact cratering High-velocity comets (5x lunar production rate) Sun-grazers, other near-parabolic comets Jupiter-family (short-period) comets Crater chains may be made by fragments of comets disrupted by solar tides Near-Earth, Aten, and Inter-Earth asteroids Ancient, maybe now-gone, impactor populations Late Heavy Bombardment (3.9 billion years ago) Outer solar system planetesimals (outer planet migration) Main-belt asteroids (planetary migration, collisions) Trojans and other remnants of terrestrial planet accretion Left-over remnants of inner solar system accretion Vulcanoids (bodies that primarily impact Mercury only) Secondary cratering Craters <2 km diam. from larger impacts Basin secondaries up to 30 km diam. (?) Endogenic craters (volcanism, etc.)

Images of Mercury CrateringRays Secondaries 90m/pixel Primary Cluster?

Possible Role of Vulcanoids Zone interior to Mercury’s orbit is dynamically stable (like asteroid belt, Trojans, Kuiper Belt) If planetesimals originally accreted there, they may or may not have survived mutual collisional comminution If they did, “Yarkovsky” drift of >1 km bodies in to Mercury could have taken several billion years and impacted Mercury alone long after LHB Telescopic searches during last 20 years have so far failed to set stringent limits on current population of vulcanoids (but absence today wouldn’t negate earlier presence) Vulcanoids could have cratered Mercury after the Late Heavy Bombardment, with little leakage to Earth/Moon zone; that would compress the timescale for Mercury’s geological history toward the present (e.g. thrust-faulting might be still ongoing, more consistent with molten interior) ?

Secondary Craters on Europa, Moon & Mars… and Mercury? (B. Bierhaus PhD, 2004) Spatial clustering and size distributions of ~25,000 craters on Europa shows that >95% (perhaps all) of them are secondaries! Extrapolation to the Moon (if craters in ice behave as in rock) shows that secondaries could account for all small craters < few hundred meters diameter. A. McEwen finds that a single 10 km crater on Mars produced a billion secondaries > 10m diameter!

Concluding Remarks MESSENGER’s six science goals Why is Mercury so dense? Why is Mercury so dense? Why is Mercury so dense? Why is Mercury so dense? What is the geologic history of Mercury? What is the geologic history of Mercury? What is the geologic history of Mercury? What is the geologic history of Mercury? What is the structure of Mercury's core? What is the structure of Mercury's core? What is the structure of Mercury's core? What is the structure of Mercury's core? What is the nature of Mercury's magnetic field? What is the nature of Mercury's magnetic field? What is the nature of Mercury's magnetic field? What is the nature of Mercury's magnetic field? What are the unusual materials at Mercury's poles? What are the unusual materials at Mercury's poles? What are the unusual materials at Mercury's poles? What are the unusual materials at Mercury's poles? What volatiles are important at Mercury? What volatiles are important at Mercury? What volatiles are important at Mercury? What volatiles are important at Mercury? But I think that serendipity and surprise will be the most memorable scientific result of MESSENGER The history of past planetary spacecraft missions teaches us to expect surprise MESSENGER has superb instruments, it will be so close to Mercury, and it will stay there a full year