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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 101 The Giant Planets
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 102 Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune The Jovian Worlds
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 103 Exploration First spacecrafts: Pioneer 10 (1972) & 11 (1973) Can we navigate through the asteroid belt? What are the radiation hazards near the planets? Pioneer 10 flew by Jupiter in 1973 and flew out the solar system Pioneer 11 flew by Jupiter in 1974 and was deflected towards Saturn which it reached in 1979
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 104 Exploration Voyager 1 & 2 (launched 1977) Highly productive Missions Carried 11 scientific instruments including cameras and spectrometers, devices for measuring magnetospheres Voyager 1 Reached Jupiter (1979) and Saturn (1980) Used gravity assist towards Saturn Voyager 2 Reached Jupiter four month later than Voyager 1 Reached Saturn (1981), Uranus (1986), Neptune (1989) Multiple Flybys possible thanks to approximate alignment of the planets Such an alignment occurs once in 175 years 2 Voyager 2
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 105 Exploration Galileo space probe Launched 1989 Reached Jupiter December 1995 Deployed a small entry probe for a direct study of Jupiter’s atmosphere Sept. 2003, probe sent into Jupiter’s atmosphere to end its mission Cassini Launched 1997 Reached Saturn in 2004, now in orbit Deployed entry probe for Titan in Jan. 2005
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Galileo Space Probe
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 107 Galileo – Jupiter Entry Probe Mass 339 kg Plunged at shallow angle into Jupiter at speed of 50 km/s Slowed down by friction against Jupiter atmosphere Temperature of its shield reached 15,000°C Speed dropped to 2500 km/h Deployed parachute for actual entry in the atmosphere Transmitted data to orbiter, for retransmission to Earth
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 108 Some Results of the Galileo Mission The discovery of a satellite (Dactyl) of an asteroid (Ida) Jovian wind speeds in excess of 600 km/hour (400 mph) were detected Far less water was detected in Jupiter's atmosphere than estimated from earlier Voyager observations and from models of the Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 impact Far less lightning activity (about 10% of that found in an equal area on Earth) than anticipated. The individual lightning events, however, are about ten times stronger on Jupiter than the Earth Helium abundance in Jupiter is very nearly the same as its abundance in the Sun (24% compared to 25%) Extensive resurfacing on Io due to continuing volcanic activity since the 1979 Voyagers fly-bys Evidence for liquid water ocean under Europa's ice
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 109 Huygens Probe Dropped by Cassini Orbiter
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Basic Facts of Jovian Planets Large distances from the sun Long periods Jupiter and Saturn similar in composition and internal structure Uranus and Neptune smaller and differ in composition and structure Basics Properties of the Jovian Planets Planet Distance (AU) Period (years) Diameter (km) Mass (Earth=1) Density (g/cm3) Rotation (hours) Jupiter5.211.91428003181.39.9 Saturn9.529.5120540950.710.7 Uranus19.284.151200141.217.2 Neptune30.1164.849500171.616.1
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1011 Appearance Only the upper atmosphere of the giant planets is visible to us Astronomers believed that their interiors are composed primarily of hydrogen and helium The uppermost clouds of Jupite and Saturn are composed of ammonia (NH 3 ) crystals Neptune’s upper clouds are made of methane (CH 4 ) Uranus has no obvious clouds, only deep and featureless haze
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1012 Rotation How does one determine the rotation rate of the giants? For Jupiter: 1st option: use dynamic surface features (storms) However the cloud rotation may have nothing to do with the rotation of the mantle and core… 2nd option: look at periodic variations of radio waves associated with the magnetic field produced deep inside the planet This gave rotation period of 9 h 56 m The same technique is used to measure the rotation of other giant planets: Saturn has 10 h 40 m Uranus and Neptune have about 17 hours
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Jupiter is tilted by 3 o No seasons to speak of Saturn is tilted by 27 o Long seasons Neptune is t ilted by 27 o Long seasons Uranus is Tilted by 98 o Practically orbiting on its side Rings and satellites follow same pattern 21 year seasons!!! Why this odd tilt? A giant impact in the past could be the cause Seasons on the Giants Seasons on Uranus
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1015 Giant Planets – Giant Pressure Giant planets composed mainly of hydrogen (H) and helium (He) But because of its enormous size, the H and He in the center of Jupiter are compressed enormously Estimated pressure: 100 million bars. Central density of 31 g/cm 3 Earth by contrast has 4 million bars and 17 g/cm 3 in its center Giant Planet implies giant pressure!!
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1016 Consequences of the Pressure Few thousand km below the surface, hydrogen is in a liquid state Still deeper, the liquid is further compressed and begins to act like a metal On Jupiter, part of the interior is metallic hydrogen! Saturn is less massive Most of its interior is liquid, but not metallic Neptune and Uranus are probably too small to liquefy hydrogen
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1017 More about Composition The planets also have a core composed of heavier materials Possibly the original rock/ice bodies that formed before gas were abundantly captured by the planets
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1018 Internal Heat Source (1) Because of their large sizes, all the giant planets are believed to be strongly heated during their formation Jupiter was the hottest Some of the primordial heat still remains Giant planets may also generate energy internally by slowly contracting Even a small amount of shrinkage can generate significant heat This probably raises the temperature of the core and atmosphere above the temperature due to the Sun’s heat Jupiter has the largest internal source of energy 4x10 17 W A cross between a planet (like earth) and a star Internal heat probably primordial heat
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1019 Magnetic Fields All four giant planets have strong magnetic fields and associated magnetospheres The magnetospheres are large They extend for millions of km in space Jupiter’s field was discovered in the late 1950’s Radio waves detected from Jupiter Electrons circulating in the magnetosphere produce the radio waves by a process called synchrotron emission Magnetic fields of Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune discovered by flyby spacecraft
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1020 Magnetospheres Jupiter’s magnetic field is not aligned with its axis of rotation It is tipped by 10 o Uranus and Neptune have tilts of 60 o and 55 o Saturn’s field is perfectly aligned with its axis of rotation
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1021 Atmospheres of the Giant Planets The part of the planets accessible to direction observation Dramatic examples of weather patterns Storms on these planets can be larger than Earth!
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1022 Atmospheric Composition Methane (CH4) and ammonia (NH3) were first believed to be the primary constituents of the atmospheres We know today that hydrogen and helium are actually the dominant gases First based on far-infrared measurements by Voyager Less helium in Saturn’s atmosphere Precipitation of helium? Energy source of Saturn? Best measurements of composition by Galileo spacecraft (1995) upon entry to atmosphere
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1023 Clouds and Atmospheric Structure Jupiter’s clouds are spectacular in color and size Color: orange, red, brown Fast motion Saturn is more “subdued” Clouds have nearly uniform butterscotch hue
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1024 Atmospheric Structure of the Jovian Planets
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1025 Winds and Weather Many regions of high/low pressures Air flow between these regions sets up wind patterns distorted by the fast rotation of the planet Wind speeds measurable by tracking cloud patterns Differences with Earth Giant planets spin much faster than Earth Rapid rotation smears out air circulation into horizontal (east-west) patterns parallel to the equator No solid surface No friction or loss of energy – this is why tropical storms on Earth eventually die out… Internal heat contributes as much energy to the atmosphere as sunlight (except for Uranus)
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1026 Winds on The Giant Planets Winds on Uranus and Neptune are rather similar to those on Jupiter and Saturn True on Uranus in spite of the 98 O tilt
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1027 Storms Omni-present on the giant planets Superimposed on the regular circulation patterns Large oval-shaped high-pressure regions on both Jupiter and Neptune Most famous: Jupiter’s Great Red Spot In the southern hemisphere 30,000 km long (when Voyager flew by) Present since first seen 300 years ago Changes in size, but never disappears From Voyager 1 in 1979
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1028 Great Red Spot Counterclockwise rotation with rotation period of 6 days Similar disturbances formed in the 1930s on Jupiter Smaller circles near the red spot Cause unknown Long-lived because of absence of ground their size Expected lifetime: centuries
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15 February 2005AST 2010: Chapter 1029 Neptune Great Dark Spot First seen in 1989 by Voyager About 10,000-km long 17-day period Had disappeared (faded?) in mid 1990s New dark spot seen in Nov. 1994 Faded by 1995 Do storms form and disappear quicker on Neptune?
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