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Published byMercy Lane Modified over 9 years ago
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Terrestrial Planets Earthlike Worlds of Rocks and Metals
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Earth: Model Planet Mass and radius give mass/volume = bulk density, about 5.5 times water Key to composition, internal structure, verified by seismic waves Metals bulk density about 8, rocks about 3; earth about 50- 50 metals/rocks
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Density Layers Core (metals) Mantle (dense rocks) Crust (less dense rocks) Partially or fully melted to separate by density (differentiation)
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Internal Energy Heat now at surface about 0.1 watt per square meter Internal energy stored from formation (by accretion) plus radioactive decay => larger in past Infrared from surface escapes to space, lost forever
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Energy Outflow Volcanism: Molten material, gases rise to surface; adds to crust and atmosphere Tectonics: Any motions of the crust; plate tectonics involve large-scale motions
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Age of Earth Radioactive dating: Decay of isotopes with long half-lives Gives elapsed time since rock last melted and solidified (remelting resets clock) Oldest rocks about 4 Gy + 0.5 Gy for earth’s formation => about 4.5 Gy for earth’s age
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Relative Ages Oldest regions of crust: Central regions of continents (few Gy) Youngest regions of crust: Seafloor (few hundred My) –Upwelling of materials from mantle by convection –Constantly renewed –Migration of continents
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Mercury: Surface Cratered highlands (4 Gy old) Large impact basins, plains with few craters (3 Gy old) Ratio volcanic/cratered terrain about 0.3; same as moon’s ratio => evolution similar to moon’s “Dead” planet now
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Venus: Surface Highlands: Volcanic and local (not global!) tectonic rises Lowlands: Undulating lava plains Ratio volcanic/cratered about 4; similar to earth’s ratio; surface evolved as much as earth’s
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Mars: Surface Lowlands: Cratered southern hemisphere (wind erosion now; water erosion in past)) Highlands: Volcanic regions in northern hemisphere (2 Gy old) Ratio volcanic/cratered about 0.7; between moon and earth
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Interiors Moon: Rocky core; cool Mercury: Large cold metal core, thin rocky mantle Mars: Small metal core, large rocky mantle Venus: Large hot metal core; interior much like earth’s
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Comparative Evolution Mass matters! More mass, greater internal energy from formation, radioactive decay More mass, greater size (volume), ratio mass/surface area less, lower rate of heat loss, longer evolution
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Evolution Formed by accretion of smaller bodies; melted, differentiated Crust solidified; cratered by impacts; basins formed (filled by volcanism, water on earth) Loss of internal energy: End of evolutionary life
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