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Chapter 4 The Solar System
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Comet Tempel
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Chapter overview Solar system inhabitants Solar system formation Extrasolar planets
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Solar system inhabitants Sun Planets Moons Asteroids Comets Meteoroids Kuiper Belt Objects
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Figure 4.1 Solar System
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Planets Orbital size Orbital period Mass Radius Moons Density (water density is 1000 kg/m 3 )
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Table 4-1 Properties of Some Solar System Objects
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Planetary orbits Lie in same plane (ecliptic plane) Mercury and Pluto are slight exceptions Orbit around sun in same direction
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Figure 4.2 Planetary Alignment
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Terrestrial planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars
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Jovian planets Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Memory aid: S-U-N
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Figure 4.3 - Sun and Planets
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Table 4-2 Comparison Between the Terrestrial and Jovian Planets Table 4.2 - Comparison Between the Terrestrial and Jovian Planets
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Other planet? Pluto As of late 2006, demoted from a planet
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Interplanetary matter Asteroids Comets Meteoroids
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Figure 4.4 Inner Solar System
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Asteroids Asteroid belt Between orbits of Mars and Jupiter Noticeably elliptical orbits Trojan asteroids Earth crossing asteroids Up to 1000 km in size
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Figure 4.5 Asteroids, from Earth
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Figure 4.6 Asteroids, Close-up a) Gaspra b) Ida with Dactyl c) Mathilde
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Asteroid types Carbonaceous Dark, water ice and organics (carbon) Silicate Reflective, more rocky Inner portion of asteroid belt
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Figure 4.7 Asteroid Eros
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Discovery 4-1a What Killed the Dinosaurs?
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Discovery 4-1b What Killed the Dinosaurs?
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Figure 4.8 Halley’s Comet
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Comets Nucleus Coma (dust and evaporated gas) Hydrogen envelope Ion tail Dust tail Tails directed away from sun
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Figure 4.9 Comet Tails - Comet Hale-Bopp 1997
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Figure 4.10 Comet Trajectory
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Figure 4.11 Halley’s Comet Close-up from Giotto spacecraft in 1986
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Figure 4.12 a) Comet Wild-2 from Spacecraft Stardust b) aerogel for comet dust
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Short period comet orbits Short period (< 200 years) Kuiper belt (beyond Neptune) 30 to 100 AU from sun Roughly circular orbits, in ecliptic plane Occasionally kicked into inner solar system About 900 Kuiper belt objects (KBO) known Some KBO’s larger than Pluto
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Long period comet orbits Long period (> 200 years) Oort cloud Up to 100,000 AU diameter Random orbital orientation Occasionally kicked into inner solar system
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Figure 4.13 Comet Reservoirs
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Meteor terminology Meteoroid (chunk of space debris) Meteor (streak of light in sky) Meteorite (piece of meteoroid that falls to ground) Micrometeoroids Meteoroid swarm or shower (cometary debris)
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Figure 4.14 Meteor Trails
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Figure 4.15 Meteor Showers
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Table 4-3 Some Prominent Meteor Showers Table 4.3 Some Prominent Meteor Showers
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Figure 4.16 Radiant
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Figure 4.16 Analogy Railroad Tracks Converging
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Meteor craters on earth About 100 craters over 100 m in diameter Others heavily eroded by weather or geological activity
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Figure 4.17 - Barringer Crater, Arizona
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Figure 4.18 Manicouagan Reservoir, Quebec
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Figure 4.19 Tunguska Debris (Siberia, 1908)
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Meteorite types Rocky silicate Iron with some nickel Carbonaceous 4.4 to 4.6 billion years old
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Figure 4.20 - Meteorite Samples (a) rocky or stony (silicate) (b) iron and some nickel
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Model of Solar System formation must explain 1.Each planet isolated 2.Planet orbits nearly circular 3.Planet orbits nearly lie in a plane 4.Planets orbit sun in same direction sun rotates 5.Most planets rotate in same direction sun rotates 6.Most moons revolve in direction planet rotates 7.Terrestrial vs. Jovian planets 8.Asteroids are old and are unlike planets 9.Kuiper belt objects 10.Oort cloud comets
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Figure 4.21 Angular Momentum
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Figure 4.22 Beta Pictoris
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More Precisely 4-1 The Concept of Angular Momentum
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More Precisely 4-1b Conservation of Angular Momentum
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Figure 4.23 - Dark Cloud containing interstellar dust and gas
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Formation of solar system Nebular contraction Spinning material flattens into pancake as it contracts Condensation of interstellar dust Accretion Millions of planetesimals Protoplanets Fragmentation Protosun
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Figure 4.24 Solar System Formation
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Figure 4.25 Newborn Solar Systems?
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Jovian planets Outer planets grew rapidly Gravitationally attracted gas from solar nebula Or could have started as gravitational instabilities in solar nebula
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Figure 4.26 Jovian Condensation
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Figure 4.27 Temperature in the Early Solar Nebula
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Figure 4.28 Planetesimal Ejection
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Figure 4.29 Extrasolar Planet
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Extrasolar planets Indirectly detected by motion of star Large Jupiter-like planets in small orbits Selection effect Only detect largest and closest to the star Is our solar system unique?
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Figure 4.30 Planets Revealed
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Figure 4.31 An Extrasolar Transit
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Figure 4.32 Extrasolar Orbits
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Figure 4.33 Sinking Planet
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