Intro Solar System
Intro Solar System
the Earth
Prof . K.S.Rao
Core
Concepts
You will
inherit
Earth.
How is science
done?
#1. Earth scientists use
repeatable observations
and testable ideas to
understand and explain
our planet. Any other
method is based on
faith.
How old is Earth?
Why is it called
the Milky Way?
Welcome to our Solar System, how well
do we know our neighbors?
The Solar System
8 classical planets
5 dwarf planets
240 known satellites (moons)
Millions of comets and asteroids
Countless particles; and interplanetary space.
Earth, the Sun, and other objects in the Solar System originated at
the same time from the same source and have evolved in varying
ways since then.
Mercury
Vertical axis (no seasons)
Probable molten (Fe) core
Silicate (SiO2) shell
Atmosphere created by solar
wind
227oC to -137oC
Venus
Axis spin opposite to other
planets (upside down?)
Is core liquid or solid? -
Unknown
Active volcanism? - Probably
Atmosphere 96.5% (CO2)
477oC runaway Greenhouse
Effect
Mars
Iron core, partially liquid
Silicate (SiO2) mantle and crust
Active volcanism? - Probably
Atmosphere 95.3% (CO2)
Past flooding and fluvial
erosion of surface
Water has flowed in the past. But is now locked up as
ice in the ground and as polar ice caps. Drainage
features due to short-lived melting events
Between Mars and
Jupiter lies the Main
Asteroid Belt
Lack of hard
surface may allow
for different winds
at different speeds
hence, banding
90% Hydrogen,
10% Helium
Saturn: 9 rings of rock
and ice particles, 10,000
km wide and 200 km
thick
Outer layer of frozen
ammonia (NH3)
96% Hydrogen, 3.35%
Helium
62 moons
Uranus: axis tilted completely
on its side
82.5% Hydrogen, 15.2%
Helium, 2.3% Methane (CH4)
Neptune: highest winds in
Solar system, 2000 km/hr
80% Hydrogen, 18.5%
Helium, 1.5% Methane (CH4)
Neptune clouds
The internal structure of
Neptune:
2. Atmosphere consisting of
hydrogen, helium and
methane gas
3. Mantle consisting of
water, ammonia and
methane ices
Neptune
Jupiter
Uranus
Saturn
Direction of travel Comets are thought to
originate from regions of icy,
mineral-rich bodies that
Direction to Sun lie beyond the orbit of
Neptune.
What does a comet look
like? They are dirty
snowballs.
Comet Tempel, 19
seconds before impact
Edgeworth-Kuiper belt
and
Oort Cloud
Dwarf Planet
an object in the Solar System that orbits the Sun and is not a
satellite of a planet or other celestial body. It must be spherical (or nearly so)
in shape.
Origin of the Universe
The universe began about 14.4
billion years ago
The Big Bang Theory states that, in
the beginning, the universe was all in
one place
All of its matter and energy were
squished into an infinitely small
point, a singularity
Then it exploded
Origin of the Universe
The turbulent
eddies collect
matter measuring
meters across
Small chunks grow
and collide,
eventually
becoming large
aggregates of gas
and solid chunks
Nebular Hypothesis
Pictures from the Hubble Space Telescope show newborn stars emerging from dense,
compact pockets of interstellar gas called evaporating gaseous globules
Nebular Hypothesis
Gravitational attraction causes the mass of gas and dust to slowly
contract and it begins to rotate
The dust and matter slowly falls towards the center
Proto-star
Birth of the Solar System
Protoplanets
Gravitational forces allow the inner planets to accrue and
compact solid matter (including light and heavy atoms)
Solar radiation blew gases (primarily hydrogen, helium)
away from inner planets
These gases were collected and condensed into the gas
giants (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune)
Beyond Neptune, ice and frozen gases form Pluto, Sedna
and the Kuiper Belt Objects
Left-over debris form comets and asteroids
Birth of the Solar System
Solar Nebula
Hypothesis
The beginning of the
Solar System 6.9 billion
years ago
nebula formation
An ancestral star
ended its life: Red Giant
Explosion - Nebula
Formation of
a nebula
Nebula Collapse and Condensation
Gas Giants
Our Sun: A Massive Hydrogen Bomb held together by gravity
Part of the material from the collision remained in orbit around the Earth
By the process collision and accretion, this orbiting material coalesced into the
Moon
The early Moon orbited very close to the Earth
The Early Earth Heats Up
Three major factors that caused heating and melting in the early Earths interior:
1. Collisions (Transfer of
kinetic energy into heat)
2. Compression
3. Radioactivity of elements
(e.g. uranium, potassium,
or thorium)
The Evolving Atmosphere
For the next several hundred million years, volcanic out-gassing began to create a thicker
atmosphere composed of a wide variety of gases
The gases that were released were probably similar to those created by modern volcanic
eruptions
The Evolving Atmosphere
Astronomers also
hypothesize that comets
impacting the Earth were
a major source of water
that contributed to
creation of the oceans
Remember, that comets
are best described as
dirty ice balls
The Age of the Earth
Earth is ~ 4,570,000,000 years old
Meteorites give us access to debris left over from the formation of the
solar system
We can date meteorites using radioactive isotopes and their decay
products
Radioactive elements
Simple arithmetic plot of a universal isotopic decay curve. After 1 half-life 50% of parent
isotope remains; after 2 half-lives, 25% remains.