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Meteorites, Asteroids, and Comets

0. Meteorites, Asteroids, and Comets. Please pick up your transmitter and swipe your ID. 0. Meteorites. Meteoroid = small body in space. Distinguish between:. Meteor = meteoroid colliding with Earth and producing a visible light trace in the sky.

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Meteorites, Asteroids, and Comets

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  1. 0 Meteorites, Asteroids, and Comets Please pick up your transmitter and swipe your ID

  2. 0 Meteorites • Meteoroid= small body in space Distinguish between: • Meteor= meteoroid colliding with Earth and producing a visible light trace in the sky • Meteorite= meteor that survives the plunge through the atmosphere to strike the ground

  3. :10 0 of 30 Which one of those objects would appear as a “shooting star”? • Only meteoroids. • Only meteors. • Only meteorites. • Meteors and meteoroids. • Meteors and meteorites. • Meteoroids and meteorites. • All three.

  4. 0 Meteorites Sizes from microscopic dust to a few centimeters. About 2 meteorites large enough to produce visible impacts strike the Earth every day. Statistically, one meteorite is expected to strike a building somewhere on Earth every 16 months. Typically impact onto the atmosphere with 10 – 30 km/s (≈ 30 times faster than a rifle bullet).

  5. 0 Meteor Showers Most meteors appear in showers, peaking periodically at specific dates of the year.

  6. 0 Meteoroid Orbits Meteoroids contributing to a meteor shower are debris particles, orbiting in the path of a comet. Spread out all along the orbit of the comet. Comet may still exist or have been destroyed. Only few sporadic meteors are not associated with comet orbits.

  7. :10 0 of 30 What kind of pattern would you expect to see, comparing the tracks of various meteors of one shower? • The tracks should have random directions. • The tracks should all be parallel. • The tracks should all appear to come from the same point in space. • The tracks should all appear to move toward the same point in space.

  8. 0 Radiants of Meteor Showers Tracing the tracks of meteors in a shower backwards, they appear to come from a common origin, theradiant. ↔ Common direction of motion through space. The Perseid Meteor Shower

  9. 0 The Leonid Meteor Shower in 2002

  10. :10 0 of 30 Would you expect a meteor shower to be equally intense each year? • Yes, because all the meteors should orbit the sun in about 1 year, so there should be no fluctuations from year to year. • Yes, because the meteors are evenly distributed over the entire former comet orbit. • No, because the meteors should be concentrated around the former location of the comet, which orbited around the sun with a longer period than 1 year. • No. In fact, they should only be visible in one year at all.

  11. 0 Meteorite Impacts on Earth Over 150 impact craters found on Earth. Famous example: Barringer Crater near Flagstaff, AZ: Formed ~ 50,000 years ago by a meteorite of ~ 80 – 100 m diameter

  12. 0 The Origins of Meteorites Planetesimals cool and differentiate; Collisions eject material from different depths with different compositions and temperatures. Meteorites can not have been broken up from planetesimals very long ago → Remains of planetesimals should still exist. → Asteroids

  13. 0 Asteroids Last remains of planetesimals that built the planets 4.6 billion years ago!

  14. :10 0 of 30 Where do we find most asteroids in the solar system? • In a belt between the Earth and Mars. • In a belt between Mars and Jupiter. • In a belt far outside the orbits of the planets. • On highly elliptical orbits, coming as close to the sun as Mercury’s orbit, and reaching as far out as Pluto’s orbit or beyond. • In elliptical orbits around Jupiter.

  15. 0 The Asteroid Belt Most asteroids orbit the sun in a wide zone between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. Mars Jupiter Pluto Uranus Saturn Neptune (Distances and times reproduced to scale)

  16. 0 The Asteroid Belt Small, irregular objects, mostly in the apparent gap between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. Thousands of asteroids with accurately determined orbits are known today. Sizes and shapes of the largest asteroids, compared to the moon

  17. :10 0 of 30 What causes the divisions (e.g., Cassini Division) in the rings of Saturn? • Orbital resonances with moons orbiting Saturn outside the ring system. • Material close to an orbit of a moon inside the ring system being swept up by the moon. • Random fluctuations causing some regions around Saturn to be empty. • Orbital resonances with moons orbiting Saturn inside the ring system.

  18. 0 Kirkwood Gaps The asteroid orbits are not evenly distributed throughout the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. There are several gaps where no asteroids are found: Kirkwood gaps These correspond to resonances of the orbits with the orbit of Jupiter. Example: 2:3 resonance

  19. 0 Non-Belt Asteroids Not all asteroids orbit within the asteroid belt. Apollo-Amor Objects: Trojans: Sharing stable orbits along the orbit of Jupiter. Asteroids with elliptical orbits, reaching into the inner solar system. Some potentially colliding with Mars or Earth.

  20. 0 Please pick up your transmitter and swipe your ID

  21. 0 Comets Comet Ikeya-Seki in the dawn sky in 1965

  22. Throughout history, comets have been considered as portants of doom, even until very recently: 0 Appearances of comet Kohoutek (1973), Halley (1986), and Hale-Bopp (1997) caused great concern among superstitious. Comet Hyakutake in 1996

  23. :10 0 of 30 3 Where on its orbit does a comet spend most of its time? 2 4 1 • 1 • 2 • 3 • 4

  24. 0 Two Types of Tails Ion tail:Ionized gas pushed away from the comet by the solar wind. Pointing straight away from the sun. Dust tail: Dust set free from vaporizing ice in the comet; carried away from the comet by the sun’s radiation pressure. Lagging behind the comet along its trajectory

  25. Where is the sun with respect to this comet? :10 0 of 30 Enter question text... • 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 2) 3) 1) 4) 5)

  26. 0 Gas and Dust Tails of Comet Mrkos in 1957

  27. 0 Comet Hale-Bopp in 1997

  28. 0 Fragmentation of Comet Nuclei Comet nuclei are very fragile and are easily fragmented. Animation 1 Animation 2 Comet Shoemaker-Levy was disrupted by tidal forces of Jupiter Two chains of impact craters on Earth’s moon and on Jupiter’s moon Callisto may have been caused by fragments of a comet.

  29. 0 Fragmenting Comets Comet Linear apparently completely vaporized during its sun passage in 2000. Only small rocky fragments remained.

  30. :10 0 of 30 The fragments of a comet can produce a new … • Moon of Jupiter. • Moon of Mars. • Planet. • Meteor shower. • Group of asteroids.

  31. 0 The Geology of Comet Nuclei Comet nuclei contain ices of water, carbon dioxide, methane, ammonia, etc. (Materials that should have condensed from the outer solar nebula). Not solid ice balls, but fluffy material with significant amounts of empty space. “Dirty snowballs”

  32. 0 The Deep Impact Mission Video 1 Video 2 Placing a probe into the path of Comet Tempel 1 and documenting the result of the impact Impact: July 4, 2005

  33. 0 The Origin of Comets Comets are believed to originate in the Oort cloud: Spherical cloud of several trillion icy bodies, ~ 10,000 – 100,000 AU from the sun. Gravitational influence of occasional passing stars may perturb some orbits and draw them towards the inner solar system. 40,000 – 100,000 AU Interactions with planets may perturb orbits further, capturing comets in short-period orbits. Oort Cloud

  34. 0 The Kuiper Belt Second source of small, icy bodies in the outer solar system: Kuiper Belt, at ~ 30 – 100 AU from the sun. Pluto and Charon may be captured Kuiper-Belt objects.

  35. 0 Beyond the Solar System

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