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The Terrestrial Planets

The Terrestrial Planets. Chapter 4 Section 3 ISN p. 47. The Terrestrial Planets. The terrestrial planets are the inner four planets of Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars that are close to the size of Earth and have solid, rocky surfaces.

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The Terrestrial Planets

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  1. The Terrestrial Planets Chapter 4 Section 3 ISN p. 47

  2. The Terrestrial Planets • The terrestrial planets are the inner four planets of Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars that are close to the size of Earth and have solid, rocky surfaces. • My Very Excellent Mother Just Served Us Nachos OR My VERY EXCELLENT MUSTACHE JUST SAW UGLY NINJAS • The gas giant planets are the outer planets of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune which are much larger, more gaseous, and lack solid surfaces. • Pluto, the ninth planet from the Sun, has a solid surface, but it does not fit into either category.

  3. Mercury • Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun and has no moons. • Mercury is about 1/3 the size of Earth and has a smaller mass and radius. • Mercury has a slow spin of 1407.6 hours; in 2 of Mercury’s yrs., 3 of Mercury’s days have passed.

  4. Mercury’s Atmosphere • Mercury has essentially no atmosphere, and what little does exist is composed primarily of oxygen and sodium. • The daytime surface temperature on Mercury is 700 K (427ºC), while temperatures at night fall to 100 K (–173ºC). • So what do you think the surface is like?

  5. Mercury’s Surface • Most of what we know about Mercury is based on radio observations and images from a United States space probe mission, called Mariner 10. • Mercury’s surface is covered with craters and plains. The plains of Mercury’s surface are smooth and relatively crater free. • Mercury has a planet wide system of cliffs, called scarps, that may have developed as Mercury’s crust shrank and fractured early in the planet’s geological history.

  6. Mercury’s Interior • The high density of Mercury suggests that it has an extensive nickel-iron core, filling about 42% of Mercury’s volume. • The detectable magnetic field suggests that Mercury has a molten zone in its interior. • Mercury’s small size, high density, and probable molten interior zone resemble what Earth might be like if its crust and mantle were removed.

  7. Venus • Venus, the 2nd planet from the Sun, has no moons. • Venus’s high albedo and its proximity to Earth make it the brightest planet in Earth’s nighttime sky. • The surface of Venus is very hot, and it rotates slowly clockwise with one day equaling 243 Earth days. • Venus has been explored by radar and spacecraft.

  8. Venus’s Atmosphere • Venus is the hottest planet in the solar system with an average surface temperature of about 737 K (464°C). • The atmospheric pressure on Venus is equivalent to 92 Earth atmospheres. • An efficient greenhouse effect is achieved with an atmosphere that is primarily carbon dioxide and nitrogen with clouds of sulfuric acid.

  9. Venus’s Surface • The 1989 Magellan missions of the U.S. used radar reflection measurements to map the surface of Venus in detail. • The surface has been smoothed by volcanic lava flows, and it has only a few impact craters. • The most recent global episode of volcanic activity took place about 500 million years ago. • There is little evidence of current tectonic activity on Venus, and there is no well-defined system of crustal plates. Why do you think that it appears to be blue in some photographs?

  10. Venus’s Interior • The size and density of Venus are similar to Earth, so the internal structure is most likely similar. • It is theorized that Venus has a liquid metal core that extends halfway to the surface. • There is no measurable magnetic field despite this liquid core, which is probably due to Venus’s slow rotation rate.

  11. Earth • Earth, the 3rd planet from the Sun, has many unique properties. • Its distance from the Sun and its nearly circular orbit allow liquid water to exist on its surface in all 3 states: solid, liquid, and gas. • Liquid water is required for life. • Earth’s moderately dense atmosphere (78 percent nitrogen and 21 percent oxygen) and a mild greenhouse effect support conditions suitable for life.

  12. Earth’s Wobble • Earth’s axis is tilted and has a wobble. • Precession is the wobble in Earth’s rotational axis. • It takes Earth’s rotational axis about 26 000 years to go through one cycle of precession. • The sideways pull that causes precession comes from the Moon’s gravitational force on Earth, as well as to a lesser extent, the Sun’s gravitational force.

  13. Mars • Mars is the 4th planet from the Sun and the outermost of the terrestrial planets. • Mars is smaller and less dense than Earth and has two irregularly-shaped moons, Phobos and Deimos. • Mars has been explored by telescopes on Earth and with probes beginning in the 1960s that have flown by, orbited, or landed.

  14. Mars’ Atmosphere • The composition of Mars’s atmosphere is similar to Venus’s atmosphere, but with much lower density and pressure. • The thin atmosphere creates a constant wind on Mars. • Martian dust storms may last for weeks at a time.

  15. Mars’ Surface • The southern hemisphere of Mars is a heavily cratered, highland region, while the northern hemisphere is dominated by plains that are sparsely cratered. • Four gigantic shield volcanoes including Olympus Mons, the largest mountain in the solar system. • An enormous canyon, Valles Marineris lies on the Martian equator. • The Martian surface contains erosional features that suggest that liquid water once existed on the surface of Mars. • Mars has polar ice caps of frozen carbon dioxide covering both poles that grow and shrink with the seasons on Mars. • Water ice lies beneath the carbon dioxide ice in the northern cap.

  16. Mars’ Interior • Astronomers are unsure about the internal structure of Mars. • It is thought to have a core of iron and nickel, and possibly sulfur which is covered by a mantle. • Because Mars has no magnetic field, the core is probably solid. • There is no evidence of current tectonic activity or tectonic plates on the surface of the crust.

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