1 / 29

Formation of Our Solar System

Formation of Our Solar System. Image: Lunar and Planetary Laboratory: http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=178. 1. Some data to explain: 1. Planets isolated 2. Orbits ~circular / in ~same plane

tea
Télécharger la présentation

Formation of Our Solar System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Formation of Our Solar System Image: Lunar and Planetary Laboratory: http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=178 1

  2. Some data to explain: 1. Planets isolated 2. Orbits ~circular / in ~same plane 3. Planets (and moons) travel along orbits in same direction…. same direction as Sun rotates (CCW) Venus slowly rotates CW Uranus on its side Pluto on its side – captured asteroid? Moons go CCW around planets (few exceptions) Lunar and Planetary Institute image at http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=175 2

  3. Solar System is highly differentiated • Terrestrial planets • Slow rotators, few or no moons • Gas Giants • Fast rotators, many moons • Asteroids • Old • Different from rocky or gaseous planets • Comets • Old, icy • Do not move on same plane as planets 3

  4. Planets, most moons, and asteroids revolve around the Sun in the same direction (CCW) • They all move in ~ circular orbits • Pluto-special case • Orbit is highly inclined (18°) • oval shape 4

  5. Some more data to explain: 4. Most planets rotate in this same direction Mercury 0° Venus 177° Earth 23° Mars 25° Jupiter 3° Saturn 27° Uranus 98° Neptune 30° 5 NASA images edited by LPI

  6. And some more data to explain: 5. Solar System highly differentiated: Terrestrial Planets (rocky, dense with density ~4-5 g/cm3) Jovian Planets (light, gassy, H, He, density 0.7-2) Images: Lunar and Planetary Laboratory: http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=178 6

  7. How Did We Get a Solar System? Image: LPI Active region of Star formation in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) – satellite galaxy of Milky Way (Hubble) Huge cloud of cold, thinly dispersed interstellar gas and dust (mostly H & He) Hubble image at http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/nebula/emission/2006/41/image/a/ 7

  8. How Did We Get a Solar System? Image: LPI Concentrations of dust and gas in the cloud; material starts to collect (gravity > magnetic forces) Hubble image at http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/nebula/emission/2005/35/image/a/ 8

  9. How Did We Get a Solar System? Gravity concentrates most stuff near center Heat and pressure increase Collapses – central proto-sun rotates faster (probably got initial rotation from the cloud) 9 Image: LPI http://www.lpi.usra.edu/education/timeline/gallery/slide_1.html

  10. How Did We Get a Solar System? • Rotating, flattening, contracting disk - solar nebula! • Equatorial Plane • Orbit Direction 10 NASA artwork at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ra4-protoplanetary-disk.jpg

  11. How Did We Get a Solar System? • After ~10 million years, material in center of nebula hot enough to fuse Hydrogen (H) • “...here comes the Sun…” NASA/JPL-Caltech Image at http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/starsgalaxies/spitzer-20060724.html 11

  12. How Did We Get a Solar System? • Metallic elements (Mg, Si, Fe) condense into solids at high temps. Combined with Oxygen to make tiny grains • Lower temp (H, He, CH4, H2O, N2, ice) - outer edges • Planetary Compositions Hubble photo at http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/star/protoplanetary-disk/2005/10/image/a/layout/thumb/ 12

  13. How Did We Get a Solar System? • Inner Planets: • Hot – Silicate minerals, metals, no light elements, ice • Begin to stick together with dust  clumps 13 Image: LPI http://www.lpi.usra.edu/education/timeline/gallery/slide_3.html

  14. How Did We Get a Solar System? • Outer Solar System • Cold – ices, gases – 10x more particles than inner • May have formed icy center, then captured lighter gases (Jupiter and Saturn first? Took H and He?) • Leave C,O, and N for the others 14 Image: LPI http://www.lpi.usra.edu/education/timeline/gallery/slide_5.html

  15. Terrestrial planets • Heavier elements stable at higher temperature • Condensed in inner nebula • Gas giants • Lighter elements (H, He, C, O, N) stable at lower temperature • Condensed in outer nebula 15

  16. Where do Comets Originate? 16

  17. Orbital paths of comets • Highly elliptical (oval-shaped) • 1 complete orbit is called a period • Short-period comets • Revolve around the Sun less than 200 yrs • E.g. Comet Halley • Paths are close to the same plane of orbit as planets • Orbit is the same direction as the Sun • Originate from the Kuiper belt 17

  18. Long-period comets • Longer than 200 years to go around once • Orbital path is random • Direction and plane of orbit • E.g. Comet Hale-Bopp • Originated in Oort cloud • Spherical cloud, 20 trillion miles beyond the Sun 18

  19. How Did We Get a Solar System? • Accretion - particles collide and stick together … or break apart … gravity not involved if small pieces • Form planetesimals, up to a few km across 19 Image: LPI http://www.lpi.usra.edu/education/timeline/gallery/slide_3.html

  20. How Did We Get a Solar System? • Gravitational accretion: planetesimals attract stuff • Large protoplanets dominate, grow rapidly, clean up area ( takes ~10 to 25 My) 20 Image: LPI http://www.lpi.usra.edu/education/timeline/gallery/slide_4.html

  21. Smaller protoplanets (inner solar nebula) • Unable to accrete gas because of their higher temperature • Obtain their atmospheres from the impact of comets • Largest protoplanets (outer solar nebula) • Accrete gas because of their cooler temperature • Strongly influence the orbits of the remaining comets • Either send them out to the Oort cloud or • Send them inward where they collide with the terrestrial planets 22

  22. How Did We Get a Solar System? The Asteroid Belt ? Should have been a planet instead of a debris belt? Jupiter kept it from forming Eros image at http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/gallery.cfm?Category=Planets&Object=Asteroids&Page=1 23

  23. How Did We Get a Solar System? Beyond the Gas Giants - Pluto, Charon and the Kuiper Belt objects Chunks of ice and rock material Little time / debris available to make a planet – slower!! Taken from Hubble Telescope Charon is Pluto’s moon, only a Little smaller than Pluto Pluto’s surface temp. is as low as -400° F From the surface of Pluto, the Sun looks like a very bright star 24

  24. Early in the Life of Planets • Planetesimals swept up debris • Accretion + Impacts = HEAT • Eventually begin to melt materials • Iron, silica melt at different temperatures • Iron sank – density layering 25 Image from LPI: http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=168

  25. Mercury • Average density of 5430 kg/m3 • Second highest density of all planets • Like Earth, has an Iron core • 2/3 to ¾ of the radius of the planet! • Iron-Nickel core 26

  26. Venus • Composition ~ to Earth • Crust 10-30 km thick • Mantle • Core – Iron-Nickel • Average density is 5240 kg/m3 27

  27. Earth • Crust, mantle, and core • Crust • ~ 30 km thick for land (granite) • ~ 5 km for oceanic crust (basalt) • Mantle • Core, Iron-Nickel • Liquid outer core • Inner solid core • Average density ~ 5520 kg/m3 28

  28. Mars • ~ ½ the diameter of Earth • Crust • Mantle • Core , • Iron-Nickel • and Iron sulfide • Density ~ 3930 kg/m3 29

  29. Pluto • Structure not very well understood • Surface is covered with methane ice • Surface temp ~ 400° F • Frozen methane shows a bright coloration • Density ~ 2060 kg/m3 • This low of a density suggests that the planet must be a mix of rock and ice 30

More Related