Astr 1050 Wed., Dec. 4, 2002
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Today: Chapter 16, The Origin of the Solar System |
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(We’ll just hit the highlights for Ch.
16-19.) |
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Chapter 16: Origin of the
Solar System
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Solar Nebula Hypothesis |
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Context for Understanding Solar System |
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Extrasolar Planets |
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Dust Disks, Doppler Shifts, Transits
and Eclipses |
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Survey of the Solar System |
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Terrestrial Planets |
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Jovian Planets |
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Other “Stuff” including apparent
patterns with application to the nebular hypothesis |
Patterns in Motion
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All planets orbit in almost the same
plane (ecliptic) |
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Almost all motion is counterclockwise
as seen from the north: |
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All planets orbit in this direction |
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*Almost* all planets spin in same
direction |
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with axes more-or-less perpendicular to
ecliptic |
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Regular moons (like Galilean satellites
and our own moon) orbit in this direction too |
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Planets are regularly spaced |
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steps increasing as we go outward |
Spacing of Planets
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Regular spacing of planets on a
logarithmic scale |
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Each orbit is ~75% larger than the
previous one |
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Need to include the asteroids as a
“planet” |
Solar Nebula Model
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Planets form from disk of gas
surrounding the young sun |
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Disk formation expected given angular
momentum in collapsing cloud |
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Naturally explains the regular
(counterclockwise) motion |
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Makes additional explicit predictions |
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Should expect planets as a regular part
of the star formation process |
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Should see trends in composition with
distance from sun |
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Should see “fossil” evidence of early
steps of planet formation |
Extra-Solar Planets
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Hard to see faint planet right next to
very bright star |
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Two indirect techniques available
(Like a binary star system but where 2nd “star” has extremely low mass) |
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Watch for Doppler “wobble” in
position/spectrum of star |
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Watch for “transit” of planet which
slightly dims light from star |
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About 100 planets discovered since
1996 See http://exoplanets.org/ |
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Tend to be big (³Jupiter) and
very close to star (easier to see) |
Characteristics of
“Planets”
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Two types of planets |
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Terrestrial Planets: small, rocky
material: inner solar system |
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Jovian Planets: large, H, He gas outer
solar system |
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Small left-over material
provides “fossil” record of early conditions |
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Asteroids –
mostly between orbits of Mars and Jupiter |
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Comets
– mostly in outermost part of
solar system |
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Meteorites – material which falls to earth |
Slide 8
Production of the
Elements
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H, He made in the big bang |
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Elements up to Fe generated by fusion
in stars |
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expelled back into interstellar medium
from red giants and supernova |
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Elements heavier than Fe require energy
to make:
neutron capture |
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side effect in fusion chains |
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s process |
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in supernova explosions |
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r process |
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p+ capture occasionally
important |
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p process |
Timing of the Assembly
Process?
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Over time inside 87Rb one n®p+ so 87Rb ® 87Sr |
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Use relative amounts of Rb, Sr to
determine age of rocks |
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Half life: Time it takes ½ of “parent” to decay to
“daughter” |
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Other unstable elements: 40K 235U 238U |
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Ages of old surfaces and
meteorites: ~4.5 billion years |
Patterns in Composition
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Terrestrial Planets |
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Relatively small |
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Made primarily of rocky material: |
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Si, O, Fe, Mg perhaps with Fe cores
(Note – for earth H2O is only a very small fraction of the
total) |
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Jovian Planets |
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Relatively large |
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Atmospheres made of H2, He,
with traces of CH4, NH3, H2O, ... |
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Surrounded by satellites covered with
frozen H2O |
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Within terrestrial planets inner ones
tend to have higher densities
(when corrected for compression due to gravity)
Planet Density Uncompressed
Density
(gm/cm3) (gm/cm3) |
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Mercury 5.44 5.30 |
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Venus 5.24 3.96 |
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Earth 5.50 4.07 |
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Mars 3.94 3.73 |
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(Moon) 3.36 3.40 |
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Equilibrium Condensation
Model
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Start with material of solar
composition material |
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(H, He, C, N, O, Ne, Mg, Si, S, Fe ...) |
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Material starts out hot enough that
everything is a gas |
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May not be exactly true but is simplest
starting point |
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As gas cools, different chemicals condense |
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First high temperature chemicals, then
intermediate ones, then ices |
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Solids begin to stick together or
accrete |
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snowflakes Þ snowballs (“Velcro
Effect”) |
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Once large enough gravity pulls solids
together into planetesimals |
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planetesimals grow with size |
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At some point wind from sun expels all
the gas from the system |
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Only the solid planetesimals remain to
build planets |
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Composition depends on temperature at
that point (in time and space) |
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Gas can only remain if trapped in the
gravity of a large enough planet |
The Material Available
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Inner solar system dominated by
silicate rocks |
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SiO2 (quartz) Mg2SiO4 Fe2SiO4
(olivine) etc. |
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Outer solar system dominated by H2,
He, ice (H2O) |
Reason for Jovian Planets
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Because you cannot condense O by itself
(but only in compounds also containing Si, Mg, Fe), you don’t have much
material available for making terrestrial planets. You are limited by the low abundance of Si,
Mg, Fe: Terrestrial planets are
relatively small |
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Once solid H2O becomes
available you have lots more material |
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Starting at Jupiter you can make a big
enough core from solid H2O that you can gravitationally hold onto
the H and He gas |
Growth of the
Planetisimals
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Once a planetisimal reaches critical
size gravity takes over |
Growth and
Differentiation of Planets
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Planet forms from homogeneous mix of
material |
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Planet heats up |
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“Heat of formation”
(i.e. energy from gravity) |
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Heat from radioactive decay of U, etc. |
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Dense material (Fe) sinks to center |
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Certain “siderophile” elements (like
Ni) |
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Other “lithophile” elements remain
behind |
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Homogeneous model too simple |
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Final collisions can be big: |
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Little planetesimals first form bigger
ones, then bigger ones collide to form yet bigger ones |
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Moon may be result of impact of Mars
size body as Earth formed (more
later) |
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First material to condense might
separate out early |
Heterogeneous Growth of
Planets
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Fe is among the first materials to
condense as nebula cools |
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Might form iron cores before lower
temperature materials condenses |
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Has implications for separation of
lower temperature “siderophiles” during later differentiation |
Evidence of Assembly
Process? Craters
Craters evident on almost
all small “planets”
Even larger planets
typically have some
Clearing of the Nebula
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Radiation pressure (pressure of light) |
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Will see present day effects in comets |
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Solar Wind |
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Strong solar winds from young T Tauri
stars |
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Will see present day effects in comets |
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Sweeping up of debris into planets |
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Late Heavy Bombardment |
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Ejection of material by near misses
with planets |
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Like “gravity assist maneuvers” with
spacecraft |
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Origin of the comets |
Patterns and Predictions
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Why do different planets have different
levels of geologic activity? |
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Why do different planets have different
atmospheres? |
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What are ages of old “unaltered”
planetary surfaces? |
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Should be similar, and agree roughly
with age of Sun |
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Does composition of asteroids match
predictions? |
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Lower temperature than Mars
region: Hydrated silicates, etc. |
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What types of minerals do we see in
meteorites? |
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What types of ices and minerals do we
see in comets? |