Notes
Slide Show
Outline
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Astr 1050     Wed., Apr. 28, 2004
  •    Today:  End Ch 17., Terrestrial Planets
  •   Recall: Nice webpage your classmate provided http://www.nationalgeographic.com/solarsystem/splash.html


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Venus
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Expect Venus to be similar to Earth
(but it isn’t!)
  • Venus only slightly closer to sun, so expect about same initial composition
  • Venus only slightly smaller than Earth, so expect about same heat flow


  • Venus atmosphere is dramatically different
    • Very thick CO2 atmosphere
    • Virtually no water in atmosphere or on surface
  • Venus shows relatively recent volcanic activity, but no plate tectonics


  • Both probably related to its slightly closer position to the sun
    which caused loss of its critical water


  • Thick atmosphere and clouds block direct view so information from:
    • Orbiting radar missions  (Magellan in early 90’s)
    • Russian landers (as in previous photo)
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Why does Venus have much more CO2 in atmosphere than Earth?
  • Amount of CO2 in atmosphere on Venus roughly equal to
    amount of CO2 in limestone on Earth


  • With no oceans, don’t have a way to get CO2 out of atmosphere and back into rocks


  • Runaway effect, because high T causes faster loss of water to space.
    • If H2O gets into upper atmosphere it is broken down into O, H by UV sunlight
    • H is so light it escapes to space
    • On Earth cooler T traps H2O in lower atmosphere (it condenses if it gets to high)


  • Location closer to the sun pushed Venus “over the edge”  compared to Earth
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Surface Relief of Venus from Radar
  • Venus does show evidence of “recent” volcanism
  • It does not show linear ridges, trenches, or rigid plates
    • In a few spots there are weak hints of this – but clearly different
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Volcanoes
  • Sapas Mons
    • Lava flows from central vents
    • Flank eruptions
    • Summit caldera


  • Size:
    • 250 miles diameter
    • 1 mile high
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Lava Channels
  • Large!
    • 100’s of miles long
    • 1.2 miles wide


  • High Venus temperatures may allow very long flows


  • Composition could also be different
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Pancake Domes
  • Pancake domes formed from very viscous lava
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“Ticks”
  • Domes which have partially collapsed?
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Corona and a possible model
  • Corona possibly due to upward moving plume of hot mantle which bow up surface, then spreads out and cools
    (as in a “lava lamp”)
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Lots of Martian Science Fiction
  • Best, most recent and scientifically accurate is probably Kim Stanley Robinson’s series:
  • Red Mars, Blue Mars, Green Mars
  • Terraforming/colonization of Mars
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Mars and the Pattern of Geologic Activity
and Atmospheric Loss

  • Expect intermediate geologic activity based on size
    • RMars = 0.53 REarth         RMoon = 0.27 REarth
    • Earth still active but lunar mare volcanism ended ~3 billion years ago


  • Expect intermediate atmospheric loss
    • Smaller size will make atmospheric escape easier
    • Cooler temperature (farther from sun) will make astmospheric escape harder



  • In some ways Mars is most “Earth-like” planet
    • Has polar caps
    • Has weather patterns
    • Had (in past) running water
      • May have had conditions necessary for development of life
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Why some atmospheres are lost

  • Compare velocity of gas atoms (Vgas)  to planet’s escape velocity Vesc


    • If any significant # of atoms have escape speed atmosphere will eventually be lost


    • In a gas the atoms have a range of velocities,
      with a few atoms having up to about 10 ´ the average velocity,
      so we need 10
      ´ Vavg gas < Vesc to keep atmosphere for 4.5 billion years.





    • In above equations R = planet radius, M = planet mass, T = planet temperature,
      m = mass of atom or molecule,   k and G are physical constants


  • Big planets have larger Vesc (i.e. larger M/RµR3/R) so hold atmospheres better
    • Earth would retain an atmosphere better than Mercury or the Moon

  • Cold planets have lower Vgas so hold atmospheres better
    • Saturn’s moon Titan will hold an atmosphere better than our moon


  • Heavier gasses have lower Vgas so are retained better than light ones
    • CO2 or O2 retained better than He, H2, or H
    • Even with “heavy” gasses like we H2O we need to worry about
      loss of H if solar UV breaks H2O apart.  That is what happens on Venus.






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Which planets can retain which gasses?
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Mars atmosphere today
  • Pressure is only ~1% of Earth’s
  • Composition:  95% CO2    3% N2    2% Ar


  • Water:
    • Pressure too low for liquid water to exist
      • Water goes directly from solid phase to gas phase
      • CO2 (dry ice) acts like this even at terrestrial atmospheric pressure
    • Water seen in atmosphere
    • Water seen in polar caps
    • Evidence of running water in past


  • Carbon dioxide (CO2)
    • Gets cold enough for even this to freeze at polar caps
    • Unusual meteorology, as atmosphere moves from one pole to other each “year”
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Mars dust storm
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Sand Dunes on Mars
  • Spacecraft in Mars orbit
    • Mars Global Explorer
    • Mars Odyssey


  • Even though atmosphere is thin, high winds can create dust storms
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Water ice clouds
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Ancient River Channels?
(note channels older than some craters – by superposition)
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Recent liquid water?
(water seeping out of underground “aquifer” ?)
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Layered Deposits
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Where is the water today?
  • Much may have escaped to space
  • Some is locked up in N Polar Cap
  • Much could be stored in subsurface ice (permafrost)


  • Mars Missions making progress this semester:
      • http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/solarsystem/mer_main.html


  • Location of water critical to knowing where to search for possible past life
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“Comparative Planetology”
  • Think about how Venus, Earth, and Mars started out so similarly


  • Think about what properties led to the very different environments today


  • Think about how these issues may apply to the future of Earth, and even our prospects for terraforming (and there is a debate about whether we should terraform at all!).