Notes
Slide Show
Outline
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Astr 1050    Mon., May 3, 2004
  •    Today: Chapter 19, Pluto and “Debris”


  • Wednesday: Evaluations and Review (HW 10 due)


  • Friday: Exam #4, Ch. 16-19


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Chapter 19:  Meteorites, Asteroids, Comets
  • Small bodies are not geologically active
  • They provide “fossil” record of early solar system
    • Asteroids
      • Mostly from region between Mars and Jupiter
      • Left over small debris from accretion, never assembled into a large planet
      • Meteorites come mostly from asteroids
    • Comets
      • “Stored” on large elliptical orbits beyond planets
      • Thought to be “planetesimals” from Jovian planet region, almost ejected from solar system in its early history
  • Meteorites provide only samples besides Apollo
    • With sample in hand, can perform very detailed analysis:  detailed chemistry; radioisotope age; other isotope info


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Asteroids
  • Most located between Mars and Jupiter
  • Largest is Ceres
    • 1/3 diameter of moon
    • Most much smaller
  • >8,000 known
  • Total mass << Earth
  • A few make it to earth
    • source of the meteorites
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Meteorites from Asteroids
  • If meteorite speed and direction is observed as it enters Earth’s atmosphere, you can work backwards to find its orbit.


  • Almost all of the meteorites with well determined orbits have most distant part of orbit ellipse within the asteroid belt.
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The larger asteroids
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Are Asteroids Primitive?
  • Ida (56 km diam.) and its moon Dactyl (1.5 km diam.)
    • Colors have been “stretched” to show subtle differences
  • Imaged by Galileo on its way out to Jupiter
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Another Galileo Asteroid:  Gaspra
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Phobos & Deimos:  Two “misplaced” asteroids?
  • Phobos and Diemos are small (~25 km and ~15 km diam.) moons of Mars
  • Look like captured asteroids rather than moons formed in place
  • Are “C” class – i.e. dark “Carbonaceous” type “asteroids”
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Clues from Meteorites
  • Three main kinds of meteorites
    • Carbonaceous chondrites: Most primitive material – dark because of C
    • Stones Similar to igneous rocks
    • Irons Metallic iron – with peculiarities



  • Why do we have different kinds?
    • How are the main types of meteorites related to the asteroids?
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Origin of different asteroid types
  • Carbonaceous = undifferentiated?


  • Stones and Metals from differentiated planetesimals?
    • S = mantles
    • M = cores


  • Try to sort out using meteorite samples
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Meteors vs. Meteorites
  • Meteor is seen as streak in sky
  • Meteorite is a rock on the ground
  • Meteoroid is a rock in space
  • Meteor showers (related to comet orbits) rarely produce meteorites
    • Apparently most comet debris is small and doesn’t survive reentry
  • Meteorites can be “finds” or “falls”
    • For a fall – descent actually observed and sometimes orbit computed
    • Most have orbits with aphelion in asteroid belt
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Large Meteor over the Tetons (1972)
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The Leonids  2001
  • APOD site:  Picture by Chen Huang-Ming
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Meteor Showers and Comets
  • Meteor showers caused by large amount of small debris spread out along comet orbits
  • Almost none makes it to the ground – no meteorites
  • Occur each year as earth passes through orbit of comet
  • Appears to come from “radiant point” in sky


  • Leonids:  Mid November
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Comets:         Hale-Bopp in April 1997
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Comet characteristics
  • Most on long elliptical orbits
    • Short period comets – go to outer solar system
      • “Jupiter family” still ~ in plane of ecliptic
      • “Halley family” are highly inclined to ecliptic
    • Longer period ones go out thousands of AU
      • Most of these are highly inclined to ecliptic
  • Become active only in inner solar system
    • Made of volatile ices and dust
    • Sun heats and vaporizes ice, releasing dust
    • “Dirty snowball” model
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Comet structure
  • Gas sublimates from nucleus
  • Dense coma surrounds nucleus
  • Ion tail is ionized gas points directly away from sun
    • shows emission spectrum
    • ions swept up in solar wind
  • Dust tail curves slightly outward from orbit
    • shows reflected sunlight
    • solar radiation pressure gently pushes dust out of orbit
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Hale-Bopp clearly shows components
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Where do comets come from?
Long period comets:  The Oort Cloud
  • Most (original) orbits have aphelions of  >1000 AU


  • Need ~6 trillion comets out there to produce number seen in here
  • Total mass of 38 MEarth


  • Passing stars deflect comets in from the cloud
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Formation of Oort cloud comets
  • Composition indicates formation in region between Jupiter and Neptune
  • Ejected to the Oort cloud by near collisions as Jovian planets formed
  • Most probably lost from solar system – a few have just barely closed orbits
  • Occasional passing stars perturb more comets into orbits passing in close to sun
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Where do the Jupiter family comets come from?:
  The recently discovered Kuiper Belt
  • Material beyond Neptune never ejected into the Oort cloud
  • Pluto and Charon the biggest members – now also Quarar, Sedna
  • Very hard to detect because very faint
    • far from the sun so little illumination
    • comets not active at that distance
    • Hubble and new large telescopes have recently detected ~100
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Pluto and Charon
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Importance of comets
  • Evidence of solar nebula
  • Source of H2O and CO2 for earth
  • Impacts continue
    • Impacts on Earth
      • Extinction of the dinosaurs
    • SL-9 impact on Jupiter