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Comparative Planetology Comparative Planetology is the comparing and contrasting of different worlds to describe and categorize them Important Properties:

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Presentation on theme: "Comparative Planetology Comparative Planetology is the comparing and contrasting of different worlds to describe and categorize them Important Properties:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Comparative Planetology Comparative Planetology is the comparing and contrasting of different worlds to describe and categorize them Important Properties: –Distance to the Sun –Orbital Period –Radius –Mass –Rotation Period –Density

2 Solar System Layout All planets travel in elliptical orbits with the Sun at one focus Most eccentricities are low Most lay in the same orbital plane Mercury and Pluto are the exceptions –Each has significant eccentricity and don’t lie in the orbital plane

3 Terrestrial Planets Properties of all terrestrial planets –Within about 1.5 AU of the Sun –Relatively small –Relatively high density –Rocky Composition –Solid Surfaces Some Differences –Atmospheres are very different –Some have moons –Surface conditions very different

4 Jovian Planets Properties of Jovian planets –Farther away from the Sun –Made almost entirely of gas –Relatively Large –Strong Magnetic Fields –Many Moons –All have Rings Some Differences –Compositions different –Inner Structure differences

5 Terrestrial vs. Jovian

6 Pluto What is Pluto?

7 Interstellar Matter

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9 Interstellar matter is made of gas and dust –The gas is mostly individual atoms and small molecules –0.1 – 1.0 nanometers in size –Gas does not account for all the obscuration of light Interstellar dust is made of clumps of atoms and molecules –Dust absorbs or scatters light (like headlights in fog) –Obscuration increases with decreasing wavelength

10 Interstellar Matter Interstellar dust is typically about 100 nm in size –This makes the dust invisible to radio waves –The dust is opaque to shorter wavelengths –“Extinction” is the term for the dimming out of light Because dust blocks the shorter wavelengths more than the longer wavelengths, visible light loses some of its blue component –Makes the light appear more red –“Reddening”

11 Interstellar Matter Notice dust cloud edges Cloud blocks some of the blue light intensity

12 Interstellar Matter Space is an empty place? A dirty place? Average gas density ~ 9 billion atoms per m 3 –Better than any vacuum created on Earth –Earth’s gas density is approximately 1x10 25 atoms per m 3 –That is a million – billion times more! Average dust distribution ~ 1000 particles per km 3 Volume the size of Earth would not fill a coffee cup

13 Interstellar Matter Earth’s atmosphere has 1 dust particle per 10 18 gas atoms Space has 1 dust particle per 10 12 gas atoms If the gas density of space was equal to Earth, we couldn’t see our hand in front of our face As we look over large distances, this is significant

14 Interstellar Matter

15 Interstellar Medium Nebula: “Fuzzy” patches in the sky Emission Nebulae: gas clouds hot enough (thousands of Kelvins) to emit visible light Dark Dust Cloud: Cold and dense (relatively) clouds of dust and gas

16 Nebulae

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18 Dark Dust Clouds

19 21-cm Radiation How do you observe nebula that are too dense or cool to emit usable radiation? 21-cm wavelength radiation is emitted from cool atomic Hydrogen This long wavelength allows the radiation to penetrate dust

20 Nebular Theory The solar system started as a cloud of hot gas The cloud’s gravity started to pull it inward As it pulled inward it started to rotate

21 Nebular Theory Because of the rotation it started to flatten out It started to spin faster as the cloud shrunk Planets formed in cooler outer regions

22 Condensation Theory Condensation theory adds to the nebular theory by introducing DUST Models show that gas alone would not clump together Dust particles act as the nucleus for larger object formation

23 Condensation Theory

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25 Angular Momentum When objects spin, Newton says they should keep spinning Spinning objects have momentum This momentum must be conserved

26 Angular Momentum Angular momentum: L = Iω For Conservation of Momentum: I i ω i = I f ω f I is the moment of inertia –For spheres I = 2/5 MR 2 ω = angular velocity (how fast it rotates) If the moment of inertia goes down, then the angular momentum must go up

27 Angular Momentum A Star in the final stages of its life will shrink and turn into a neutron star The mass of the star is 5x10 35 kg Its initial radius is 1x10 9 m Its initial ω is 3x10 -6 rad/sec (1 revolution in 25 days) As it becomes a neutron star, it shrinks to a radius of 20,000 m What is it’s new rotation rate?

28 Angular Momentum I i ω i = I f ω f 2/5 M R i 2 ω i = 2/5 M R f 2 ω f R i 2 ω i = R f 2 ω f ω f = R i 2 ω i / R f 2 ω f = (1x10 9 m) 2 (3x10 -6 rad/s) / (2x10 4 m) 2 ω f = 7,500 rad/s 4,300,000 revolutions per hour

29 Angular Momentum A new planet is forming much like ours did Its initial mass is 5x10 25 kg It is initially spinning at a rate of once every 50 hours Fast-forward a million years Due to collisions with other things, it’s mass has increased to 7.5x10 25 kg However, because some of the planet has cooled (and therefore shrunk) its radius has not changed What is the new rate of rotation?

30 Angular Momentum I i ω i = I f ω f 2/5 M i R 2 ω i = 2/5 M f R 2 ω f M i ω i = M f ω f ω f = M i ω i / M f ω f = (5x10 25 kg)(1rev/50hr) / (7.5x10 25 kg) ω f = 0.0133 rev/hr 1 revolution every 75 hours

31 Angular Momentum I i ω i = I f ω f Everything else being equal: Rotation slows if: –Mass Increases –Radius Increases Rotation speeds up if: –Mass Decreases –Radius Decreases


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