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Mars moon Phobos, as seen by ESA's Mars Express. Phobos is about 25 kilometers in length and does not have enough gravity to compress it into a ball. It.

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Presentation on theme: "Mars moon Phobos, as seen by ESA's Mars Express. Phobos is about 25 kilometers in length and does not have enough gravity to compress it into a ball. It."— Presentation transcript:

1 Mars moon Phobos, as seen by ESA's Mars Express. Phobos is about 25 kilometers in length and does not have enough gravity to compress it into a ball. It orbits so close to Mars that sometime in the next 20 million years, tidal forces will break up Phobos into a ring whose pieces willESA slowly spiral down and crash onto the red planet. The Russian mission Phobos- Grunt is scheduled to launch and land on Phobos next year.

2 Out-of-class Activity: Every clear Wednesday evening for the rest of the semester. Check website for details. Kirkwood Observatory Open House

3 A100 Movie Special Tuesday, March 23 Swain West 119 7:00 pm (153 minutes) Winner of several awards 20 activity points!

4 Homework #6 is due Wednesday, March 24, 2:30 pm Homework #7 will be posted shortly. It will be due next Monday

5 Exam #2 Wednesday, March 31 Review session will be held next Monday, time and location to be announced

6 Newton’s Three Laws of Motion

7 Newton’s Law of Gravity

8 The Acceleration of Gravity (a force) As objects fall, they accelerate (a = g = F grav /m). We use the special symbol g to represent the acceleration due to the force of gravity. At sea level on the Earth, g = 9.8 m/s each second, or g = 9.8 m/s 2. The higher you drop the ball, the greater its velocity will be at impact (force will be acting on it longer).

9 Weight is the force of gravity acting upon an object : W = F g = mg

10 Galileo demonstrated that g is the same for all objects, regardless of their mass!

11 Is Mass the Same Thing as Weight? ● mass – the amount of matter in an object ● weight – a measurement of the force due to gravity acting upon an object When in free-fall, you still have weight! “weightless” is a misnomer W = mg (weight) F = ma

12 ● Objects do have weight in space ● Free-fall often confused with weightlessness

13 Now, some questions…

14 Tidal Forces Because the gravitational force decreases with (distance) 2, the attractive force experienced by one object (e.g., the Earth) due to the gravitational field of a second object (e.g., the Moon) varies with position (closest parts attracted most strongly).

15 ● Now look at what happens when we measure the forces relative to the center of the Earth.

16 Tidal Friction

17 ● This fight between Moon’s pull & Earth’s rotation causes friction. ● Earth’s rotation slows down (1 sec every 50,000 yrs.) ● Conservation of angular momentum causes the Moon to move farther away from Earth.

18 Synchronous Rotation ● …is when the rotation period of a moon, planet, or star equals its orbital period about another object. ● Tidal friction on the Moon (caused by Earth) has slowed its rotation down to a period of one month. ● The Moon now rotates synchronously. – We always see the same side of the Moon. ● Tidal friction on the Moon has ceased since its tidal bulges are always aligned with Earth.

19 ● Most of the large moons in the solar system are in synchronous rotation.

20 Now we are ready to examine the solar system!!

21 We want to understand how the solar system was formed and how it got to be in the state that it is today. Look for patterns and physical characteristics of the solar system.

22 What does any theory of the formation and evolution of the solar System have to account for?

23 The Sun: A fairly typical star Predominately H and He Most of the mass in the solar system. Rotates in same sense that planets orbit.

24 Need to understanding the similarities and differences between the planets, moons, asteroids, & comets Nine planets eight

25 People of earth. Help!!!!

26 Planetary orbits: 1) Prograde 2) approximately coplanar 3) approximately circular Rotation: 1) Mostly Prograde 2) Includes sun 3) Includes large moons

27 TerrestrialJovian Two “flavors” of planets

28  Size – “smaller”  Location – closer to Sun  Composition – rocky/metallic  Temperature – hotter  Rings – none  Rotation rate – slow  Surface – solid  Atmosphere – “minimal” Terrestrial Planets Mercury Mars Venus Earth

29 Mercury No moons Venus No moons Earth One moon Mars Two moons

30 Jovian Planets  Size – “larger”  Location – farther from Sun  Composition – gaseous (mostly H,He)  Temperature – cold  Rings – ubiquitous  Rotation rate – fast  Surface – not solid  Atmosphere – substantial Jupiter Neptune Saturn Uranus

31 Jupiter >61 moons Uranus > 27 moons Neptune > 13 moons Saturn > 31 moons

32 Surface features of solid objects in solar system

33 Craters are ubiquitous

34 There are lots of smaller objects in the Solar System, some are rocky and some are icy

35 small Rocky Odd-shapes nearly circular orbits orbit planes are near Ecliptic Plane orbits in inner part of solar system Asteroids

36 The “asteroid belt”

37 Asteroids

38 Mars’ moons and the asteroid Gaspra Deimos Gaspra Phobos

39 Comets “small” icy highly eccentric orbits all orbit inclinations

40 Comet Wild Halley’s Comet

41 Comet Tempel 1 (“Deep Impact”)

42

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44 Comets are found mainly in two regions of the solar system

45

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47 UB313 (1500 miles) Kuiper Belt Objects

48 So how do we account for what we see in the solar system?


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