Jupiter-Like Planets The Jovian Planets Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune.

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Presentation transcript:

Jupiter-Like Planets The Jovian Planets Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune

Appearances

Clouds Storms

Insides

Earth-like: 3.9 – 5.5 g/cm3 p. 172

Jupiter & Saturn Liquid molecular hydrogen/helium Liquid metallic hydrogen Rocky core p. 175

p. 175

Uranus & Neptune Liquid molecular hydrogen/helium ‘Slush’ Rocky core p. 175

* Most Jovians are net radiators . . . Internal heat/solar heat Jupiter 2 Saturn 3 Uranus 1 Neptune 1.5

* Jovians rotate differentially . . . ‘slow’ ‘fast’  Fluid interior

Magnetic Fields

* Fluid, conducting interiors + rapid rotation  huge magnetic fields Strange geometry

Jovian Magnetospheres

Jupiter & Saturn Aurorae

Atmospheres

* No solid surfaces! * Composition: mainly hydrogen & helium + some methane & ammonia. * Heated mainly from bottom. * Rapid rotation drives high-speed east-west winds, forming clouds into zones & belts. * Sustain giant cyclonic storms: - Great Red Spot - Great Dark Spot

Jupiter’s atmosphere Belt Zone Temp Rising air . . . . . . Falling air . . . Convection!

p. 175

Great Red Spot . Cyclonic Storm 16,000 mi

Great Red Spot (Jupiter)

Red Spot Movie

Great Dark Spot (Neptune)

Galileo atmospheric probe 370 mi - 230 oF +300 oF

Blue-green of Uranus & Neptune is due to methane

Moons

Jupiter’s Family

Io Recent volcanic deposits Vents

Volcanic Plumes Sulfur deposits

Volcano from above Lava lake?

Europa Icy Surface

Water beneath the ice? Cracks in the Ice

Ice ‘Rafts’

p. 175

Ganymede Craters in icy crust

Strange grooved terrain – suggestive of tectonic activity . . .

Callisto The most heavily cratered body in the Solar System!

Valhalla Impact Basin

Saturn’s Moons Titan

Voyager, 1981 Titan Haze (‘smog’) Hubble Space Telescope, 1998 90% nitrogen Ethane lakes?

Cassini mission to Saturn (Arrival: 2004) Huygens probe descending toward Titan

Rhea Enceladus Dione Densities ~ 1.2 – 1.4 g/cm3 Ice + rock interiors & icy surfaces.

Some of Saturn’s minor satellites.

Moons of Uranus Miranda

Miranda Groovy terrain!

Neptune: 8 moons Neptune Triton

Triton ‘Cantaloupe’ terrain Nitrogen ice surface Temp = - 390 oF South polar cap

Streaks probably result from nitrogen geysers. Dark streaks Old Faithful

Clouds in a thin nitrogen atmosphere.

Rings

RINGS * Consist of particles, each following an orbit about a planet, like a small moon.

Jupiter: ‘smoke’ particles.

Saturn: chunks of ice & icy rock

‘Braids’ in the F Ring.

Shepherd satellites (‘moons’) and F Ring.

Ring ‘Spokes.’

Uranus: Dark & chunky ring particles.

Neptune: Dark & chunky ring particles.