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The Solar System What is our little corner of the Milky Way Galaxy like?

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Presentation on theme: "The Solar System What is our little corner of the Milky Way Galaxy like?"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Solar System What is our little corner of the Milky Way Galaxy like?

2 Composition of the Solar System n n The Sun contains 99.85% of all the matter in the Solar System. The planets, which condensed out of the same disk of material that formed the Sun, contain only 0.135% of the mass of the solar system. Jupiter contains more than twice the matter of all the other planets combined. Satellites of the planets, comets, asteroids, meteoroids, and the interplanetary medium constitute the remaining 0.015%.

3 Percentages n n Sun: 99.85% n n Planets: 0.135% n n Comets: 0.01% ? n n Moons: 0.00005% n n Minor Planets: 0.0000002% n n Meteoroids: 0.0000001% n n Interplanetary Medium: 0.0000001%

4 Solar System Structure n n The planets revolve around the Sun in orbits that lie close to a common plane. (Mercury 7 o ; Pluto 17.2 o ) n n All planets orbit the sun in a counter- clockwise fashion as seen from above the north pole of the sun. Orbits are contained within a very narrow disk or plane. n n Most orbits are very nearly circular with the exception of Mercury and Pluto.

5 General Structure n n The spin axes of most planets and moons are perpendicular to the orbital plane (Venus and Uranus are notable counter examples). n n Thus solar system is basically disk shaped with the Sun near the center.

6 Small Rocky Worlds n n Terrestrial Planets – are small, dense, rocky worlds with less atmosphere than the other type of planet. Craters, no rings, very few moons, very small. (Densities between 3.3-5.5 g/cm 3 )  Mercury  Venus  Earth  Mars

7 Terrestrial Planets

8 Big Gaseous Worlds n n Jovian Planets – are large, gaseous, low density worlds. Thick gaseous mostly hydrogen atmospheres, rings, lots of moons, and very large in comparison to terrestrial planets. (Densities are 1.75 g/cm 3 or lower!)  Jupiter  Saturn  Neptune  Uranus

9 Jovian Planets

10 Pluto n n Pluto – doesn’t fit either category. Pluto is a small icy world clearly different from either the Jovian and Terrestrial worlds. Since its discovery by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930, it has been a unique mystery mostly because of its great distance from the Earth and is peculiar orbit.

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12 Space Debris n n Asteroids  (minor planets) are small rocky worlds. Most (not all) orbit between Mars and Jupiter. Most are irregular in shape, crated, and dense.

13 Comets n n Comets  An impressive glowing object that is illuminated by the Sun as it sweeps through the inner solar system. Dirty snowball theory. (Water and CO 2 ices) Vapor tail, particle tail, which can extent to 1 A.U. on bright comets.

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15 n n Meteor  falling “shooting star” – bits of rock and metal falling into the Earth’s atmosphere and bursting into vibrant light as they drastically heat because of the friction created between them and the Earth’s atmosphere. These bits are, on average, tiny – specks of dust, sand grain size, small pebbles – NOT large. n n Meteoroid  in space before its fiery collision with the Earth’s atmosphere. n n Meteorite  fallen piece that survived the fall. Most “shooting stars” are less than 1 gram of material.

16 Age of the Solar System n n Oldest Rocks dated on Earth ~ 3.9 billion years, however the Earth’s own volcanism and plate-techtonics erase most of the evidence!! n n Lunar Rocks are dated to 4.48 billion years. n n Meteorites ~ 4.6 billion years n n Sun estimate based on all the circumstantial evidence ~ 5 billion years.

17 Solar Nebula Theory A large massive slowly rotating cloud of interstellar material begins to collapse under the influence of gravity. A star forming nebula begins to grow warm and grow denser. The warming center is becoming a “protostar” of mostly hot hydrogen gas. Further out in the nebula other clumps of dust and debris are gathering into asteroid sized objects and “planetesimals”.

18 Solar Nebula Theory When nuclear fusion begins we have a new star! The star will vaporize the inner regions of the cloud and begin to drive off the gaseous and dusty material As the star continues to shine and produce energy the nebula is driven off revealing the surviving material; planets, comets, and asteroids.

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