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Hour 3: Star and Planet Formation, History of our Solar System, Planets Around Other Stars Interstellar Clouds & Star-Forming Regions Protoplanetary Disks.

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Presentation on theme: "Hour 3: Star and Planet Formation, History of our Solar System, Planets Around Other Stars Interstellar Clouds & Star-Forming Regions Protoplanetary Disks."— Presentation transcript:

1 Hour 3: Star and Planet Formation, History of our Solar System, Planets Around Other Stars Interstellar Clouds & Star-Forming Regions Protoplanetary Disks & Solar System Formation Two Kinds of Planets & the Condensation Sequence Era of Heavy Bombardment - Frustration of Life ? Extrasolar Planets & the “Hot Jupiter” Puzzle

2 Take-aways: Clouds of material between the stars are sites of stars formation Earth plus the other planets in our solar system evidently formed from a disk around the Sun as it formed; such protoplanetary disks are seen around many young stars Planets like Earth are believed therefore to form as normal by- products of stars forming There are two types of planets in our solar system, Earth-like and Jupiter-like, results of a process we think we understand Almost 200 planets have now been found around other stars, but those planetary systems often have “hot Jupiters” - is our solar system weird, or are those systems weird ? All the planets sustained heavy bombardment from remnant construction material soon after they formed; that may have set the timescale for the beginning of life on Earth

3 Interstellar Clouds and Star-forming Regions

4 The Orion Nebula: An Active Star-Forming Region

5 Constellation Orion left: visual wavelength image right: far-infrared image

6 p.194c

7 p.195b

8 p.194b

9 Globules Evaporating gaseous globules (“EGGs”): Newly forming stars exposed by the ionizing radiation from nearby massive stars

10 p.177b

11 p.177d

12 Globules Bok globules: ~ 10 – 1000 solar masses; Contracting to form protostars

13 Shocks Triggering Star Formation Henize 206 (infrared)

14 Protoplanetary Disks & Solar System Formation

15 Fig. 1-7, p.7

16 p.364a

17 Table 16-1, p.367

18 Fig. 16-1, p.357

19 Fig. 16-2, p.358

20 Fig. 16-3, p.358

21 Two Kinds of Planets & The Condensation Sequence

22 Two Kinds of Planets Planets of our solar system can be divided into two very different kinds: Terrestrial (earthlike) planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars Jovian (Jupiter-like) planets: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune

23 Table 16-3, p.369

24 Asteroids Last remains of planetesimals that built the planets 4.6 billion years ago! Small, irregular objects, mostly in the apparent gap between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.

25 Fig. 16-7, p.363

26 The Geology of Comet Nuclei Comet nuclei contain ices of water, carbon dioxide, methane, ammonia, etc.: Materials that should have condensed from the outer solar nebula. Those compounds sublime (transition from solid directly to gas phase) as comets approach the sun. Densities of comet nuclei: ~ 0.1 – 0.25 g/cm 3 Not solid ice balls, but fluffy material with significant amounts of empty space.

27 Fig. 16-4c, p.359

28 Extrasolar Planets & the “Hot Jupiter” Puzzle

29 Fig. 16-5, p.360

30

31 Artist’s Conception HD 209458 Planet passing in front of parent star -- size indicates density like Jupiter

32 Hot Jupiters: They seemingly go against the neat “Condensation Sequence” theory that seems to explain our solar system’s arrangement Did the “Hot Jupiters” form “cold”, i.e. at the expected location beyond the “ice line”, and then migrate toward the Sun ? If so, wouldn’t that destroy any Earth-like planets ? In our system Jupiter did NOT migrate -- is our system weird or are the Hot Jupiter systems the unusual ones, but just easier to detect with present technology ?

33 Era of Heavy Bombardment - Frustration of Life ?

34 Fig. 16-13b, p.374

35 p.389c

36 Fig. 17-9, p.394

37 Fig. 18-3, p.424

38 Take-aways: Clouds of material between the stars are sites of stars formation Earth plus the other planets in our solar system evidently formed from a disk around the Sun as it formed; such protoplanetary disks are seen around many young stars Planets like Earth are believed therefore to form as normal by- products of stars forming There are two types of planets in our solar system, Earth-like and Jupiter-like, results of a process we think we understand Almost 200 planets have now been found around other stars, but those planetary systems often have “hot Jupiters” - is our solar system weird, or are those systems weird ? All the planets sustained heavy bombardment from remnant construction material soon after they formed; that may have set the timescale for the beginning of life on Earth


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