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AST 111 Asteroids and Comets. Asteroids and Meteorites Planets have changed since formation – Developed layers – Geological Activity Many small bodies.

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Presentation on theme: "AST 111 Asteroids and Comets. Asteroids and Meteorites Planets have changed since formation – Developed layers – Geological Activity Many small bodies."— Presentation transcript:

1 AST 111 Asteroids and Comets

2 Asteroids and Meteorites Planets have changed since formation – Developed layers – Geological Activity Many small bodies haven’t really changed

3 Asteroids Leftover planetesimals from Solar System formation Did not see any for two centuries after invention of the telescope 400,000 cataloged

4 Asteroids Ceres is largest (600 miles) – Nearly spherical – (Remember planet rules!) – Dwarf planet 1 million+ asteroids with 1 km+ diameter Mass of all asteroids totals up to smaller than the Moon

5 Asteroids Composition determined by spectra Mostly metal and rock (condensed before the frost line) – Many are carbon-rich; formed near frost line Mass and density measured by fly-bys and asteroids’ small moons

6 Asteroids Main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter – Asteroids thousands to millions of km apart! Trojan Asteroids follow / lag Jupiter by 60 o – “Lagrange points”

7 Gaps and Groupings Orbital resonances cause Jupiter to line up with asteroids periodically Can force increasing oscillation in asteroid orbits – Can kick them out, or – Can keep them in place

8 Why is there an asteroid belt? Young Jupiter disrupted many of the planetesimals that were forming a planet Happened through orbital resonances The mass of the asteroid belt is less than that of any terrestrial planet

9 Meteorites Asteroids constantly collide – Small pieces get broken off Ones that hit Earth and survive to the ground are meteorites. – Usually break into fragments

10 Primitive Meteorites Primitive meteorites: formed with Solar System – 4.6 billion years old (age of Solar System) Stony primitive meteorites – Rocky minerals with metallic flakes Carbon-rich primitive meteorites – Carbon compounds and even water

11 Primitive Meteorites Life of primitive meteorite: – Created in solar nebula – Orbited the Sun more or less undisturbed – Fell to Earth Stony ones from inner asteroid belt (warmer) Carbon ones from outer asteroid belt (colder)

12 Processed Meteorites Once part of a larger object Younger than primitive meteorites They can be: Metal-rich (iron and nickel) – Much like terrestrial planet cores Rocky – Made of rock similar to terrestrial mantles and crusts

13 Processed Meteorites Larger asteroids could undergo differentiation – Interiors melted – Metals sank, rocks rose Rocky meteorites from surfaces of differentiated asteroids Metal meteorites from cores of shattered asteroids – Like part of a “dissected planet”

14 Comets Planetesimals formed beyond the frost line

15 Comets “Comet” refers to any leftover icy planetesimal Majority of comets live in: – Kuiper Belt – Oort Cloud Typically 20 km in diameter If it’s in our sky: – It got deflected in here by a planet

16 History of Comets Thought to be in Earth’s atmosphere – Tycho Brahe: at least beyond the Moon – Newton: they orbit the Sun – Edmond Halley: calculated orbit, showed same comet comes back

17 Halley’s Comet First spacecraft sent to Halley’s Comet in 1980’s Size and mass suggest either: – A porous structure, or – A “rubble pile”

18 Comet Discoveries Many made by amateurs SOHO (solar observatory) has found 1250! – They either swing around the Sun or die trying

19 What are they made of? ICE! – Condensed H-compounds Along with some “rocky dust” – “Dirty Snowballs” Spectra show CO – Only condenses in coldest, farthest parts

20 What’s inside? Deep Impact mission Fired impactor, collided at 37,000 km/hr 10+ meters of dust Porous interior – Density similar to fresh snow

21 Why the tail? If an icy object crosses the frost line, it melts! Two tails: – Plasma tail caused by solar wind (strong push) – Dust tail caused by sunlight pressure (weak push)

22 A Comet’s Orbit p. 378

23 How long do they live? If they hang around inner solar system: – Loses ice (0.1% per pass) – Can only make a few hundred passes

24 Meteor Showers These happen when Earth passes through a comet’s path Sand and pebble – sized pieces of the comet burn up in the atmosphere – 70 km / s!

25 Where exactly do comets come from? Two major sources of comets: – Kuiper Belt – Oort Cloud Comets that visit inner solar system have very elliptical orbits – Because they were thrown by Jovian planets Orbits up to a quarter of the distance to the nearest star!

26 Kuiper Belt vs. Oort Cloud The “regulars” in inner solar system are from Kuiper Belt – 30-50 AU – 100,000+ comets – Same plane as planets Oort Cloud: – Out to 50,000 AU – One trillion + comets!! – Random orbits

27 Origins of Comets Planetesimals that hung around Jovian worlds collided or got launched – These are what make up the Oort Cloud Plenetesimals beyond Jovian planets were “safe” – Orbital resonances sometimes launch one at the Sun

28 Jovian Planets: Asteroid Launchers Every asteroid or comet that has hit Earth since heavy bombardment was sent by the Jovian planets – But remember… they sent hundreds of thousands of comets to the Oort Cloud, decreasing the number hanging around the planets

29 Jovian Planets: Asteroid Launchers Can civilizations only arise in Solar Systems with an “asteroid launcher” such as Jupiter to clear out comets?


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