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Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System Our Solar System
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Page 1: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System.

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Our Solar SystemOur Solar System

Page 2: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System.

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Conservation of angular momentum says that product of radius and rotation rate must be constant.

Therefore, as a dust cloud collapses, its rate of rotation will increase.

The Concept of Angular The Concept of Angular MomentumMomentum

Page 3: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System.

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Nebular contraction:

• Cloud of gas and dust contracts due to gravity; conservation of angular momentum means it spins faster and faster as it contracts.

The Formation of the Solar The Formation of the Solar SystemSystem

Page 4: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System.

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Condensation theory:

• Interstellar dust grains help cool cloud, and act as condensation nuclei.

The Formation of the Solar The Formation of the Solar SystemSystem

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Temperature in cloud determines where various materials condense out; this determines where rocky planets and gas giants form.

The Formation of the Solar The Formation of the Solar SystemSystem

Page 6: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System.

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Formation of the Solar The Formation of the Solar SystemSystem

The star Beta Pictoris is surrounded by a disk of warm matter, which may indicate planetary formation.

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Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Formation of the Solar The Formation of the Solar SystemSystem

These images show possible planetary systems in the process of formation.

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Early astronomers knew Moon, stars, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, comets, and meteors.

Now known: Solar system has 166 moons, one star, eight planets (added Uranus and Neptune), asteroids, comets, meteoroids, dwarf planets, and Kuiper Belt objects.

An Inventory of the Solar An Inventory of the Solar SystemSystem

Page 9: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System.

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

• Distance from Sun known by Kepler’s laws.

• Orbital period can be observed.

• Radius known from angular size.

• Masses known from Newton’s laws.

• Rotation period known from observations.

• Density can be calculated knowing radius and mass.

An Inventory of the Solar An Inventory of the Solar SystemSystem

Page 10: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System.

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

All orbits but Mercury’s are close to the same plane.

An Inventory of the Solar An Inventory of the Solar SystemSystem

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Universal Law of GravitationUniversal Law of Gravitation

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Terrestrial planets:

Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars

Jovian planets:

Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune

An Inventory of the Solar An Inventory of the Solar SystemSystem

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Differences between the terrestrial planets:

• Atmospheres and surface conditions are very dissimilar.

• Only Earth has oxygen in atmosphere and liquid water on surface.

• Earth and Mars rotate at about the same rate; Venus and Mercury are much slower, and Venus rotates in the opposite direction.

• Earth and Mars have moons; Mercury and Venus don’t.

• Earth and Mercury have magnetic fields; Venus and Mars don’t.

An Inventory of the Solar An Inventory of the Solar SystemSystem

Page 14: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System.

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Interplanetary MatterInterplanetary Matter

The inner solar system, showing the asteroid belt, Earth-crossing asteroids, and Trojan asteroids

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Asteroids and meteoroids have rocky composition; asteroids are bigger.

(above) Asteroid Ida with its moon, Dactyl

(below) Asteroid Gaspra

(above) Asteroid Mathilde

Interplanetary MatterInterplanetary Matter

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What Killed the Dinosaurs?What Killed the Dinosaurs?

The larger an impact is, the less often we expect it to occur.

The dinosaurs may have been killed by the impact of a large meteor or small asteroid.

Page 17: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System.

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Interplanetary MatterInterplanetary Matter

Asteroid Eros

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Interplanetary MatterInterplanetary Matter

The impact of a large meteor can create a significant crater.

The Barringer meteor crater in Arizona

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Interplanetary MatterInterplanetary Matter

The Manicouagan reservoir in Quebec

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MeteoritesMeteorites

►Meteorites are formed by Meteorites are formed by differentiation in asteroids or other differentiation in asteroids or other planetary bodies.planetary bodies.

►Many meteorites contain chondrules – Many meteorites contain chondrules – round grains created when molten round grains created when molten droplets formed in space before being droplets formed in space before being accreted by the parent asteroid.accreted by the parent asteroid.

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MeteoritesMeteorites

► ChondritesChondrites Stony meteorites not Stony meteorites not

modified by any modified by any means.means.

Oldest solid material Oldest solid material in our solar systemin our solar system

4.5 billion years old4.5 billion years old

► AchondritesAchondrites Stony meteorites Stony meteorites

without chondrules without chondrules or metal.or metal.

Metal

Stony Iron

Achondrite

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Comets are icy, with some rocky parts.

The basic components of a comet

Interplanetary MatterInterplanetary Matter

Page 23: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System.

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Interplanetary MatterInterplanetary Matter

The solar wind means the ion tail always points away from the Sun.

The dust tail also tends to point away from the Sun, but the dust particles are more massive and lag somewhat, forming a curved tail.

Page 24: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System.

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Interplanetary MatterInterplanetary Matter

The internal structure of the cometary nucleus

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Interplanetary MatterInterplanetary Matter

The size, shape, and orientation of cometary orbits depend on their location. Oort cloud comets rarely enter the inner solar system.

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Interplanetary MatterInterplanetary Matter

Meteor showers are associated with comets – they are the debris left over when a comet breaks up.

Page 27: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System.

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Planets Beyond the Solar Planets Beyond the Solar SystemSystem

Many planets have been discovered in other solar systems; this is one that is visible.

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Planets Beyond the Solar Planets Beyond the Solar SystemSystem

Some planets are discovered through the “wobble” they create in their parent star’s orbit.

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Others are discovered through the periodic dimming of the parent star’s luminosity.

Planets Beyond the Solar Planets Beyond the Solar SystemSystem

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Planets Beyond the Solar Planets Beyond the Solar SystemSystem

These are the orbits of many extra-solar planets discovered so far. Most have masses closer to that of Jupiter than that of Earth.

Page 31: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System.

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• Solar system consists of Sun and everything orbiting it.

• Asteroids are rocky, and most orbit between orbits of Mars and Jupiter.

• Comets are icy, and are believed to have formed early in the solar system’s life.

• Major planets orbit Sun in same sense, and all but Venus rotate in that sense as well.

• Planetary orbits lie almost in the same plane.

Summary of Chapter 4Summary of Chapter 4

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• Four inner planets – terrestrial planets – are rocky, small, and dense.

• Four outer planets – Jovian planets – are gaseous and large.

• Nebular theory of solar system formation: Cloud of gas and dust gradually collapsed under its own gravity, spinning faster as it shrank.

• Condensation theory says dust grains acted as condensation nuclei, beginning formation of larger objects.

Summary of Chapter 4, cont.Summary of Chapter 4, cont.

Page 33: Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Our Solar System.

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Summary of Chapter 4, cont.Summary of Chapter 4, cont.

• Planets have been discovered in other solar systems.

• Most are large and orbit much closer to the Sun than the large planets in our solar system do.