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General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College
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General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

General AstronomyThe Solar System

The Outer Worlds

Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College

Page 2: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

The PlanetsIn order of increasing distance from the Sun:

– Mercury– Venus– Earth– Mars– Jupiter– Saturn– Uranus– Neptune

My Very Excellent Mother Just Served Us Nachos

Inner Planets

Outer Planets

Page 3: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Planets

We continue by looking at the Outer Planets and attempt to categorize their main features:

JupiterSaturnUranusNeptune

Page 4: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

The Outer Planets

Page 5: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Jupiter

Page 6: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Jupiter's Statistics Eccentricity 0.048

Orbital period 11.9 yrs

Orbital Radius 5.20 AU

Inclination 1° 18'

Radius 71,492 km

Mass (Earth Masses) 318

Density 1.33 g/cm³

Escape velocity 57.5 km/s

Rotation 10 hours

Tilt of Axis (Obliquity) 3.08°

Albedo 0.51

Mean surface temperature

125 K

Page 7: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Shoemaker – Levy 9• May 1993 – Carolyn & Eugene Shoemaker,

& David Levy find comet with 21 fragments orbiting Jupiter

• July 20, 1994 – Comet Shoemaker – Levy 9 impacts Jupiter with Fragment “G” leaving a scar larger than Earth in diameter

• Only impact event ever directly witnessed by human beings

Page 8: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Saturn

Page 9: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Saturn's Statistics

Eccentricity 0.056

Orbital period 29.5 yrs

Orbital Radius 9.53 AU

Inclination 2° 30'

Size 60,268 km

Mass (Earth Masses) 95.2

Density 0.69 g/cm³

Escape velocity 35.4 km/s

Rotation 10 hours

Tilt of Axis 26.7°

Albedo 0.50

Mean surface temperature

95 K

Page 10: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Saturn’s Storms

Page 11: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Saturn and Tethys

Page 12: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Gas Giant StructureHydrogen is converted from is

gaseous to its liquid and metallic forms under pressure

Galileo probe discovered a liquid water layer in Jupiter’s atmosphere

Original seeds of planets form core

Page 13: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Gas Giant Atmospheres• Jupiter

– Composition is primarily 75% H2 and 24% He– Galileo probe detected a liquid water layer– We see cloud tops that swirl and change with lightning– Banded structure

• Belts are dark bands that move vertically downward and horizontally eastward

• Zones are bright bands that move vertically upward and horizontally westward

– Great Red Spot• Stable for > 350 years• Counter-clockwise rotation in southern hemisphere• High pressure system• Resides between a belt and a zone and feeds off them

• Saturn– Composition is primarily 79% H2 and 19% He– Banded structure with belts and zones but more

subdued than Jupiter– Clouds are more spread out and smog in between– Faster equatorial wind speeds than Jupiter (1000 km/hr)

Page 14: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Jovian Atmospheres

Page 15: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Uranus

Page 16: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Uranus' Statistics

Eccentricity 0.046

Orbital period 84 yrs

Orbital Radius 19.2 AU

Inclination 46'

Size 25,559 km

Mass (Earth Masses) 14.6

Density 1.56 g/cm³

Escape velocity 21.9 km/s

Rotation 18 hours

Tilt of Axis 98°

Albedo 0.66

Mean surface temperature 60 K

Page 17: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Spring Storms on Uranus

Page 18: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Neptune

Page 19: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Neptune's Statistics

Eccentricity 0.010

Orbital period 165.1 yrs

Orbital Radius 30.1 AU

Inclination 1.8°

Size 24,764 km

Mass (Earth Masses) 17.3

Density 2.27 g/cm³

Escape velocity 24.4 km/s

Rotation 24 hours

Tilt of Axis 29.6°

Albedo 0.62

Mean surface temperature 60 K

Page 20: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Ice Giant Structure

Hydrogen is converted from is gaseous to its liquid form under pressureCannot create enough pressure for metallic hydrogenAlmost certainly liquid water layers deep in planets…perhaps surrounding the coresDiamond rain or snow?Original seeds of planets form core

Page 21: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Ice Giant Atmospheres• Uranus

– Still primarily hydrogen & helium– Methane ice crystals provide bluish

color– Belts and zones are very faint– Severe seasons due to large axis tilt– Recent Hubble observations show

new storms raging as seasons as winter hemisphere sees sunlight

• Neptune– Surprisingly active– Belts and zones visible to Voyager– Great Dark Spot and Little Dark Spot

were/are giant storms– Great Dark Spot vanished between

1989 and 1995– Highest wind speeds in solar system

Page 22: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Comparing Jovian PlanetsJupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune

Composition

GaseousLiquid hydrogen

Metallic hydrogen

Rock – metal core

GaseousLiquid hydrogen

Metallic hydrogen

Rock – metal core

GaseousLiquid

hydrogenH2O, CH4, NH3

Rock?

GaseousLiquid hydrogenH2O, CH4, NH3

Rock?

Differentiated

Yes Yes Yes Yes

Atmosphere75% Hydrogen

24% Helium75% Hydrogen

24% HeliumMethane Methane

Magnetic Field

Enormous! Large Large Large

# Moons 60t 30 23 8

# Rings 17 (major)

Thousands (minor)

8 7 (ring arcs)t 21 moons have been discovered in 2003 alone

Page 23: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Jovian Atmospheres

Cloud Top

Page 24: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Comparing Jovian Planets Oblateness (flattening) of Jovian planets is due to their rapid rotation.

Page 25: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Obliquity

Red line is the ecliptic

Page 26: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Magnetic Fields• Jupiter

– Metallic hydrogen generates enormous magnetic field

– Tilted 10° to rotation axis– Io produces a small “hole” in magnetic

field

• Saturn– Metallic hydrogen generates large

magnetic field– Not as large as Jupiter’s field since less

metallic hydrogen– Tilted 0° to rotation axis

• Uranus– Metallic hydrogen is not present, so

core compounds generate magnetic fields

– Tilted 60° to rotation axis

• Neptune– Metallic hydrogen is not present, so

core compounds generate magnetic fields

– Tilted 46° to rotation axis

Page 27: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Moons• Jupiter – 60 moons

– Galilean Moons are Io, Europa, Ganymede, Callisto

– 11 moons discovered by Galileo in 2000

• Saturn – 30 moons– Titan possesses large atmosphere– Mimas is “Death Star” moon

• Uranus – 23 moons– Named primarily after

Shakespearean characters– Miranda possesses unique geology– 21st moon discovered in Oct. 2002– 22nd & 23rd discovered Sept 2003

• Neptune – 11 moons– Triton possesses a weak

atmosphere– 6 new moons discovered by

Voyager 2 in 1989

Page 28: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Rings• Jupiter

– 1 ring– Visible only in backlighting– Discovered in 1979

• Saturn– 7 major rings– Thousands of minor rings– Radial spokes – still

unknown– Discovered in 1600s

• Uranus– 8 thin rings– Discovered in 1977

• Neptune– 7 minor ring arcs– Discovered in 1989

Page 29: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

Sizes

VenusMars

Mercury

Page 30: General Astronomy The Solar System The Outer Worlds Many slides are taken from lectures by Dr David Wood, San Antonio College.

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