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Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr. Julien Salmon Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, CO
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Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

Jul 01, 2018

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Page 1: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution

Dr. Michelle KirchoffWith help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr. Julien Salmon

Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, CO

Page 2: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

Important Observations

1. Current locations of the planets2. Some planets made of rock, others made of gas3. Characteristics of asteroids and comets4. Many planets have moons

Page 3: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

Our Story Begins…The Nebular Model of Planet Formation

Page 4: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

1. Cloud Collapse

A huge cloud of interstellar gas and dust collapses.

– The clouds are usually light years across!

– The collapse may be triggered by a supernova.

Page 5: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

2. Formation of Protoplanetary Disk

Gravity causes cloud to flatten.

Conservation of angular momentum causes it to spin faster.

Gas/dust disk forms around growing star.

Page 6: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

3. Growth of Planetesimals

Gravity causes dust to collect into larger planetesimals (asteroid- or comet-like bodies).

Animation from Tanga et al. (2003)

Page 7: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

4. Collisions Make Large Bodies!

The planetesimals collide and form larger bodies. Over time, they grow into Moon/Mars-sized protoplanets.

Page 8: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

5. Planet Formation

Protoplanets closer to the Sun are made of rocky materials; farther away are made of icy materials.

Page 9: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

5. Planet Formation: Inner Solar System

Sea of bodies:– Moon to Mars-

sized bodies – Smaller

planetesimals.

Distance From Sun (Further)(Closer)

Elo

ng

ati

on

o

f O

rbit

Very Circular

Very Elongated

Plan

etes

imal

s

Prot

opla

nets

Location ofAsteroid Belt

Animation from Alessandro Morbidelli

Page 10: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

5. Planet Formation: Inner Solar System

Sea of bodies:– Moon to Mars-

sized bodies – Smaller

planetesimals.

Collisions create planets!

Some bodies are left behind in the asteroid belt.

Animation from Alessandro Morbidelli

Page 11: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

5. Planet Formation: Outer Solar System

Some protoplanets are large enough to capture lots of gas from disk. This is where the gas giants come from!

Page 12: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

5. Planet Formation: Outer Solar System

This “circumplanetary” disk could also explain the satellites of the giant planets

Page 13: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

The Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud

Regions where our comets come from.

Page 14: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

Important Observations

1. Current locations of the planets – Sort of 2. Some planets made of rock, others made of gas – Yes!3. Characteristics of asteroids and comets – Sort of4. Many planets have moons – Sort of

Page 15: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

Our Story Continues…Moving planets, large collisions, oh my!

Page 16: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

Modified Solar System Formation Model

Old view. Gas giants/comets formed near present locations (5-30 AU) and reached current orbits ~4.5 Gy ago.

Comets

New view. Gas giants formed in more compact configuration (5-15 AU). Massive comet population existed between 15-30 AU.

Primordial disk of comets

Page 17: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

Destabilizing the Outer Solar System: The “Nice” Model

Watch what happens after 850 My!

Tsiganis et al. (2005); Morbidelli et al. (2005); Gomes et al. (2005)

Explains the orbits of giant planets and depleted Kuiper belt & Asteroid belt

Page 18: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

Giant Impact Model of Moon Formation

Mars-sized body hits Earth and forms Moon from debris disk.

Iron core vs. stony mantleAnimation from Robin Canup

Impactor

Trajectory

Early Earth

Page 19: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

Giant Impact Model of Moon Formation

Mars-sized body hits Earth and forms Moon from debris disk.

This model explains:• Large Moon!

• High Earth/Moon angular momentum.

• Lack of iron in Moon.

Animation from Robin Canup

Page 20: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

Further Implications

Small moons can be captured during migration

Planet properties affected by final large impacts – Tilt of planet’s axis (north pole), its rotation rate, whether it had a

moon.

Page 21: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

Important Observations

1. Current locations of the planets – Yes!2. Some planets made of rock, others made of gas – Yes!3. Characteristics of asteroids and comets – Yes!4. Many planets have moons – Yes!

Page 22: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

What Do We Still Need to Learn?

● Location and size of Mars still a mystery

● Details of growing planetesimals and accretion

● Details of forming “natural” satellites

● Details of satellite capture

● Why do other solar systems look so different?

● ??

Page 23: Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution · Making Our Solar System: Planetary Formation and Evolution Dr. Michelle Kirchoff With help from Dr. Bill Bottke & Dr.

Thank You!

Questions?