GEOL3025, Section 030 Lecture #11 31 August 2007
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Transcript GEOL3025, Section 030 Lecture #11 31 August 2007
Chapter 22: Planetary Geology
Introduction
Compositional Groups:
Gases:
Rocks:
H & He
Melting points near absolute zero (-273°C)
Silicate minerals & Fe-Ni metal
Melting points >700°C
Ices:
Composed of Ammonia (NH3), Methane (CH4), CO2 & H2O
Intermediate melting points
The Planets
Inner Planets:
AKA Terrestrial Planets (like Earth)
AKA Rocky Planets
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars
Outer Planets:
Dominated by rocky materials
AKA Jovian Planets (like Jupiter)
Gas Giants: Jupiter & Saturn
Ice Giants: Uranus & Neptune
+ Pluto (Rocky-Ice planet?)
Minor Planets:
Asteroids, Comets & Kuiper Belt Objects
Planetary Data
Planetary Atmospheres
Ability to hold onto an atmosphere depends on
planet’s mass & temperature
Escape velocity: minimum velocity to escape the
gravity of a plant
e.g. Earth’s escape velocity = 11 km/s
Ice line: distance from Sun that is cold enough for
water ice to be stable
Giant planets have thicker atmospheres b/c formed
past ice line & therefore accreted ices & rock
Inner planets have thinner atmospheres b/c
accreted only rock
Mercury
Low albedo
Has highly-crated
highlands & smooth
terraines similar to Moon
Highly eccentric orbit
46-70 million km
High density
Reflects only 5% of sunlight
Implies large core
Tidally locked to Sun
3:2 resonance
3 days to 2 years
http://www.nineplanets.org/mercury.html
Irregularities in
Mercury’s orbit helped
to prove Einstein’s
General Theory of
Relativity
Radar Map
Due to high cloud cover
Second brightest object
in night sky
Nearly circular
retrograde orbit
Thick atmosphere
Venusian Surface
High albedo
Venus
90 atm
~470°C (melt Pb)
Pancake volcanoes
http://www.nineplanets.org/venus.html
Considered Earth’s
twin
95% Earth’s diameter
80% Earth’s mass
Young surfaces
Same bulk chemistry &
density
Earth-Moon System
http://www.nineplanets.org/moon.html
Brightest object in night sky
Two types of terraines:
Ancient highlands
Younger Maria
~ Basalt
Low density (~3.3 g/cm3)
~ Feldspar
Implies little or no core
Formation by large impact
~Mars-sized object
Explains O-isotopes, low
density & chemical
composition
cygnus.colorado.edu
Mars
Viking Image
1% Atm of Earth
CO2 rich
Ice caps (H2O & CO2)
Evidence of liquid water
Has highest mt. & longest,
deepest valley in Solar
System
Phobos
Deimos
http://www.nineplanets.org/mars.html
Pathfinder Image
Jupiter
http://www.nineplanets.org/jupiter.html
Io
Largest planet in Solar System
Bands of clouds & storms
Convection of atm
Radiates more heat than receives
from Sun
Rotates in 10 hours
At least 28 moons
Europa
Saturn
Second largest planet in Solar
System
Has well-developed ring
system
Bands & storms
Similar to Jupiter’s
At least 30 moons, including
“sheppard moons”
Titan has thick atmosphere
Titan
Mimas
http://www.nineplanets.org/saturn.html
Uranus
Rings
Twin with Neptune
Rotates 90° to orbit
around Sun
At least 15 moons
Slightly larger in diameter
Slightly smaller in mass
Miranda shows greatest
At least 9 rings
http://www.nineplanets.org/uranus.html
Miranda
Neptune
Twin with Uranus
Blue due to methane in
atmosphere
Bands & storms
Giant Dark Spot has disappeared
At least 13 moons
Triton has atmosphere
Retrograde orbit
Similar in reflectance spectra to
Kuiper Belt Objects & Pluto
Ice volcanoes
Triton
http://www.nineplanets.org/neptune.html
HST image
Pluto-Charon System
HST image
Highly eccentric & inclined
orbit
Highest satellite:planet
radius ratio
Similar reflectance spectra
to Kuiper Belt Objects
Also to Centaurs & primitive
asteroids
Charon
http://www.nineplanets.org/pluto.html
Minor Planets
Asteroids:
Kuiper Belt Objects:
Mostly between Mars & Jupiter
AKA Trans-Neptunian Objects
Discovered in 1992
Source of Short-Period Comets
Oort Cloud Comets:
Spherical Cloud on edge of Solar System
Theoretical, proposed in 1950
Source of Long-Period Comets
Asteroids
First discovered in 1801
Named Ceres
Several hundred thousand
have been discovered
Several 1000 discovered
each year
Classified by composition &
albedo
75% are C-type
243Ida
951Gaspara
253Mathilde
http://www.psi.edu
17% are S-type
Darkest, C-rich
http://www.nineplanets.org/asteroids.html
Moderate, metal + silicates
5% are M-type
Brightest, mostly metal
Itokawa
http://near.jhuapl.edu/iod/20000214f/index.html
433Eros
Kuiper Belt Objects
Quaoar
Sedna
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/50000_Quaoar
http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/2004/14/image/a
Oort Cloud Comets
www.solstation.com
~50,000 AU from Sun
~ 1 light year
Source of long period
comets
www.wikipedia.com
> 200 years
Materials scattered out
from interaction with
Jupiter & Saturn
www.britannica.com
gatornet.chapin.edu
Meteorites: Time Capsules
Nebula Heterogeneous
Formation Sequence
CAIs, Chondrules, fine-grained materials
Some melted
Some wet
Some hot
Some both hot & wet
Organic materials present
Meteorite Classification
Metallic
Achondrites
Chondrites
Igneous
Primitive
Basaltic
Pallasites
Carbonaceous
Ordinary
Enstatite
Chondritic ~ Solar Composition
Martian Meteorites
Are probably from Mars b/c:
Young & basaltic
O-isotopes:
Recent volcanism (130 to 1300 Ma)
if one from Mars, all from Mars
Gas bubbles trapped in glass
Composition ~ Viking measurements
N2, CO2, H2, He, Ar, Kr, Xe & isotope ratios
Life on Mars?
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TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
QuickTime™ and a
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Carbonate Globbules
~900oC or <80oC ?
Also: PAHs
~ Antarctic meltwater
Not spatially near CO3’s
Orange: Ca, Mn-rich
Inner Black: Mg-rich
White: Fe-rich
Outer Black: Fe, S-rich
(where mt is)
Oxygen Isotopes
Shergotty
Life on Mars?
SEM prep
artifact?
Too small for
DNA?
Terrestrial
contamination
QuickTime™ and a
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QuickTime™ and a
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Life on Mars?
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TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
ALH84001
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Q uickTim e™ and a
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Terrestrial
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Etched Volcanic Glass