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Introduction to Astronomy • Announcements – Midterm Exam on Thursday • Closed-book/notes/etc.

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Page 1: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Introduction to Astronomy

• Announcements– Midterm Exam on Thursday

• Closed-book/notes/etc.

Page 2: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

This is what happens when a massive star dies.

About 1400 ly distant, it covers an area of sky = 5 full Moons!

Page 3: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

The Jovian Planets

Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune

Page 4: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

The Jovianplanets to correct scale

Also knownas the outerplanets or thegas giants

Page 5: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Commonalities

• All are much larger than Earth• Densities are all lower than the terrestrial

planets• All have small ice/rock cores surrounded

by liquid layer surrounded by thick gas atmosphere (which contains optical surface of planet)

• Rings• Belts and Zones (high & low pressure)

Page 6: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

JupiterJupiterThe King of the Planets

Page 7: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 8: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

JupiterJupiter• Name from Roman God of Gods• Largest of the planets

– 11x diameter of Earth, 318x mass of Earth

• Dense, brightly-colored atmospheric bands– Fast-moving H, He, NH3, CH4, H2O

• Fast rotation period (10 Earth hours)– Results in significant equatorial bulge

Page 9: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Interior

• Avg. density ~ 1.3 g/cm3 (slightly higher than water)– Much less than Earth density, so must be

made of lighter elements

• 1/6 of the way to the core, gaseous H turns to liquid H– Compression by overlying layers

• Even deeper, liquid turns to liquid metallic H

• Rocky, Iron core

Page 10: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Divers know this phenomenonwell…

As depth increases, pressureincreases.

Need for decompression stopsto avoid Nitrogen Narcosis(“The Bends”)…pressure on bodydrops too rapidly, allows bubblesof N2 to enter blood stream anddissolve into brain tissue,which is highly toxic.

Page 11: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 12: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Atmosphere

• Coriolis effect & cloud bands• Heat in interior drives convection currents

upward– Stirs up atmosphere, brings hot gases to

surface while cooler gases fall back down below surface

– Coriolis effect• Gases moving toward equator get pushed to the

west, gases moving away from equator get pushed to the east

Page 13: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Here on Earth, we have localizedhigh- and low-pressure systems

On Jupiter, those same high- andlow-pressure systems are stretchedinto globe-circling bands

Page 14: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 15: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

If no rotation, hot gases in theinterior convectively rise.

In pot of boiling water, convectioncarries bubbles of WATER VAPORto surface, where it is released tocondense into STEAM

When these hot gases reach the surface, they spread out horizontally. Some travel toward the equator, some travel toward the poles

How to stretch a weather cellHow to stretch a weather cell

Page 16: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 17: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

• Just in case you don’t believe me, here’s an example of the Coriolis deflection– Note I did not say Coriolis “force”

• Movie

Page 18: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Speed of cloud bands varies widely from place to place

Page 19: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

• As opposite-moving winds blow, other uprising material may get caught between them and get “twisted” up into Jovian storms– Like ball rolling between two conveyor belts– Some transient (short-lived)– GREAT RED SPOT permanent (as far as we

know)– Brownish-red bands from Sulfur and/or

Phosphorous tinting

Page 20: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Smaller storms

HUGE “Jet Streams”

Page 21: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

The Kelvin-Helmholtz Instability

Page 22: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 23: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

• Convection & rotation in liquid Hydrogen sustains DYNAMO– BJupiter ~ 20 – 20,000 x stronger than Earth’s

magnetic field• Largest magnetosphere of all the planets• Intense auroral displays observed by Hubble and

by Voyager fly-bys• Radiation belts• Thunderstorms & lightning

Page 24: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 25: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Jupiter has Aurorae justlike on Earth!

Image of Jupiter & auroraein UV wavelengths (Hubble/STIS)

Page 26: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 27: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

March 2007:

Auroral observationsby Chandra X-rayTelescope overlaidw/ HST image

Page 28: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Jovian Moon “footprints”

Page 29: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Rings

• Thin rings confirmed by Voyager I fly-by in 1979

This is a false-colorimage from Voyager 2looking back as itpassed Jupiter

Why is the planet’ssurface dark?

Cassini confirmedrings are small, irregular“chips” from nearby moons

Page 30: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Moons• Galilean moons

– 4 largest of Jupiter’s moons– Mini model of solar system

• In both appearance and formation• Denser, rockier moons closer in• Icier moons further out

This is why objects cannot be classified as planets based only on size

Page 31: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Io, Europa, and Ganymedehave a synchronous orbitalresonance: because the moonsare closely-spaced, they createa rhythmic gravitational pullon each other…

For every orbit of Ganymede,Europa orbits twice and Io orbitsfour times

Page 32: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Io

• Closest moon, tidally-locked– Gravitational disturbances prevent closed

orbit…makes ROSETTE pattern

• Most spectacular volcanic activity in solar system– Caused by gravitational/tidal forces that

constantly stretch and pull on interior, heating it up (like a RUBBER BAND)

– Sulfuric volcanoes: “lava” is not molten rock, but molten Sulfur

• But occasionally see evidence of silicate lava

Page 33: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 34: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Visible image of Io, showing a HUGEvolcanic eruption of Sulfur

This plume rose about 65 miles abovethe surface of the moon!

This puts any volcanic eruptions on Earth to shame…

Molten sulfur lava flowssown volcanic peak beforesolidifying…

Page 35: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

IR view: simultaneous, surface-wide eruptions

Page 36: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Europa

• Perhaps most interesting moon in the solar system

• Icy moon– Surface layer of ice ~ 6 miles thick– LIQUID WATER underneath!

– White areas are frozen H2O, red areas from mineral-rich water that oozed through surface cracks

• Perhaps organic? Red algae?

Page 37: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 38: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 39: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Size comparison of Europa’sice fields

Page 40: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

• Tidal heating by Jupiter’s gravity keeps subsurface H2O in LIQUID form– Explains lack of cratering…liquid water would

quickly smooth over any surface depressions– Also has glacier-like surface flows of ice

– LIFE?• Extremophiles: life-forms that survive in frigid

temps, high temps, high acidity, low light levels, etc…

Page 41: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 42: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

SaturnSaturn

Page 43: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

SaturnSaturn• Avg. density ~ 0.7 g/cm3

– This is less than density of water, so if dropped into our oceans, SATURN WOULD FLOAT!

– Mostly H & He

• Internal heat source: friction/drag on falling, condensed liquid Helium droplets

• Similar to Jupiter, but colder, so that ammonia (NH3) freezes into tiny cloud particles– Dense cloud cover masks details of surface

Page 44: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 45: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Saturn’s weather bands as imaged by Cassini

Page 46: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 47: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 48: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Rings

• Originally thought to be solid• Closer examination shows inner rings

rotate faster than outer rings– Kepler’s 3rd law again!– Therefore, rings must be made of a swarm of

small, separate bodies a few cm to a few meters in diameter

– Mapped via radar echo techniques• Determined size and composition (Voyager I)• Primarily H2O ice, but see signs of carbon

compounds

Page 49: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Substructure of Saturn’s rings: composition & speed differences, many gaps

Page 50: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

• Ring gaps– Cassini’s Division: large gap caused by orbit

of moon Mimas periodically pushing particles out of that particular area

– Shepherding Satellites: small moon-like objects (larger than average) that direct ring material into narrow lanes, creating small gaps between them

These are rings aroundUranus, but principleis the same…

Page 51: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

F-ring

Potato-shapedmoon,Prometheus

Page 52: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Distortion of Saturn’s F-ring by interacting moonlets(smaller than moons, but larger than ring particles)

Page 53: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Cassini Division

Saturnian Shadow

Filtered Sunlight

Page 54: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 55: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Cassini image from9 Sep 2006

Shows new ringletsnot seen in Voyager fly-bys 25 years ago

Page 56: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

a.k.a. The Death Star

Mimas in white-lightand IR

Page 57: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Ring Origins• Destruction of moons & asteroids by tidal

forces• Roche Limit (RRoche = 2.44 Rplanet)

– Gravity pulls harder on near-side of orbiting object than on far-side

– If this differential gravitational force is stronger than the object’s self-gravitation (what holds the object together), it gets torn apart

– Gravity pulls pieces into orbit– Side-by-side differences in rings suggest

whole ring system formed from MANY destroyed bodies

Page 58: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Saturn’s B & C rings in the infrared, highlighting not onlytemperature differences, but compositional differences as well

Page 59: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 60: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 61: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Moons

• Mostly ice, but less dense than Jupiter’s moons

• Most interesting moon:– Titan

• D = 3000 miles > DMercury

• So cold, N2 moves slowly, doesn’t reach escape velocity

– Titan has Nitrogen atmosphere!

• Spectroscopy indicates presence of liquid methane oceans & ethane-methane “rainclouds”

Page 62: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Filtered sunlight

Page 63: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Introduction to Astronomy

• Announcements– Midterm Exam tomorrow

– HW #4 due Monday

Page 64: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

UranusUranus

Page 65: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

UranusUranus• Named for Ouranos• Pretty much featureless except for faint cloud

bands and faint ring system

• Rich in H (in the form of H2O and CH4)

• Methane causes blue color– Absorbs red-end of solar spectrum, scatters blue-end

off clouds of frozen methane

• Avg. density ~ 1.2 g/cm3

– Mostly light elements probably with rocky/icy core

Page 66: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 67: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 68: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Rings & Moons

• Rings similar to Jupiter & Saturn but darker and narrower– Probably more carbon-

based molecules– Thin rings held by

shepherding satellites• 5 large moons & 20

small ones

As a side note, all Uranus’ moonsare named for Shakespearean characters

Page 69: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 70: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

NOT to scale…

• Miranda (large moon)– Very puzzling appearance– Large impact, destruction & reformation?– Rising & sinking motions in interior?

Page 71: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Tilt of Uranus• Equator nearly perpendicular to orbit (spins on

its side)• Rings & moons are similarly tilted

– Offers clues about formation– Giant impact knocked the planet over, spewed out

material that then formed rings & moons• otherwise, wouldn’t expect rings and moons to have tilted

orbits…

– One pole in perpetual day, one in perpetual night (for half of the Uranian year, 42 Earth-years)

• odd rotation + odd heating = lack of atmospheric phenomena?

Page 72: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Which is really the north pole?

Page 73: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

NeptuneNeptune

Page 74: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

NeptuneNeptune• Similar to Uranus

– Cloud bands, deep blue color– Had a “Great Dark Spot” similar to Jupiter’s Great

Red Spot

• Discovered through orbital anomaly– Uranus’ position did not quite agree with predictions– The gravity of another planet located past Uranus

explained disagreement• Leverrier & John Adams (1843)• Confirmed when Neptune first discovered (Johanne Galle,

1846)

Page 75: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc
Page 76: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

• Discovered by Voyager 2 in August 1989

• Thought to be a “hole” in the methane atmosphere– Much like our

ozone hole

Page 77: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

18 hours from first to last frame

Waves in overlying clouds

Page 78: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Atmosphere

• Cloud bands generated by Coriolis effect– 1300 mph winds!

• Methane tinting– Like Uranus

• Great Dark Spot disappeared (sometime < 1997)…why?!– not well-understood

Page 79: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Rings & Moons

• Very narrow, tenuous (faint) rings

• 6 moons close-in, 7 further out

• Triton– Orbits opposite to Neptune’s rotation– Highly-tilted orbit

• left-over or captured planetesimal?

– Has retained an acidic atmosphere– “wrinkly”, volcanic soot-laden surface

Page 80: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Outer ring is more clumpy or braided

Page 81: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Triton is actually spiraling-in towards Neptune…

…the Solar System will have a new ring system to rival Saturn’s!

Page 82: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

PlutoPluto• Roman god of the underworld• Is it a planet?

– Highly-elliptical orbit out of the plane of the rest of the solar system

• Avg. density ~ 2.1 g/cm3

• Composed of H2O, Methane, Nitrogen & CO2 ices– Polar caps of frozen Methane

• Thin atmosphere of N2 & CO

• Surface temperature a constant -380 °F

Page 83: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Discovered by Clyde Tombaughin 1930, working at Lowell Observatoryin Flagstaff, AZ

Compared (by eye!) an enormousamount of pairs of photographicimages, looking for faint objects whose positions slowly changed…

…this is NO small task.

Page 84: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

Even the smallestbodies in the solarsystem can havemultiple moon systems

In fact, Pluto and Charon are actuallya binary system!

The center-of-massof the two objectsis above the surfaceof Pluto

Where did this name come from?

Page 85: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

HST, 1996

New Horizons, scheduledfor Pluto-rendezvous in 2015

Page 86: Introduction to Astronomy Announcements –Midterm Exam on Thursday Closed-book/notes/etc

NEXT TIMENEXT TIME• Meteors, Asteroids, and Comets

If Pluto were any closer to the Sun, it would be a comet!