Discovering Asteroids
- Asteroids leave trails in long exposure images because of their orbital motion around the Sun.
Asteroid Facts
- Asteroids are rocky leftovers of planet formation
- The largest is Ceres, diameter is approximately 1000 km
- There are 150,000 listed in catalogs, and probably over a million with diameter > 1 km
- Small asteroids are more common than large asteroids
- All the asteroids in the solar system wouldn't add up to even a small terrestrial planet
- Asteroids are cratered and not round
Asteroids with Moons
- Some large asteroids have their own moons
- Asteroid Ida has a tiny moon named Dactyl
Asteroid Orbits
- Most asteroids orbit in a belt between Mars and Jupiter
- Trojan asteroids follow Jupiter's orbit
- Orbits of near-Earth asteroids cross Earth's orbit
Orbital Resonances
- Asteroids in orbital resonance with Jupiter experience periodic nudges
- Eventually those nudges move asteroids out of resonant orbits, leaving gaps in the belt
Origin of Asteroid Belt
- Rocky planetesiamals between Mars and Jupiter did not accrete into a planet
- Jupiter's gravity, through influence of orbital resonances, stirred up asteroid orbits and prevented their accretion into a planet
Origin of Meteorites
- Most meteorites are pieces of asteroids
Meteor Terminology
- Meteorite: A rock from space that falls through Earth's atmosphere
- Meteor: The bright trail left by a meteorite
Meteor Types
- Primitive: Unchanged in composition since they first formed 4.6 billion years ago
- Processed: Younger, have experienced processes such as volcanism or differentiation
Meteorites from the Moon and Mars
- A few meteorites arrive on Earth from the Moon and Mars
- Composition differs from the asteroid fragments
- This is a cheap (but slow) way to acquire moon rocks and Mars rocks
Comet Facts
- Formed beyond the frost line, comets are icy counterparts to asteroids
- The nucleus of a comet is like a "dirty snowball" Most comets do not have tails
- Most comets remain perpetually frozen in the outer solar system
- Only comets that enter the inner solar system grow tails
Nucleus of Comet
- A "dirty snowball"
- Source of material for comet's tail
Anatomy of a Comet
- Coma is atmosphere that comes from heated nucleus
- Plasma tail is gas escaping from coma, pushed by solar wind
- Dust tail is pushed by photons
Deep Impact
- Mission to study nucleus of Comet Tempel 1
- Projectile hit surface on July 4, 2005
- Many telescopes studied aftermath of impact
Only a tiny number of comets enter the inner solar system; most stay far from the Sun
- Oort Cloud: Comets on random orbits extending to about 50,00 AU
- Kuiper Belt: Comets on orderly orbits at 30-100 AU in disk of solar system
How did they get there?
- Kuiper Belt comets formed in the Kuiper Belt. Flat plane aligned with the plane of planetary orbits. Orbiting in the same direction as the planets
- Oort Cloud comets were once closer to the Sun, but they were kicked farther out by gravitational interactions with Jovian planets. Spherical distribution, orbiting in any direction
Pluto's Orbit
- Pluto's orbit is tilted and significantly elliptical
- Neptune orbits three times during the time Pluto orbits twice-resonance prevents a collision
Is Pluto a Planet?
- Much smaller than the eight major planets
- Not a gas giant like the outer planets
- Has an icy composition like a comet
- Has a very elliptical, inclined orbit
- Pluto has more in common with comets than with the eight major planets
Discovering Large Iceballs
- In summer 2005, astronomers discovered Eris, an iceball even larger than Pluto
- Eris even has a moon: Dysnomia
Other Icy Bodies
- There are many icy objects like Pluto on elliptical, inclined orbits beyond Neptune
- The largest ones are comparable in size to Earth's Moon
Kuiper Belt Objects
- These large, icy objects have orbits similar to the smaller objects in the Kuiper Belt that become short period comets
What is Pluto like?
- Its larges moon, Charon, is nearly as large as Pluto itself (probably made by a major impact)
- Pluto is very cold (40 K)
- Pluto has a thin nitrogen atmosphere that refreezes onto the surface as Pluto's orbit takes it farther from the Sun
Other Kuiper Belt Objects
- Most have been discovered very recently so little is known about them
- NASA's New Horizons mission will study Pluto and a few other Kuiper Belt Objects in a planned flyby
Comet SL9 caused a string of violent impacts on Jupiter in 1994, reminding us that catastrophic collisions still happen
Tidal forces tore it apart during a previous encounter with Jupiter
This crater chain on Callisto probably came from another comet that tidal forces tore to pieces
Impact plume from a fragment of comet Sl9 rises high above Jupiter's surface
Did an impact kill the dinosaurs?
Mass Extinctions
- Fossil records show occasional large dips in the diversity of species: mass extinctions
- The most recent was 65 million ears ago, ending the reign of the dinosaurs
Iridium: Evidence of an Impact
- Iridium is very rare in Earth surface rocks but is often found in meteorites
- Luis and Walter Alvarez found a worldwide layer containing iridium, laid down 65 million years ago, probably by a meteorite impact
- Dinosaur fossils all lie below this layer
Consequences of an Impact
- A meteorite 1 km in size would send large amounts of debris into the atmosphere
- Debris would reduce the amount of sunlight reaching Earth's surface
- The resulting climate change may have caused mass extinction
Likely Impact Site
- Geologists fund a large subsurface crater about 65 million years old in Mexico
- Comet or asteroid about 10 km in diameter approaches Earth
Likely Impact Site
- Size of crater suggest impacting object was about 10 km in diameter
- Impact of such a large object would have ejected debris high into Earth's atmosphere
Facts About Impacts
- Asteroids and comets have hit Earth
- A major impact is only a matter of time: not IF but WHEN
- Major impacts are very rare
- Extinction level events about millions of years
- Major damage about tens to hundreds of years
Frequency of Impacts
- Small impacts happen almost daily
- Impacts large enough to cause mass extinctions are many millions of years apart
The Asteroid with Our Name on It
- We haven't seen it yet
- Deflection is more probable with years of advance warning
- Control is critical: Breaking a big asteroid into a bunch of little asteroids is likely to help
- We get less advance warning of a killer comet
1 comment:
Ready for midterm.
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