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Download Comparing Earth, Sun and Jupiter
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The solar system  Mass dominated by the Sun: an average star  Planets are solid, almost spherical bodies orbiting the Sun:  Mercury  Venus  Earth  Mars  Jupiter  Saturn  Neptune  Uranus  Pluto  Smaller bodies found in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.  Often nonspherical  Most of the planets rotate in the same direction as they orbit the Sun, and in the same plane  Exceptions are Venus, Uranus, Pluto         The Sun Mostly Hydrogen and Helium High luminosity due to central fusion reactions Sunspots: cooler regions where magnetic field is strongest More features visible at other wavelengths Types of Stars Characterised mainly by their luminosity and colour Most stars lie on a tight correlation between L and colour: this is the main sequence Main sequence stars range from very bright, blue stars, to very faint, red ones Sun is a greenish star on the main sequence     Star systems Most stars are part of a binary system. By carefully measuring their orbits around one another we can measure their masses Star clusters are gravitationally bound groups of stars.  Open clusters are young clusters of a few 100 stars  Globular clusters are much older systems and contain tens of thousands of stars A galaxy is a system of several billion stars and star clusters, gravitationally bound and orbiting a common centre of mass Galaxies themselves form groups and clusters The Milky Way  Our galaxy is characterized by a relatively thin disk of stars and dust. This appears as a roughly linear feature on the sky  The dust obscures most of the light from these stars. If there were no dust, the centre of the galaxy would be as bright as the full moon  Looking in infrared light, which is less affected by dust, we can see the full structure of our Galaxy.  Young stars and open clusters, in roughly circular orbits about the centre, lie in the disk.  Globular clusters and older stars form the halo, a roughly spherical collection of stars, much larger than the disk, on high velocity, radial orbits.             Mercury Small planet, very close to the Sun Hard to see because always a small angular distance from the Sun. Visited by Mariner 10 in 1974 Heavily cratered, moon-like surface No detectable atmosphere Venus Most Earthlike planet in terms of size, composition Retrograde rotation Only direct views of surface from the Soviet Venera missions, in 1970s However it is covered in very thick clouds which produce an intense Greenhouse effect Surface heated to 700K Most information about surface comes from radar Low-relief surface, with some mountains likely volcanic in origin              Earth-Moon Only planet with liquid surface water  2/3 of surface covered in water bluish colour due to Rayleigh scattering Anomalously large moon shows same face  Near-side dominated by large maria  Far side more heavily cratered Covered with fine dust known as regolith Lunar cycle every 28 days due to relative position of Sun and Earth Slight wobble due to eccentricity of orbit Rilles found all over moon’s surface: may be evidence of liquid lava flow at earlier time Mars Red surface, due to high iron content Polar caps clearly visible: indicate water content  Change with seasons Atmosphere very thin and dry; planet is too small to hold on to an atmosphere Surface now well explored by robotic craft Desert-like terrain covered with lavalike rocks Two small moons, Phobos and Deimos, probably captured asteroids. The Asteroid Belt  Thousands of many small (<1000 km diameter), rocky bodies  In contrast to planets, most are non-spherical  Orbits lie more or less in the ecliptic plane; a little more inclined and eccentric than most planets  Almost certainly pieces left over from the era of planet-formation.  Source of most meteors     Jupiter The nearest of the gas giants Huge atmosphere of mostly hydrogen and helium. Has more mass than all the other planets put together. Also has most of the angular momentum May have a small, solid core Many (>60) small moons, and also a small ring system  Callisto: similar to a terrestrial planet  Dark surface, composed of carbonaceous soil and water ice  Interior probably contains water ice  Ganymede: largest moon of Jupiter  Bright surface, containing ~90% water ice  Europa: 12% smaller than our Moon  Bright, icy surface with many “scratches” and no impact craters  Young surface of pack ice floating on underlying ocean  Some unknown internal source of heat  Io: slightly larger than the moon  Volcanoes were predicted before the Voyager mission found them  Most volcanically active body in the SS  Volcanoes have driven off water and other volatiles, leaving rocky surface     Saturn Similar composition to Jupiter, dominated by a hydrogen/helium atmosphere Has the lowest mean density of all planets Rings are made up of rocky bodies orbiting in a thin plane  Structure in the rings due to orbital resonances with the planet and moons Like Jupiter, Saturn has many moons  Phoebe is outermost moon and probably a captured, interplanetary body  Iapetus is strange because one hemisphere is covered with very dark soil, while the other is covered with bright frost.  Tethys, Dione, Rhea have bright, icy surfaces, probably mixed with rocky material. May have been some resurfacing, indicating a source of internal heat  Enceladus is mostly icy, with some fractured, cratered regions. Has unknown heat source.  Titan is the second-largest moon in the SS, and the only one with a thick atmosphere  Atmosphere is opaque, containing methane and photochemical smog  Explored by Huygens probe last year  Mimas is a heavily cratered, icy planet  One very large crater suggests a collision which nearly destroyed the moon.          Uranus Also has a dense atmosphere of H and He Has a thin ring system and many satellites Voyager 2 is the only spacecraft to visit Uranus Bluish colour due to Rayleigh scattering of blue light and strong absorption of red light by methane Axis of rotation lies nearly in plane of the SS Neptune Only discovered in 1846 Also visited by Voyager 2 Similar colour to Neptune, for the same reason. But more active atmosphere, including a large, oval storm. Also has a ring system and many satellites  Triton is a large moon with a retrograde, inclined orbit and a thin atmosphere of N2 and methane.  Voyager 2 observed geyserlike plumes of dark smoke, indicating internal heating.  Cold surface of nitrogen and methane ice      Pluto Pluto and Charon a twin system; Pluto is about 7 times more massive Only unvisited planet in the SS Similar to Triton in mass and density Pluto’s period is 3/2 that of Neptune.  Probably resonantly captured Kuiper belt objects Infrared spectra show Pluto has a surface of nitrogen and methane ice.  Charon has a more neutral gray colour and is rich in water ice. Why so different? Comets  Similar to asteroids, but originate from much farther out, beyond the orbit of Neptune  Highly eccentric orbits bring them in to the inner solar system  Have icy components in addition to rock  This ice sublimes when comet approaches the Sun
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            