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Mars. Terrestrial planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Background Sun. Sun. Moon. Earth. Venus. Mercury. p. 96. Composed of clusters of galaxies. Each cluster has 25 to 1,000 galaxies. Each galaxy has 10 8 to 10 12 stars. Besides stars there are: Nebula Planets Black Holes
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Mars Terrestrial planets Mercury Venus Earth Mars Background Sun Sun Moon Earth Venus Mercury p. 96
Composed of clusters of galaxies. Each cluster has 25 to 1,000 galaxies. Each galaxy has 108 to 1012 stars. Besides stars there are: Nebula Planets Black Holes Dark matter The Universe
Earth and Venus – sister planets, Venus 95% in size of Earth Fig. 6-1, p.97
Earth and Moon 1992 Galileo spacecraft Fig. 6-2, p.98
Interior of terrestrial planets Fig. 6-3, p.98
Solar tides are about 50% of lunar tides. If Sun, Earth and Moon are on one line, then the two tides add. This is during New and Full Moon. 1 + 0.5 = 1.5 times Moon alone. If Sun and Moon are at right angles, then tides subtract. This is during first quarter and last quarter. 1 – 0.5 = 0.5 times Moon alone. Ratio of the high tides 1.5/0.5 = 3!!! Lunar and Solar Tides
Earth’s Magnetic Field Magnetic and geographic north poles are about 1,000 mile apart.
Aurora Particles from the Sun entering Earth atmosphere Fig. 6-13b, p.106
Third quarter Moon Fig. 6-14, p.106
Moon rock Fig. 6-15, p.107
Natural radioactive elements, such as uranium decay over time. Half life is time that half the nucleus of atoms decay. Uranium U(238) (isotope) half life is 4.6 billion years to Lead Pb(206). In 4.6 billion years half would be left. In 9.2 billion years one quarter will be left. Measuring the ratio of Pb(206) to U(238) in a rock, the age is computed when rock was formed. Radioactive Dating
Age of Moon rocks. Oldest rock on Earth is 3.9 billion years. Most meteors have age of 4.5 billion years, age of solar system. Fig. 6-16, p.109
Crater Formation Crater formation
Arizona Meteor Crater Diameter about 1,200 meters (4,000 ft).
Far side of the Moon Fig. 6-18a, p.110
Moon Fig. 6-18b, p.110
Apollo 17, 1972 Fig. 6-21, p.110
Apollo 11, 1969 Fig. 6-23, p.111
Mercury and Venus can never be seen at midnight, Fig. 6-26, p.113
Albedo: fraction of light reflected Fig. 6-29, p.115
Mercury Moon Mars Venus Fig. 6-31, p.116
Mercury Fig. 6-33, p.117
Mercury Fig. 6-34, p.118
Mercury Best picture from Earth Fig. 6-35, p.118
Venus Best picture from Earth Fig. 6-37, p.119
Venus Atmosphere Fig. 6-39, p.119
Greenhouse effect. Fig. 6-40, p.120
Venus Mount Mons Fig. 6-43, p.123
Atmosphere of a planet depends on two factors: Escape velocity and max surface temperature vesc = √(2GM/R) v ~ √(T/m) [m-molecule mass] Relative masses of molecules H2=2, He=4, O2=32, CO2=44 Earth – 11.2 km/s (25,000 mi/hr, 40,000km/hr) 330ºK Mercury – 4 km/s 700ºK Venus – 10.4 km/s 750ºK Mars – 5 km/s 290ºK Jupiter - 60 km/s 165ºK Saturn – 35 km/s 135ºK Uranus – 21 km/s 75ºK Neptune – 23 km/s 70ºK Pluto - 1.1km/s 50ºK Moon – 2.4 km/s ~300ºK Atmosphere
Questions on Mars! • Was there running water (rivers) on Mars. • Where is the water now? • Was (is) there any primitive life on Mars? • Why is Mars the best planet to colonize?
Mars Pathfinder Fig. 6-47, p.126
Mars Olympus Mons Fig. 6-48a, p.127
Mars Dry river beds Fig. 6-50a, p.128
Viking Fig. 6-54, p.130