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The Gas Giants. The Gas Giants. Together they account for 99.5% of our planetary system. Size-Mass Relationship. As with terrestrials, composition can be guessed from mean density. But the high compressibility of volatiles must be accounted for
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The Gas Giants • Together they account for 99.5% of our planetary system
Size-Mass Relationship • As with terrestrials, composition can be guessed from mean density. But the high compressibility of volatiles must be accounted for • Initially, as they accrete mass they grow in radius • But at a mass of ~300 earth masses, further accretion causes the radius to decrease.
Composition • T=0 K models • T>0K • Jupiter and Saturn are well matched by H+He models • Require some ice/rock as well • Uranus and Neptune are much better represented by an icy composition. • 1
Recall: Moment of Inertia • The moment of inertia is a measure of degree of concentration • Related to the “inertia” (resistance) of a spinning body to external torques • Shows giant planets are centrally concentrated: cores?
Shapes • Rotation induces significant flattening of compressible material
Heat Balance • The average temperature of Jupiter is 160 K. Is it in thermal equilibrium? (Assume a visible albedo of 0.43, but a perfect blackbody in the infrared). • An infrared picture of Jupiter
Atmospheres • Similar thermal structure to terrestrial planets • Temperature of Jupiter and Saturn is never low enough to form a methane cloud deck – which dominates Neptune and Uranus
H at high temperatures and pressures • Atmosphere of Jupiter and Saturn is mostly “liquid” H2. • At very high pressures, H atoms dissociate from each other and their electrons • Forms a metallic liquid • Good conductor • Maximum of Earth-based laboratory experiments STP
Interiors • Jupiter and Saturn are dominated by an atmosphere of fluid, metallic hydrogen • Neptune and Uranus are dominated by an icy mantle, probably as a fluid, conducting ocean, surrounded by a H and He atmosphere
Cloud patterns • Surface features are due to forms and colourations of the highest cloud layers
Magnetospheres • The giant planets have strong magnetic fields • Likely due to the convective, metallic hydrogen interior • Interact with solar wind (and atmosphere of Io) to produce spectacular aurorae
Jupiter • This shows Voyager 1's approach during a period of over 60 Jupiter days. • Notice the difference in speed and direction of the various zones of the atmosphere. • The interaction of the atmospheric clouds and storms shows how dynamic the Jovian atmosphere is.
Cloud motions in Jupiter’s atmosphere • The Coriolis force diverts N-S motion into E-W motion, in distinct zonal bands (5 in each hemisphere).
Infared and Optical • Regions of white in visible light are dark in infrared • internal heat is blocked by the clouds • Darkest visible bands are brightest in the infrared • seeing deeper into the atmosphere where it is hotter • Red spot also dark in IR: cool, high altitude storm
Jupiter’s atmosphere • Rising air from the deeper layers cools and forms clouds as it rises; we see deeper where the high ammonia clouds have been depleted by precipitation, much as on Earth rain will often mean clearer skies.
Great Red Spot • Red colour probably from red phosphorous • A large eddy caused by rising hot gas and the Coriolis force
Oval BA • A White oval storm, similar to the Red Spot but smaller • Formed from colliding storms in 1998 • Recently turned Red • May be bringing material to the upper atmosphere, where reactions with UV solar rays change the colour.
Oval BA • Near collision in July 2006 • Is now the size of Earth with winds reaching 645 km/s, similar to the Great Red Spot • July 2006 • Feb 2006
Saturn… views never seen before • From the Cassini spacecraft http://saturn.nasa.jpl.gov
Saturn… views never seen before • From the Cassini spacecraft http://saturn.nasa.jpl.gov • night side of Saturn is partly lit by light reflected from its own ring system. Earth Faint E-ring, created by fountains from Enceladus
Internal heating • Saturn radiates more energy than it receives, by the same amount as Jupiter does • But Saturn is smaller, and this cannot all be gravitational energy • It is thought that He forms droplets and sinks downward, releasing gravitational energy • Thermal infrared picture of Saturn
Storm at the pole Storms on Saturn • Like Jupiter, Saturn shows large storms • These are usually harder to see, however
Uranus and Neptune • Uranus • Bluish green colour, with far fewer atmospheric features than Jupiter and Saturn • Neptune
Uranus and Neptune: Interiors • Likely have a rocky core, but are dominated by a fluid, icy and ionic ocean • Surrounded by an atmosphere rich in H and He • Uranus is the only gas giant that does not emit much more heat than it receives from the Sun • Internal convection disrupted? • Consistent with lack of storms
Uranus’ tilt • Uranus has an axis of rotation pointing almost directly toward the Sun • Interestingly, prevailing winds are still E-W, so the Coriolis force dominates the weather patterns.