Unit 9 Formation of the Solar System and Terrestrial Planets
jumbled terrain
-opposite of Caloris Basin on Mercury -other side of planet -jumbled land by seismic waves from the impact
Microlensing
estimates mass of planet
heavy bombardment
event of intense meteor impacts -leftover planetesimals hit other objects in the late stages of the solar system
Caloris Basin
largest impact crater on Mercury (largest basin); created jumbled terrain on opposite side; close-up pictures show stretch marks from surface rebounding
Nebular hypothesis
our solar system formed from the gravitational collapse of a giant interstellar gas cloud
Transit
planet must pass in front of the star (a tough requirement) - can reveal planet's size/radius
Magnetosphere
the region surrounding the earth or another astronomical body in which its magnetic field is the predominant effective magnetic field. -protects atmosphere from solar wind -field lines channel solar wind particles into poles -sun-facing end is flattened -other end has a tail
Protostar
the second stage of a new born star in a nebula. A new star is born because when the nebula contracts, it becomes are dense and hot and this is how a star is born and is on its first stage. The prostar is it second stage
Direct imaging
very tough to block out the glare from the star - only good for large planets orbiting at large distances from their star
Primary Atmosphere
- an atmosphere of a planet that forms by accretion of gaseous matter from the accretion disc of the planet's sun. Planets such as Jupiter and Saturn have primary atmospheres. Primary atmospheres are very thick compared to secondary atmospheres like the one found on Earth. -more primitive
Dynamo theory
-A strong magnetic field will be produced if a planet has a liquid core and relatively fast rotation
Accretion
-For planetesimals: Many smaller objects collected into just a few large ones. -In Jovians: collection of rocky/metallic materials could have formed an terrestrial core During Heavy Bombardment: collection of leftover planetesimals bombarded other objects in the late stages of solar system formation -Also happens when planets are young
Lobate Scarps
-On mercury -Curved cliffs, probably formed when Mercury shrank while cooling down
Lunar Maria
-On near side only -Basaltic Formation: -Early surface is covered with craters. -Large impact crater weakens crust. -Heat build-up allows lava to well up to surface. -Cooled lava is smoother and darker than surroundings.
Solar Wind
-Particles released from the sun -the continuous flow of charged particles from the sun that permeates the solar system.
Valles Marinaris
-System of valleys on mars -thought to originate from tectonics
Accretion Disc
-formed by diffused material in orbital motion around a massive central body. The central body is typically a star. Gravity causes material in the disk to spiral inward towards the central body. -conservation of angular momentum -flattening
Olympus Mons
-largest volcano in solar system -on Mars -whole Mon appears to have been lifted (sheer cliffs)
Lunar Highlands
-on the dark side of the moon -no maria -crust is thicker(from wrinkling?)
bow shock
-on the sun facing side of the magnetosphere -flattened -blocks/directs solar wind particles towards field lines to the poles??
Pancake Domes
-on venus -evidence of volcanism -Associated with volcanic activity forming coronae
thermal escape
Cause of loss of gas on surface of planets
Oort Cloud
Contains about 1 TRILLION comets. These comets were likely "flung" there by the Jovian planets during late Solar System formation. About 50,000 AU from the Sun (average distance). HIGHLY elliptical orbits
Frost line
Inside: too hot for hydrogen compounds to form ices Outside: cold enough for ices to form Between Mars-Jupiter
Angular Momentum
L = mvr Rotation speed of the cloud from which our solar system formed must have increased as the cloud contracted
Detecting an exoplanet
Methods of Detection: -Doppler Shifts - can reveal planet's mass/orbital distance -Transit - planet must pass in front of the star (a tough requirement) - can reveal planet's size/radius -Microlensing - estimates mass of planet -Direct Imaging - very tough to block out the glare from the star - only good for large planets orbiting at large distances from their star
crater dating
More craters = older surface; less craters = younger
Surface Ejection
Probably stuff that was ejected into space by impacts
Condensation
Temperature in the protostellar cloud decreased outward. Denser materials collect and condense closer in towards the protostar. Lighter, more volatile materials only condense further out from the protostar.
planetismal
a minute planet; a body that could or did come together with many others under gravitation to form a planet.
exoplanet
a planet that orbits a star outside of the solar system
Hadley circulation
a tropical atmospheric circulation that features air rising near the equator, flowing poleward at 10-15 kilometers above the surface, descending in the subtropics, and then flowing equatorward near the surface. -earth has six convection cells
Secondary atmosphere
an atmosphere of a planet that did not form by accretion during the formation of the planet's star. instead forms from internal volcanic activity, or by accumulation of material from comet impacts.
differentation
any process in which a mixture of materials separates out partially or completely into its constituent parts, as in the cooling and solidification of a magma into two or more different rock types or in the gradual separation of an originally homogeneous earth into crust, mantle, and core.
Doppler shifts
can reveal planet's mass/orbital distance
Scattering
change in photon's direction