asteroids, comets and meteorites
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Asteroids, Comets and Meteorites. Important Points. Small objects in the solar system are leftovers that never accreted into planets Minor planets mostly orbit between Mars and Jupiter Comets formed in the outer solar system and were flung outward by close encounters with other planets - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Asteroids, Comets and Meteorites
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Important Points1. Small objects in the solar system are leftovers that never
accreted into planets2. Minor planets mostly orbit between Mars and Jupiter3. Comets formed in the outer solar system and were flung
outward by close encounters with other planets4. Comets can be trapped in the inner solar system by
planetary encounters5. The head and tail of a comet glow from sunlight shining on
gases evaporated from the comet6. Meteors and meteorites are pieces broken off larger bodies
by collisions, or dust shed by comets7. Occasionally comets or minor planets collide with larger
objects like the earth
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Small Bodies of the Solar System• Asteroids: within the orbit of Jupiter• Centaurs: Between Jupiter and Neptune• Kuiper Belt Objects (KBO’s): Beyond Neptune• Scattered Disk: Extreme KBO’s• Comets: Icy bodies with elongated orbits• Meteoroids: Small objects– Meteors: vaporize in Earth’s atmosphere– Meteorites: survive to reach surface
1. Small objects in the solar system are leftovers that never accreted into planets
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The Bode-Titius Law
• The planets have fairly regular spacings• Start with 0, 3, 6, 12, 24, 48, 96, 192, 384, 788• Add 4: 4, 7, 10, 16, 28, 52, 100, 196, 388, 792• Divide by 10: 0.4, 0.7, 1.0, 1.6, 2.8, 5.2, 10 …• Matches distances of planets in A.U.• What’s at 2.8?• First Asteroid Discovered, 1801
2. Minor planets mostly orbit between Mars and Jupiter
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The Bode-Titius Law
• Neptune,discovered in 1846, matched the predicted 38.8 value poorly (30.1)
• Pluto didn’t match at all (39.5 versus 79.2)• Coincidence?• Or is the Bode-Titius pattern due to the
influence of Jupiter and planetary clearing?
2. Minor planets mostly orbit between Mars and Jupiter
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Other Hypothetical Planets• Vulcan– Hypothetical planet within the orbit of Mercury– Some asteroids and many comets cross the orbit
of Mercury, but nothing is known to orbit entirely within the orbit of Mercury
• Planet X– Hypothetical massive outer planet beyond
Neptune• Nemesis– Hypothetical dwarf star companion to Sun
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The Asteroid
Belt, 2001
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The Asteroid
Belt, 2010
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Asteroid Discoveries
2. Minor planets mostly orbit between Mars and Jupiter
Asteroids Year
1 1801
100 1867
500 1902
1,000 1921
2,000 1942
5,000 1972
10,000 1981
20,000 1993
50,000 1999
100,000 2000
200,000 2003
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2010 SEPT. 2
• 535789 Minor planets catalogued• 251651 Officially numbered• 16154 Named
2. Minor planets mostly orbit between Mars and Jupiter
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How We Study Them
• Spacecraft• Ground-Based and Hubble Imaging• Radar Imaging
2. Minor planets mostly orbit between Mars and Jupiter
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Spacecraft Images
2. Minor planets mostly orbit between Mars and Jupiter
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951 Gaspra (15 km)
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243 Ida (40 km) and Dactyl
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253 Mathilde (50 km)
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Three Asteroids Compared
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433 Eros (20 km)
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Eros
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Eros
2. Minor planets mostly orbit between Mars and Jupiter
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Asteroid Itokawa
2. Minor planets mostly orbit between Mars and Jupiter
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Earth-Based Optical Imaging
2. Minor planets mostly orbit between Mars and Jupiter
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4 Vesta (500 km)
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Ceres and Vesta
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Radar Imaging
2. Minor planets mostly orbit between Mars and Jupiter
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Double Asteroids
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Comets
3. Comets formed in the outer solar system and were flung outward by close encounters with other planets
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Types of Comets• Short Period (<200 years)– Record reobserved comet is Comet Ikeya-Zhang
(1661-2002)• Long Period (>200 years)– Hale-Bopp (2400 years)– Need a source very far away– Oort Cloud– Too little material very far from the Sun– Flung out by planetary encounters
3. Comets formed in the outer solar system and were flung outward by close encounters with other planets
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Where Comets Come From• Ice and Frozen Gases– Outer Solar System (Kuiper Belt)
• Planetary Encounters perturb Orbits– Diverted inward to become short-period– Diverted outward to Oort Cloud
3. Comets formed in the outer solar system and were flung outward by close encounters with other planets
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Creation of Long Period Comet
3. Comets formed in the outer solar system and were flung outward by close encounters with other planets
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Capture of Short Period Comet
4. Comets can be trapped in the inner solar system by planetary encounters
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Anatomy of a Comet
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Record-Breaking Hale-Bopp
• Most-observed comet in history• Discovered the furthest from the Sun• Largest cometary nucleus known• Visible to the naked eye for 18 months – twice
the previous record• Brighter than magnitude 0 for eight weeks,
longer than any other comet in the last thousand years.
5. The head and tail of a comet glow from sunlight shining on gases evaporated from the comet
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Comet Hale-Bopp 1997
5. The head and tail of a comet glow from sunlight shining on gases evaporated from the comet
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Halley’s Comet
5. The head and tail of a comet glow from
sunlight shining on gases evaporated from
the comet
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Comet Holmes 2007
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Comet Borelly
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Comet Tempel I
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The Deep Impact Mission
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A Comet Hits The
Sun
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Meteoroids• Meteoroid – Small object orbiting Sun• Meteor – Meteoroid that becomes incandescent
from friction with atmosphere• Bolide or Fireball – Exceptionally brilliant meteor– In impact studies, “bolide” often used for an
impacting meteoroid prior to impact• Meteorite – A meteoroid that reaches the surface• Micrometeorite – microscopic meteoroid
6. Meteors and meteorites are pieces broken off larger bodies by collisions, or dust shed by comets
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Bolide
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Meteor Showers• Earth passes through streams of orbiting debris• Many linked to orbits of known comets• Occur predictably– Perseids: August– Orionids: October (Halley’s Comet)– Leonids, November
• No known falls• Generally 20 or so per hour, rarely 1000’s• Appear to radiate from one point in sky
6. Meteors and meteorites are pieces broken off larger bodies by collisions, or dust shed by comets
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A Meteor Shower
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Radiant
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Meteorites• Stony (95%)– Chondrites: Pellet-like texture– Carbonaceous Chondrites: Most similar to the Sun
(minus gases), planetary raw material– Achondrites: Basalt
• Stony-Iron (1%)• Nickel-Iron (4%)– Kamacite (>6% Ni) and Taenite (>25% Ni)– Texture revealed by etching
6. Meteors and meteorites are pieces broken off larger bodies by collisions, or dust shed by comets
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Finding Meteorites• Finds versus Falls– Fall: Observed to fall, then recovered– Find: Identified long after fall– Stony Meteorites weather and are hard to tell
from natural rocks– Iron meteorites are more easily recognized
• Prime Scientific Collecting Localities– Antarctica– Deserts
6. Meteors and meteorites are pieces broken off larger bodies by collisions, or dust shed by comets
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MeteoritePeekskill, NY 1992
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Chondrite
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Stony-Iron Meteorite
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Iron Meteorite
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Meteo-Wrongs• Meteorites Never:– Have internal cavities– Have layers– Have veins– Flatten on impact– Mold around objects– Almost never light in color outside
• If you “think” it’s magnetic, it’s not magnetic
6. Meteors and meteorites are pieces broken off larger bodies by collisions, or dust shed by comets
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Nope
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Nope
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Nope
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Nope
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Nope
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Nope
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Nope
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Tektites• Very silica-rich, water poor glassy rocks• Terrestrial vs. Extraterrestrial origin?• Volcanic vs. Impact origin?• Problems:– Odd chemistry– If terrestrial, why are they spread so widely?– If extraterrestrial, why are they so localized?
• Now considered impact glass– Atmospheric shock wave evacuates atmosphere
7. Occasionally comets or minor planets collide with larger objects like the earth
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Tektites
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Zodiacal Dust
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Speaking of Zodiacal Bands….
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Chancellor Brian May,
CBE(Liverpool
John Moores University)
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Take-Away Points1. Small objects in the solar system are leftovers that never
accreted into planets2. Minor planets mostly orbit between Mars and Jupiter3. Comets formed in the outer solar system and were flung
outward by close encounters with other planets4. Comets can be trapped in the inner solar system by
planetary encounters5. The head and tail of a comet glow from sunlight shining on
gases evaporated from the comet6. Meteors and meteorites are pieces broken off larger bodies
by collisions, or dust shed by comets7. Occasionally comets or minor planets collide with larger
objects like the earth