Title: Not Your Parents Solar System
1Not Your Parents Solar System!
Overview of Solar System
2Big questions
- What is the origin of the solar system? It is
generally agreed that it condensed from a nebula
of dust and gas. But the details are far from
clear. - How common are planetary systems around other
stars? There is now good evidence of
Jupiter-sized objects orbiting several nearby
stars. What conditions allow the formation of
terrestrial planets? It seems unlikely that the
Earth is totally unique but we still have no
direct evidence one way or the other. - Is there life elsewhere in the solar system? If
not, why is Earth special? - Is there life beyond the solar system?
Intelligent life? - Is life a rare and unusual or even unique event
in the evolution of the universe or is it
adaptable, widespread and common?
Answers to these questions, even partial ones,
would be of enormous value. Answers to the
lesser questions on the pages that follow may
help answer some of these big ones.
3How we learned the solar system
- Sun, 8 planets, our Moon Pluto
- Separate section on each
- Mention asteroids and comets
- Lots of cool facts
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5Whats wrong?
- Memorization
- Factoids
- Highlights differences
- Little or no relevance
- Little or no big picture
6An Improvement
- Compare and contrast
- Discuss broad ideas
- Apply to planets, moons, etc., as a group
- Highlight similarities
- Appearance
- Characteristics
- Events
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11Other comparisons
- Craters Earth, Moon, Mercury, etc
- Volcanoes Mount St. Helens, Olympus Mons, Io,
etc - Canyons Grand Canyon, Mariner Valley
- Storms, Winds, Seasons, Weather, Ice Floes,
Magnetic Fields, Moons, Rings, etc
12Compare and Contrast
- Messages
- What happens on Earth happens elsewhere
- Solar system is understandable
- Problems
- Need to establish facts before comparison
- Big picture still lacking
1321st Century View
- Six families of the solar system
- Star
- Rocky planets
- Asteroid belt
- Gas giant planets
- Kuiper belt
- Oort cloud
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17Hollywoods View of the Asteroid Belt
18Thousands of asteroids about a million miles
apart!
Scientific View of the Asteroid Belt
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21Kuiper Belt
22- Oort Cloud ?
- Billions of icy minor planets comet nuclei
- Roughly spherical out to 50,000 AU
- Predicted by Jan Oort
- Explains long-period comets
- No observations
23Families of the Solar System
- Classes of similar objects
- Size
- Composition
- Orbit size
- Orbit shape
- Orbit inclination
- Moons
- Rings
24Families of the Solar System
- Classification
- Structure of the solar system
- Similar objects lie in similar regions
- Clues to solar system formation and evolution
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26Sun Rocky Planets Asteroid Belt Gas Giant
Planets Kuiper Belt Oort Cloud
27Sun
Mercury Venus Earth Mars
Asteroid Belt
Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune
Kuiper Belt
Oort Cloud
28Some
May View Elaborate Mnemonics
As Boring,
Just Some Useless Nonsensical
Knowledge, But
Others Cheer
29What about Pluto?
- Not a rocky planet
- Not a gas giant planet
- For teachers, it is an opportunity
30Planet Pluto
- 1930 Tombaugh discovers Pluto
31Double Take Charon
- 1978 James Christy (USNO) observations to
refine Plutos orbit - Notices elongated images, deduces moon
- 1985 Charon occults Pluto, confirms existence
- Refined sizes and masses tiny
32First Pictures of Pluto/Charon
- 1995 Hubble Space Telescope infrared
- 1996 Hubble Space Telescope visible
33First Pictures of Pluto
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35Black Sheep of the Planets
- Pluto is the oddball
- Size
- Companion
- Composition
- Orbit
- 32 resonance with Neptune
- Pluto/Charon as double ice planet?
36Kuiper Belt
- History
- 1930 Leonard mentions possibility of
trans-Plutonian objects - 1943 Kenneth Edgeworth postulates objects
beyond Pluto - 1951 Gerard Kuiper predicts that a massive
Pluto would disperse small objects into a belt - 1980 Fernandez predicts belt that resembles
what was eventually found
37KBOs
- 1992 Jewitt Luu find object dubbed QB1
- Distance of 42 AU
- First (third?) object discovered in the Kuiper
Belt
38More and more KBOs
- Large searches for KBOs ensued
- Hundreds discovered within a decade
- Over 600 so far (Nov 2003)
- Over 70,000 predicted with diameters 100 km,
orbits 30-50 AU - Plutinos Neptune resonance
- Scattered Neptune affects orbit
- Classsical Separated from Neptune
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42Pluto/Charon orbits within Kuiper Belt
43Large KBOs
- Pluto still larger, but not by that much
- Note plot below doesnt include Quaoar
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45Binary KBOs
- Pluto/Charon not the only binary object
- Nine discovered so far (Nov 2003)
- All types of KBOs have binaries
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47What is Pluto?
- You make the call
- Singular ice planet
- Mutant giant double comet
- King of the Kuiper Belt
- ???
48Kuiper Belt Experts View
- So, bluntly put, one has two choices. One can
either regard Pluto as the smallest, most
peculiar planet moving on the most eccentric and
most inclined orbit of any of the planets or one
can accept that Pluto is the largest known, but
otherwise completely typical, Kuiper Belt Object.
The choice you make is up to you, but from the
point of view of trying to understand the origin
and significance of Pluto it clearly makes sense
to take the second option. - Dave Jewitt, University of Hawaii
49IAU Official Position
- IAU defines Pluto to be a planet
- IAU cannot define planet
- Upper limit not massive enough to produce any
form of fusion at its core - Deuterium fusion occurs for objects about 15
times Jupiters mass - No lower limit specified
- Reasonable lower limit?
- Massive enough for gravity to make it spherical
- At least 13 planets
- No reasonable definition produces 9 planets
50What is a Planet?
- Solar system alone is category of one
- What about other solar systems?
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53Beta Pictoris
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57Disks around Other Stars
- Lots of them
- Proplyds proto-planetary disks
- Kuiper Belt sized and larger
- Some substructure seen
58Planets around Other Stars
- Cannot see directly (yet)
- Detect via gravitational pull on star
- Wobble
- Periodic shift of spectral lines
- Monitor for many years (several orbits)
- Large gas giant planets detectable
59Planets around Other Stars
- Current count (Nov 2003)
- 102 planetary systems
- 117 planets
- 13 multiple planet systems
- At least 15 of sun-like stars have planets
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62Planets around Other Stars
- Jupiter mass planets in Mercury orbits
- Elliptical orbits
- Multiple Jupiter sized planets
- Saturn mass planets detected (2003)
- Planets around pulsars
63Perspective on the Solar System
- Our solar system is the oddball
- Need to generalize our formation and evolution
scenarios - Implications for life in the universe
- Lots of planets
- Stability of orbits?
- New era of solar system study