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11a . Sun-Scorched Mercury

11a . Sun-Scorched Mercury. Earth-based observations of Mercury Mercury’s rotation & year Mariner 10 ’s images of Mercury Mercury’s interior. Mercury Data (Table 11-1). Mercury Data: Numbers. Diameter: 4,878.km 0.38 . Earth Mass: 3.3 . 10 23 kg 0.055 . Earth

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11a . Sun-Scorched Mercury

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  1. 11a. Sun-Scorched Mercury • Earth-based observations of Mercury • Mercury’s rotation & year • Mariner 10’s images of Mercury • Mercury’s interior

  2. Mercury Data (Table 11-1)

  3. Mercury Data: Numbers • Diameter: 4,878.km 0.38 . Earth • Mass: 3.3 . 1023 kg 0.055 . Earth • Density: 5.4 . water 0.99 . Earth • Orbit: 5.8 . 107 km 0.39 AU • Day: 58.65 days 58.65 . Earth • Year: 87.97 days 0.24 . Earth

  4. Mercury Data: Special Features • Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun • Mercury is the smallest terrestrial planet • Mercury has essentially no atmosphere • 3 sidereal days = 2 sidereal years • Mercury exhibits unique 3-to-2 spin-orbit coupling • Mercury is very heavily cratered • Mercury is a visual twin of the Moon except … • Mercury does not have any maria (i.e., “seas”) • Mercury’s interior is dominated by an iron core • 75% the diameter & 42% the volume • Mercury is very difficult to observe from Earth • Mercury is never >28° from the Sun • This third week of February 2013

  5. Earth-Based Observations of Mercury • Brighter than any star (at times) • Albedo is only 0.12, the same as weathered asphalt • Difficult to observe from Earth • Copernicus apparently never saw Mercury • Neither did I until April 2002 despite many attempts • Elongation maxima of Mercury • Maximum eastern elongation of 18° Evening sky • Maximum western elongation of 28° Morning sky • Elongation favorability of Mercury • Unfavorable Eastern & low angle to the horizon • Favorable Western & high angle to the horizon • Conjunctions Three inferior per year • Solar transits Crossing in front of the Sun • Aphelion in May & perihelion in November

  6. Transit of Mercury: 8 November 2006 2006 Transit

  7. Evening Morning Mercury’s Elongations

  8. Favorable & Unfavorable Elongations Western elongation Eastern elongation High-angle to horizon Low-angle to horizon Morning sky Evening sky

  9. Mercury’s Greatest Elongations Eastern (Evening)Western (Morning) Friday 26 October 2012Tuesday 4 December 2012 Saturday 16 February 2013Sunday 31 March 2013 Wednesday 12 June 2013 Tuesday 30 July 2013 Wednesday 9 October 2013 Monday 18 November 2013 Friday 31 January 2014 Friday 14 March 2014 Sunday 25 May 2014 Saturday 12 July 2014 Sunday 21 September 2014 Saturday 1 November 2014 Mercury Chaser's Calculator

  10. Mercury’s Rotation & Revolution • Determining Mercury’s axial rotation rate • 1880s Schiaparelli wrongly concludes 1-to-1 S.O.C. • Unable to see enough surface detail with his telescopes • 1962 Radio noise emitted from Mercury Passive • Sunlit side blackbody radiation curve ~623 K • Expected radiant temperature • Sunless side blackbody radiation curve ~103 K • Unexpected radiant temperature Too high! • Implied that Mercury has no permanent sunless side • 1965 Arecibo radio telescope Active • Transmitted 1 precise radio l to Mercury • Reflected radio signal analyzed for Doppler shift • Mercury’s left side Very small blue shift Approaching • Mercury’s right side Very smallredshift Receding       • Measured at very nearly 59 days • 2/3 of Mercury’s year • 3-to-2 spin-orbit coupling Unique in the Solar System

  11. Measuring Mercury’s Axial Rotation

  12. Mercury’s 3-to-2 Spin-Orbit Coupling

  13. Causes of 3-to-2 Spin-Orbit Coupling • Solid Sun tides distort Mercury into an ellipsoid • There is a tidal bulge on opposite sides of Mercury • Mercury is in a highly elliptical orbit • Mercury’s aphelion distance is ~ 1.52 x perihelion • The Sun’s gravitational force varies ~ 2.3 x • The Sun’s gravitational force cannot lock onto one side • The Sun’s gravitational force can lock onto one axis • Some effects • 1.00 Mercury day = 2.00 Mercury years • Occasional retrograde Sun motion in Mercury’s sky • Slow East -to-West sunset • Slow West-to-East sunrise • Slow East -to-West sunset

  14. Mariner 10 at Mercury (1974 & 1975)

  15. Mariner 10’s Images of Mercury • Only three passes of Mercury • Mariner 10 orbited the Sun, not Mercury • 1.00 Mariner 10 orbit every 2.00 Mercury years • March 29, 1974 ~704 km above Mercury • September 21, 1974 ~47,000 km above Mercury • March 16, 1975 ~327 km above Mercury • Same hemisphere toward the Sun each time • Mariner 10 obtained images approaching & leaving • Detailed mosaics of only one hemisphere

  16. Mercury & the Moon Compared

  17. Mercury’s Surface • Casually, Mercury looks much like the Moon • Mercury is heavily cratered but… • Crater density is not as high as on the Moon • Mercury has gray intercrater plains, not black maria • Mercury has long, irregular ridges & scarps • Probably shrinkage features as Mercury cooled • Most materials shrink as they solidify • The surface solidifies before the interior • When the interior solidifies, the surface gets compressed • Only ½ of Mercury’s surface was well-known • The Mariner 10 spacecraft went past three times • Precisely the same face toward the Sun both times

  18. Mercury & Moon: Subtle Differences Mercurian craters & plains Lunar highland craters

  19. Mercury’s Shrinkage Scarps (Cliffs)

  20. Mercury’s Caloris Basin • Very similar to the Moon’s Mare Orientale • Much larger than any other impact crater • Multi-ringed • Not flooded with lava • Jumbled terrain on opposite side of Mercury • Seismic wave energy focused by Mercury’s core • Similar to 17 October 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake • Seismic wave energy focused on San Francisco Bay area • Much stronger shaking than closer to the quake epicenter • Strong enough to fracture the surface • Chaotic hills ~100 to ~1,800 m high • Large smooth-floor crater superimposed on hills • Impact after formation of the Caloris Basin

  21. Mercury & Moon: Impact Basins Caloris BasinMare Orientale Mercury Moon

  22. The Caloris Basin: A Second Look http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mercury_Double-Ring_Impact_Basin.png

  23. The Caloris Basin: A Third Look

  24. Mercury’s Interior • Dominated by a very large iron core • Mercury ~75% of diameter ~42% of volume • Earth ~55% of diameter ~17% of volume • Moon ~20% of diameter ~  1% of volume • Proposed causes • Too hot for condensation of low-densityminerals • Strong solar wind removed low-density materials • Head-on impact with a planetesimal • Computer simulations favor this hypothesis

  25. Planetary Interiors: Mercury & Earth

  26. Mercury Messenger Spacecraft

  27. Mercury’s de Graft Crater http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/gallery/sciencePhotos/pics/EW1017384139G.3band.mapped.png

  28. Mercury’s Jumbled (Weird) Terrain http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/gallery/sciencePhotos/pics/Caloris_antipode.jpg

  29. Mercury’s Formation: Head-On Impact

  30. Mercury seen from Earth Very bright yet very elusive Always close to Earth’s horizon Maximum E. & W. elongations Never more than 28° from the Sun Mercury’s unusual axial rotation 3-to-2 spin-orbit coupling Solid tides distort Mercury’s shape Radically changing solar gravity Mariner 10 at Mercury Made three passes Exactly 2 Mercurial years apart Imaged only one-half of its surface Result of 3-to-2 spin-orbit coupling Remarkably Moon-like surface Heavily cratered Caloris Basin & jumbled terrain Intercrater plains & no maria Ridges & scarps Mercury’s interior Completely core dominated Comparison with the Earth & Moon Probable head-on planetesimal impact Important Concepts

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