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The Outer Planets. Cosmic Abundance of Elements. Major Constituents. Interiors: Big H 2 Atmospheres. Jupiter vs Saturn. Jupiter’s Ammonia Clouds: Belts: Dark bands Zones: Bright bands Great Red Spot White Ovals.
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Jupiter’s Ammonia Clouds: Belts: Dark bands Zones: Bright bands Great Red Spot White Ovals The GRS has lived at least 300 yrs. Ovals have been seen to survive tens of years
Jupiter’s clouds result from convection. • Hot air expands. • Lighter than the rest of the air, it rises. • As it rises, it cools and condenses forming clouds. • When it is cooler than the ambient air, it sinks.
Uranus Absorption of sunlight at red wavelengths by methane renders the planet blue.
Neptune Neptune emits more energy from its interior than does Uranus. This energy drives weather. The colder temperatures cause methane to condense in the upper atmosphere – these are the clouds that we see.
Jupiter’s Rings Silicate dust, 10,000 times more transparent than window glass.
Moons Their densities tell us that they are 1/2 rock & 1/2 ice. A typical, heavily cratered, terrain. Saturn’s moon, Tethys
Europa Few craters A terrain containing elements that were recently dislodged can be seen to neatly fit together if rotated and translated in position.
Io Io • Images\iovol_vgr.gif
What fuels Io? Each time Ganymede orbits once, Europa orbits twice, and Io orbits 4 times.
Io’s surface is almost devoid of craters, for it is being repaved at a rapid rate. The glow of warm lava. A pool of lava (black) covered with sulfur deposits (orange). This is called Tupan Patera after the Brazilian thunder god. Images taken from the Galileo spacecraft.
Io is hot Lava flows on Io exceed 1500 K in temperature. Lavas this hot are not sulfur (which would evaporate immediately). This is hotter than present lavas on Earth (1300-1450 K). Instead these lavas are likely ultramafic (rich in Mg and Fe), similar to the lavas that occurred on early Earth. Present hypothesis, a ~100 km thick crust floats on top of a worldwide ocean of magma 800 km deep.
Neptune’s Largest Moon: Triton Triton On Triton the main component of the atmosphere, nitrogen, exits in vapor pressure equilibrium. That is, it exists as an ice on the surface and as vapor in the atmosphere, in the same way that water exists as liquid and ice on Earth’s surface and as a gas in the atmosphere. The amount of gas depends on the temperature. Less exists at cooler temperatures. This is seen on Earth with the condensation of water at dew point. Atmosphere: 1.6x10-7 bar 38K Nitrogen
Summary • Giant planets are large gas planets with nearly solar elemental abundances. • They have small ice-rock cores. • Their moons are ½ rock and ½ ice. • Most moons display heavily cratered terrains. Io, Europa, Triton and Titan are exceptions. • All jovian planets sport rings of differing thicknesses, compositions & character. • Titan supports an atmosphere second only to Venus’ (considering bodies with proper surfaces). It is rich with organics, and its origin is unknown. • The Cassini mission to the saturnian system is in route and functioning well.
Saturn’s largest moon compared to Jupiter’s largest moons Ganymede Size: 4800 Mass: 1.5x1023 Titan Size:5150 km Mass: 1.3x1023 Callisto Size: 5268 Mass: 1.1x1023
Composition of Titan’s stratosphere MoleculeAbundance N2 65-98% CH4 2-10% H2 0.2-0.6% CO 6-150 ppm CH3D 5-180 ppm C2H6 13-20 ppm C2H2 2-5 ppm C3H8 0.5-4 ppm C2H4 0.09-3 ppm HCN 0.2-2 ppm HC3N 80-250 ppb CH3C2H 4-60 ppb C4H2 1-40 ppb C2N2 5-16 ppb CO2 1.5-14 ppb Derived from radiative transfer analyses of Voyager, ISO and ground-based data.
Oceans? hν H2 CH4 + CH4 -> other hydrocarbons Methane in atmosphere is depleted in107 years. Either methane is supplied or we are witnessing Titan at a particular moment in its history. Oceans containing methane explain the near saturated tropospheric conditions, provide a source for methane, and don’t require a penchant for being lucky. Flasar et al. Science221, 55 Lunine et al. Science222, 1229 haze C2H2 C2H6 Ocean (CH4, C2H6, N2)
Production Rate * Depth assuming global coverage & 4.5 Gyr of production Taken from Lunine et al. 1989. Based on Yung et al. 1984, Raulin (1984)
Titan’s Surface HST images Peter Smith et al. U. of Arizona
Testing Cassini (Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California) We can see the main antenna. All the instruments (e.g. the cameras) are covered.
Huygens Probe, European Space Agency We can see the shield that protects the instruments against the heat of entry into the atmosphere.
In 2005, the desent of Huygen’s into Titan’s atmosphere. At 170 km altitude, Huygens releases the shield and begins measurements.
15 October 1997 Cassini-Huygens spacecraft, on a Titan IV rocket, waiting for takeoff.
A perfect takeoff that saved fuel.
Huygens DIRS Descent Movie Ice Mountains Landing Site View of Landing Site
Huygen’s DISR ImagesPI: Marty TomaskoUniversity of Arizona Foreground stones are 6 inches
More DISR Images. DISR
Washes flow downhill Tomasko et al. Nature 438, 765
Huygens aterrizou ~30km ao sul das dunas Sitio de aterrissagem Imagem do Cassini Radar (no modulo orbital) Larry Soderblom