1 / 24

Extrasolar Planets

Extrasolar Planets. We ride across the universe on a ball of rock tethered to a star. The Extra Solar Enclopaedia: http://exoplanet.eu/. GC Lupi with 2.5 M Jupiter planet at distance of Neptune. Planet Transits. Algol. Lambda Tau.

eljah
Download Presentation

Extrasolar Planets

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Extrasolar Planets We ride across the universe on a ball of rock tethered to a star The Extra Solar Enclopaedia: http://exoplanet.eu/

  2. GC Lupi with 2.5 MJupiter planet at distance of Neptune

  3. Planet Transits Algol Lambda Tau

  4. More than half of the known stars actually consist of 2 or more stars in orbit about each other, and in our own case Jupiter might be considered a failed solar companion. There are presently 13 known multi-planet systems.

  5. Correlation with Metallicity of Star Mstar = Fe/Hstar / Fe/Hsun Approximately 210 planets have now been discovered in orbit about 10 different nearby stars, whose light spectrum are relatively rich in metals (metallicity ~ MSol).

  6. Extra Solar Planets by Mass and Distance Because of the limits of detection, most of these new planets are relatively large (similar to Jupiter in size), but there is a rapid drop off in examples with masses greater than ~ 10Jupiter (the critical mass for deuterium fusion and the formation of so called brown dwarf stars is ~ 13Jupiter), despite the greater ease of detecting larger.

  7. Habitable Extra Solar Planets ? Approximately 1/4 of the new planets that have been discovered fall within the water window in terms of distance form their suns, and thus temperature, and they or their satellites may well be capable of supporting life as we know it. water window water window water window water window

  8. Brown Dwarf 50 light years away 55 AU First Planet ?

  9. Mantle Xenoliths Chondritic Meteorites

  10. chondrite lherzolite

  11. P P

  12. Classification of Stony Meteorites EL (0.8%) - opx, no oliv Enstatite - 18% Feo (1.6%) EH (0.8%) - opx, no oliv - 25% Feo H (30%) - 15% Feo Ordinary (78%) L (40%) - 6% Feo Chondrites (85-87%) LL (7%) - 3% Feo - chondrules - oliv, opx, Feo CV (1%)- volatile depleted - refractory lithophile enriched - refractory inclusions CO (1%)- volatile depleted STONESCarbonaceous - matrix < 30% < 30% Feo (4.8%) CM (2%) - slight volatile depletion (94-97%) - matrix > 30% CI (0.8%) - volatile-rich - hydrated silicates - no oliv or chondrules Aubrites - enstatite & Fe alloy Ureilites - shock-melted carbonaceous chondrites? (0.4%) - olivine + Fe alloy, diamonds Achondrites Lunar - feldspar breccia (10-12%) SNC - basaltic to ultramafic composition (1%) - shocked, young (1.4 bys) - Martian rare-gas isotopic ratios Eucrites - basaltic composition (2.8%) - largely of opx & felds - assoc: diogenites (opx) & howardites (breccias) - old (4.5 bys)

  13. 15 – 20 % melting MgO = 37.8 Al2O3 = 4.4 SiO2 = 45.0 CaO = 3.5 FeO = 8.1 Total = 98.8

  14. SiO2 + MgO + FeO ~ 91.1%

  15. Mars Moon Venus

More Related