Meteors, Asteroids, & Comets Notes

Meteors, Asteroids, & Comets Notes

Name:_____________________________________ Date:_______________ Block: 1 2 3 4 Meteors, Asteroids, & Comets Notes Asteroids: Last remains of _____________________ that built the planets _____ billion years ago! Asteroids are ______________ and _______________ objects that orbit the Sun but are too small to be considered planets. They are known as minor planets. Asteroids range in size from Ceres, which has a diameter of about 1000 km, down to the size of _____________. Sixteen asteroids have a diameter of 240 km or greater. They have been found inside Earth's orbit to beyond Saturn's orbit. Most, however, are contained within a ____________ _____________ that exists between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. Some have orbits that cross Earth's path and some have even hit the Earth in times past. Asteroid Classifications: Between __________ and ___________ , majority of known asteroids estimated to contain between _____ and _____ million asteroids larger than 1 kilometer (0.6 mile) in diameter, and millions of smaller ones. ______________________: __________ an _________ with a larger planet, but do not collide with it __________ trojans form the most significant population of Trojan asteroids There are Mars and Neptune Trojans, and NASA announced the discovery of an _________ trojan in 2011 _____________________ Asteroids: have orbits that pass ___________ by that of Earth As of June 19, 2013, ___________ near-Earth asteroids are known _____________ are classified as potentially hazardous asteroids - those that could pose a threat to Earth _______________________ Asteroids: Not all asteroids orbit within the asteroid belt. Asteroids with ________________ orbits, reaching into the inner solar system. Some potentially colliding with Mars or Earth. Trojans: Sharing stable orbits along the orbit of Jupiter, they are trapped in the Lagrangian points of Jupiter The Asteroid Belt: Small, irregular objects, mostly in the apparent __________ between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. Thousands of asteroids with accurately determined _________ are known today. _______________________ Gaps: The asteroid orbits are _________________ evenly distributed throughout the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. There are several gaps where __________________ are found: Near Earth Asteroids (NEA’s): NEA’s are grouped into three categories, named for famous members of each category: 1221 Amor, 1862 Apollo, and 2062 Aten. ______________: Asteroids which cross ___________ orbit but do not quite reach the orbit of Earth. Eros -- target of the NEAR mission -- is a typical Amor. ______________: Asteroids which cross _______________'s orbit with a period greater than 1 year. Geographos represents the Apollos. ______________: Asteroids which cross Earth's orbit with a period less than 1 year. Ra-Shalom is a typical Aten. Colors of Asteroids: M-type (________): ___________, less reddish asteroids, probably made out of ______________; probably iron cores of fragmented asteroids C-type (_______________): Most common; __________ asteroids, probably made out of ____________ materials (carbonaceous chondrites); common in the _____________ asteroid belt S-type (“_____________”): Brighter, redder asteroids, probably made out of _________ ___________ materials and _____________; very common in the ____________ asteroid belt “Colors” to be interpreted as albedo (________________) at different wavelengths. Asteroid Classification: Asteroids are classified into a number of types according to their spectra (and hence their chemical composition) and albedo: ______________ (and rarer B-, F-, & G-types) more than _______% of known asteroids, extremely dark (albedo 0.03) similar to carbonaceous chondrite meteorites? ______________ 15-20% of known asteroids, relatively ________ (albedo .10-.22), metallic nickel-iron mixed with iron- and magnesium-silicates similar to stony-iron meteorites and ordinary chondrites? _____________ most of the rest _______ (albedo .10-.18), nickel-iron similar to iron meteorites? _____ and _____type ______edge of main belt, Trojans, and Jupiter’s small moons. Very ______ Ultra-primitive organic compounds The Origin of Asteroids: Distribution: S-type asteroids in the _______ asteroid belt; C-type asteroids in ________ asteroid belt; they may reflect ______________ during the formation process. However, more complex features found: _____________ shows evidence for impact crater and lava flows. Heat for existence of lava flows probably from radioactive decay of 26Al. The first 10 ____________ profiled against the Earth's ____________. From left to right, 1 Ceres, 2 Pallas, 3 Juno, 4 Vesta, 5 Astraea, 6 Hebe, 7 Iris, 8 Flora, 9 Metis, and 10 Hygiea. Two types of Tails: ______________: Ionized gas pushed away from the comet by the ___________ ____________. Pointing straight away from the sun ______________: Dust set free from vaporizing ice in the comet; carried away from the comet by the sun’s radiation pressure. Lagging _______________ the comet along its trajectory Dust Jets from Comet Nuclei: Jets of dust are ejected _________________ from the nuclei of comets. Fragmentation and Geology of Comet Nuclei: (2 slides) Comet Linear apparently completely vaporized during its sun passage in 2000. Only small rocky ___________________ remained. Geology: Comet nuclei contain ______ of water, ______________, methane, ____________, etc.: Those compounds __________________ (transition from solid directly to gas phase) as comets approach the sun. Densities of comet nuclei: ~ 0.1 – 0.25 g/cm3. Not____________ice balls, but fluffy material with significant amounts of empty space. Fragmentation: Comet nuclei are very _________________ and are easily fragmented. Comet Shoemaker-Levy was disrupted by tidal forces of Jupiter The Origin of Comets: Comets are believed to originate in the ___________ cloud: _____________ influence of occasional passing stars may perturb some orbits and draw them ________________ the inner solar system. Interactions with planets may perturb orbits further, ________________ comets in short-period orbits. The ____________________________: Second ______________ of small, icy bodies in the outer solar system: __________ and __________ may be captured Kuiper belt objects. Meteorites: Distinguish between: _______________ = small body in space ______________ = meteoroid colliding with Earth and producing a visible light trace in the sky ______________ = meteor that survives the plunge through the atmosphere to strike the ground... Sizes range from microscopic dust to a few centimeters: _____________ = meteor that survives the plunge through the atmosphere to strike the ground. Statistically, one meteorite is expected to strike a building somewhere on Earth every _______ months. Typically impact onto the atmosphere with 10 – 30 km/s (≈ 30 times faster than a rifle bullet). Meteor Showers: Most meteors appear in ________________, peaking periodically at specific dates of the year. Radiants of Meteor Showers: Tracing the tracks of meteors in a shower _____________, they appear to come from a common origin, the ______________. Meteoroid Orbits: Meteoroids that contribute to a meteor shower are ____________ particles, orbiting in the path of a __________________. Spread out all along the orbit of the comet. Comet may still exist or have been ________________. Only a few sporadic meteors are not associated with comet orbits. Meteorite Impacts on Earth: Over ________ impact craters found on Earth. Famous example: _________ Crater near Flagstaff, AZ: Formed ~ ______________ years ago by a meteorite of ~ 80 – 100 m diameter. Impact Craters on Earth: Much larger impact features exist on Earth: Impact of a large body formed a crater ~ 180 – 300 km in diameter in the Yucatán peninsula, ~ 65 million years ago. It had a drastic influence on the climate of Earth; possibly responsible for _____________________ of dinosaurs. Finding Meteorites: Most meteorites are __________ and do not produce significant craters. A good place to find meteorites is ____________________! Distinguish between: _____________ = meteorites which have been observed to fall (fall time known). _____________ = meteorites with unknown fall time. Analysis of Meteorites: Meteorites are classified into 3 broad categories, 1. __________ 2. ___________ & 3.________________ What Does a “Meteorite” Look Like?: _________ meteorites are easy to recognize as meteorites (_______, _______ lumps of iron-nickel steel) ~ thus, they are more likely to be found and collected. The Allende Meteorite: Carbonaceous chondrite, fell in 1969 near Pueblito de Allende, Mexico. It showered an area about 50 km x 10 km with over _________ tons of fragments. Extremely temperature-_____________ materials. The Origins of Meteorites: Probably formed in the solar ________________, ~ 4.6 billion years ago. Almost certainly not from comets (in contrast to meteors in meteor showers!). Probably fragments of stony-iron ____________________ Some melted by heat produced by 26Al decay (half-life ~ 715,000 yr). 26Al possibly provided by a nearby ___________________, just a few 100,000 years before formation of the solar system (triggering formation of our sun?) Planetesimals ______________ and differentiate Collisions _____________ material from different depths with different compositions and temperatures. Meteorites cannot have been broken up from planetesimals very long ago, so remains of planetesimals should still exist. __________________ Complete & turn in the quiz questions on a separate sheet of paper WRITE THE QUESTION!! .

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    6 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us