Outer Planets: Uranus/Neptune

Outer Planets: Uranus/Neptune

1 Lecture 8: Uranus and Neptune • Read chapter 13 in the textbook • Exercises: Do all “Review and Discussion” and all “Conceptual Self-Test”) 1.1 Uranus • Preliminaries – Uranus: gas giants (jovian planet) like Jupiter and Saturn – discovered by British William Herschel in 1781, first discovery of a planet in over 2000 years – apparent magnitude is at the edge of the naked eye’s ability to see, if you know exactly where it is – discovered through optical telescope – orbital semimajor axis: 19.19 AU, mass: 14.54 earth masses (8.68 × 1025 kg, radius: 4.01 earth radius (25, 559 km), mean surface temperature 58 K – Voyager 2 probe flew by Uranus in 1986 giving the first close up pictures of the planet. • Physical properties: – nearly 20 AU from the sun – twice as far as Saturn – orbital period 83.75 earth years – gas giant, but much smaller than Jupiter and Saturn – SHOW RELATIVE SIZE PICTURE – like other jovian planets, Uranus has a short rotation period, 17.2hours – like all planets, lies close to the ecliptic plane inclined at 0.77◦ – unlike any other planet, the axis tilt is 98◦ – Uranus is nearly on its side – during the Uranian solstices, the northern (southern) hemisphere points toward the sun, leaving almost the entire southern (southern) hemisphere in total dark- ness – SHOW ORBIT DIAGRAM – not understood why Uranus axis tilt is so large (perhaps the result of collisions during the formation of the solar system) – Uranus appears a blue-green colour – colour of the upper atmosphere – the atmosphere rotates differentially, like Jupiter and Saturn, (but rotates faster at the poles) • The atmosphere of Uranus 1 – spectroscopic studies of reflected sunlight – outer atmosphere similar composition to Jupiter and Saturn – H2 (84%), He (14%), CH4 (2%), almost no ammonia NH4 – abundances of ammonia and methane vary systematically across the jovian plan- ets: Jupiter has much more gaseous ammonia than methane, but as we move out the amount of ammonia decreases relative to methane – temperature is the reason: ammonia freezes into crystals at 70 K, since the upper atmosphere of Uranus is 58 K, ammonia does not exist as a gas – methane is a good absorber at longer wavelengths (red light) – higher concentra- tion of methane, more blueish the colour – blue-green colour of Uranus results from methane in the atmosphere – Unlike Jupiter, Uranus lacks an internal heat source: clouds at low-lying, warmer altitudes – low amount of high level clouds means that weather patterns cannot readily be seen as they are blocked out how high atmospheric haze – high winds 200 km/h to 500 km/h do form bands like Jupiter, but are buried deeper in the atmosphere – Hubble Space Telescope discovered small dark spot indicating a storm – SHOW PICTURE OF SPOT – Uranian atmosphere is efficient at transporting energy around the planet – winter and summer sides differ by only a few K – wind speeds near the poles higher than at the equator probably due to higher amount of sunlight these regions receive • Magnetosphere and internal structure – Uranus has a fairly strong magnetic field, about 100 times stronger than the earth’s – creates a substantial magnetosphere for Uranus – Uranian magnetic field inclined 60◦ relative to the rotation axis and is not centered – SHOW MAGNETIC FIELD PICTURE – misalignment with rotation different from Jupiter and Saturn – suggests different physics is responsible – theoretical models suggest that Uranus has a rocky core similar to Jupiter and Saturn (about 10 earth masses) – rocky core of Uranus makes up a large fraction of the planet as compared to Jupiter and Saturn 2 – pressure outside the core too low to form metallic hydrogen – origin of the mag- netic field is therefore probably very different than Jupiter and Saturn – possible “slushy” outer core with ammonia dissolved in water creating a thick electrically conducting layer – circulating currents far from Uranus’s centre and rotation axis – SHOW CORE PICTURES • Moon and ring system of Uranus – As of 2007: 27 moons – most tiny, less than 25 km across – five major moons: Titania, Oberon, Ariel, Umbriel, and Miranda – all orbit close to the equatorial plane of the Uranus – almost perpendicular to the ecliptic plane – Uranian moons similar to the midsized moons of Saturn – densities 1.1 g/cm to 1.7 gm/cm – The five moons range from 1600 km in diameter to the smallest, Miranda at 480 km – SHOW MOON COMPARISON PHOTO – Uranus has no moons as large as the Galilean satellites or Saturn’s moon Titan – the outermost of these five moons, Titania and Oberon – heavily cratered, no geologic activity – radiation darkening (chemical reaction from high energy particles) thought to darken the surface of Uranus’s moons – less reflective than Saturn’s midsized moons – Ariel, close to Uranus – tidal stress, some geological activity – Miranda – very odd moon, many surface feature inconsistent with quiet geology: perhaps the result of catastrophic disruption, impacts partially breaking the moon up and with reformation – SHOW MIRANDA PHOTO – in 1977, discovery of rings around Uranus from star occultion – SHOW OCCULTATION PICTURE – rings very different from Saturn and Jupiter: rings dark and narrow with wide space between them – ring system, inside the Roche limit – density of Uranus’s rings similar to the A and B rings of Saturn – rings are much less reflective than Saturn’s – rings made up of particles all about 1cm in size – narrow rings of Uranus require shepherd moons (like Saturn’s F ring), Cordelia and Ophelia are two shepherd moons – SHOW SHEPHERD MOON DIAGRAM 3 1.2 Neptune • Preliminaries – Neptune: gas giants (jovian planet) like Jupiter and Saturn – near twin of Uranus – discovered by theoretical predictions: British physicist John Couch Adams, French physicist Urbain Le Verrier – discovered in with a telescope by German astronomer Johann Galle – apparent magnitude is too dim for the naked eye – orbital semimajor axis: 30.07 AU, mass: 17.15 earth masses (1.02 × 1026 kg, radius: 4.01 earth radius (25, 559 km), mean surface temperature 59 K (internal heat source – Voyager 2 probe flew by Uranus in 1989 giving the first close up pictures of the planet. • Physical properties: – about 30 AU from the sun – three times as far as Saturn – orbital period 163.7 earth years – gas giant, but much smaller than Jupiter and Saturn – SHOW RELATIVE SIZE PICTURE – like other jovian planets, Neptune has a short rotation period, 16.1hours – like all planets, lies close to the ecliptic plane inclined at 0.77◦ – the axis tilt similar to earth 29.6◦ – Neptune appears a blue in colour – colour of the upper atmosphere – the atmosphere rotates differentially, like the other gas giants – Neptune has an internal heat source that causes Neptune to radiate more than 2 times as much energy as it receives from the sun • The atmosphere of Neptune – spectroscopic studies of reflected sunlight – outer atmosphere similar composition to Jupiter and Saturn – H2 (83%), He (14%), CH4 (3%), almost no ammonia NH4 – as we move out of the solar system, the amount of ammonia decreases relative to methane – temperature is the reason: ammonia freezes into crystals at 70 K, since the upper atmosphere of Uranus is 58 K, ammonia does not exist as a gas – methane is a good absorber at longer wavelengths (red light) – higher concentra- tion of methane, more blueish the colour 4 – blue-green colour of Uranus results from methane in the atmosphere – Neptune’s internal heat source gives Neptune pronounced weather patterns – high level clouds observed, has several storm systems clearly visible from space – Great Dark Spot observed by Voyager 2 – disappeared in recent years – SHOW DARK SPOT AND RECENT PHOTOS – wind speeds in excess of 1,500 km/h – almost half the speed of sound in Neptune’s upper atmosphere – stormy atmosphere arises in part from the internal heat source • Magnetosphere and internal structure – Like Uranus, Neptune has a fairly strong magnetic field, about 100 times stronger than the earth’s – creates a substantial magnetosphere – Neptune’s magnetic field inclined 40◦ relative to the rotation axis and is not centered – SHOW MAGNETIC FIELD PICTURE – misalignment with rotation different from Jupiter and Saturn – again suggests different physics is responsible – theoretical models suggest that Neptune has a rocky core similar to Jupiter and Saturn (about 10 earth masses) – rocky core of Uranus makes up a large fraction of the planet as compared to Jupiter and Saturn – pressure outside the core too low to form metallic hydrogen – origin of the mag- netic field, like Uranus, is therefore probably very different than Jupiter and Saturn – possible “slushy” outer core with ammonia dissolved in water creating a thick electrically conducting layer – circulating currents far from Neptunes’s centre and rotation axis – SHOW CORE PICTURES AGAIN • Moon and ring system of Neptune – as of 2007: 13 moons – Neptune has only one large moon, Triton and one midsized moon, Proteus (al- though Nereid is not much smaller) – unlike other jovians, no regular moon system – orbits are inclined to the equator and Triton has a retrograde orbit – suggests that some moons and particularly Triton are captured Kuiper objects 5 – information on Triton mostly limited to the Voyager 2 probe – Triton shows a lacked mark of cratering – SHOW TRITON PICTURES – Voyager 2 observed geysers of nitrogen gas erupting – Triton has a thin atmosphere consiting mostly of nitrogen – Triton covered in nitrogen frost – solar heating causes eruptions – Triton has evidence of water ice lakes – the water erupts as lava and then solidifies – evidence of tidal stress geologic activity in the past as the result of Neptune’s gravity making the orbit more circular – retrograde orbit with tidal interactions will cause Triton to gradually move inward – it will be doomed once it approaches the Roche limit, Neptune will have end up with a ring system like Saturn! – Neptune’s rings conclusively discovered by Voyager 2 – Five dark rings – narrow like Uranus – Again, undiscovered moonlets and the inner satellites of Neptune play a role in confining the narrow rings.

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