a) The document discusses the structure and components of the solar system, with a focus on the sun. It describes the sun's composition, layers, properties like temperature and luminosity, and atmospheric features like sunspots.
b) It also provides an overview of the formation of the solar system according to the nebular hypothesis of a large rotating cloud collapsing and forming a disk that condensed into planets.
c) Key parts of the solar system are described, including the eight planets and their properties, as well as smaller objects like asteroids and comets. Comparisons are made between planet sizes and orbital characteristics.
a) The document discusses the structure and components of the solar system, with a focus on the sun. It describes the sun's composition, layers, properties like temperature and luminosity, and atmospheric features like sunspots.
b) It also provides an overview of the formation of the solar system according to the nebular hypothesis of a large rotating cloud collapsing and forming a disk that condensed into planets.
c) Key parts of the solar system are described, including the eight planets and their properties, as well as smaller objects like asteroids and comets. Comparisons are made between planet sizes and orbital characteristics.
a) The document discusses the structure and components of the solar system, with a focus on the sun. It describes the sun's composition, layers, properties like temperature and luminosity, and atmospheric features like sunspots.
b) It also provides an overview of the formation of the solar system according to the nebular hypothesis of a large rotating cloud collapsing and forming a disk that condensed into planets.
c) Key parts of the solar system are described, including the eight planets and their properties, as well as smaller objects like asteroids and comets. Comparisons are made between planet sizes and orbital characteristics.
a) The document discusses the structure and components of the solar system, with a focus on the sun. It describes the sun's composition, layers, properties like temperature and luminosity, and atmospheric features like sunspots.
b) It also provides an overview of the formation of the solar system according to the nebular hypothesis of a large rotating cloud collapsing and forming a disk that condensed into planets.
c) Key parts of the solar system are described, including the eight planets and their properties, as well as smaller objects like asteroids and comets. Comparisons are made between planet sizes and orbital characteristics.
Solar System What can be found in Solar Sytem? ● The Sun as the central star ● 8 planets (and their satellites): Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptunus ● Dwarf planets: Ceres, Pluto, Eris ● Small bodies inside the solar system: Asteroids, satellites, Trans-Neptunian Objects (TNO), comets, meteoroids Facts ● All of the planets revolve the Sun in the same direction → counterclockwise as seen from above ● The planets also rotate as they revolve. Their rotation is also counterclockwise as seen from above (except for Venus and Uranus) ● The mean plane of Earth's orbit around the Sun is called the ecliptic. The orbit of all planets are nearly in the same plane ● Only 5 planets (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter & Saturn) which can be seen from Earth with naked eyes since the ancients Structure of Solar System ● The Sun ● 4 terrestrial planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars) ● Asteroid belt ● 4 jovian planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptunus) ● Kuiper Belt ● Oort Cloud Planetary Comparison Orbital Orbital Rotational Number Diameter Mass Radius Period Period of Planet (Earth) (Earth) (AU) (Year) (Day) satellite Mercury 0.38 0.06 0.39 0.24 58.64 - Venus 0.95 0.82 0.72 0.62 -243.02 - Earth 1 1 1 1 1 1 Mars 0.53 0.11 1.52 1.88 1.03 2 Jupiter 11.21 317.8 5.2 11.86 0.41 63 Saturn 9.45 95.2 9.54 29.46 0.43 60 Uranus 4.01 14.6 19.22 84.01 -0.72 27 Neptune 3.88 17.2 30.06 164.8 0.67 13 Solar System Formation ● The theory should be able to explain some exceptions for the solar system planetary orbit: – Uranus' rotation axis tilt is nearly at the ecliptic plane – Venus and Uranus' rotation direction are opposite to the other planets' – Some satellites have 'backward' orbits – Earth's moon is anomalously large Solar System Formation ● Widely accepted theory: The Nebular Theory from Immanuel Kant ● Solar system formed out of gravitational collapse of gas (Solar Nebulae) ● The gas heated up and spun up ● Flattened to form accretion disks a) a large rotating cloud (3- 4 solar mass) start to condense
b) a disk of gas and dust
formed around the protosun
c) dust particles in the disk
collided with each other forming a larger particle
d) particles clumped together into planetesimals e) the clumps drifted together, forming planet- size bodies and...
f) began to collect gas
and dust from the surrounding
g) the strong solar
wind blew away extra gas and dust; the planet formation was finished ● Terrestrial planets are formed inside the frost line ● Beyond the frost line, ice can exist; more and larger planetesimal formed ● Large icy planetesimals capture gas and make miniature solar nebulae; these have accretion disks which form moons and/or rings ● Leftover planetesimals became asteroids and comets ● Kuiper belt = outer part of accretion disk that never formed full-scale planets ● Oort cloud = icy planetesimals flung away by encounters with jovians Forming the jovian planets The Age of The Solar System ● The oldest rock found in Moon and meteorites has the age of 4.4 billion years old → it's about the age of the Solar System Planetary Comparison Size comparison between the Sun and its planets Sun's Properties Quantity Value Method of Measurement Distance from Earth 150 million km Radar ranging Angular diameter 30'Solar telescope Radius 700,000 km angular diameter and distance Mass 2 x 1030 kg planets' orbital motion Density 1400 kg/m 3 mass and volume Solar constant 1400 watt/m2 High-altitude aircraft (received flux) Luminosity 3.85 x 1026 watt solar constant and distance Surface Temperature 5800 K luminosity and radius Apparent Magnitude -26.74 Photometer Absolute Magnitude 4.8 apparent magnitude and distance Rotation period Equator: 25 days ; Sunspot's motion Poles: 35 days Surface gravity 28 times Earth's or 294 m/s2 Sun's Structure ● Inner structure – Core – Radiation Zone – Convection Zone ● Atmosphere – Photosphere – Chromosphere – Corona ● At the Sun's core, hydrogen is fused into helium, generating Sun's energy ● In order to have the nuclear fusion, the temperature must be 15 million K ● The energy released in the core is slowly transmitted outward through the radiation zone, where photons are repeatedly absorbed and re- emitted at lower energies ● Then, circulating currents of gas in the convection zone transfer the energy as heat to the outer layer ● It takes 20 million years for energy produced in the core to surface and become sunshine Sun's Atmosphere ● The Photosphere (Greek for 'light ball') – The visible surface of the Sun – Hot, thin and opaque gas layer with temperature of 5800 K ● The Chromosphere (Greek for 'color ball') – Thin, transparent layer extending 10000 km above the photosphere – Average temperature is 15000 K, increases outward – Normally visible from Earth only during total eclipse of the Sun as a red/pink thin layer due to hydrogen gas Chromosphere ● The Corona (Latin for 'crown') – The outermost Sun's atmosphere – Rarified, hot gas extending millions kilometers into space – Shines bright at X-ray wavelength since its high temperature (up to 2 million K) – During total eclipse of the Sun, it is visible as a white halo around the hidden photosphere Corona The photosphere has a grainy appearance called granulation, composed of granules Granules are the tops of rising currents of hot gases from the convection zone Sunspots ● Temporary, dark, relatively cool spot on the Sun's bright photosphere ● A typical sunspot is roughly as big as Earth ● More than 300 sunspots, or none at all, may appear on the Sun's disk ● The maximum and minimum number of the sunspots is in a cycle of 11 years called sunspot cycle which displays the solar activity cycle ● The sun is most active during the sunspot maximum ● The sun is least active during sunspot minimum ● The last recorded solar activity is in 2001 when sunspot number soared