lecture 32: the origin of the solar system astronomy 161 – winter 2004

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Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

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Page 1: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Lecture 32:

The Origin of the Solar System

Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Page 2: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Key Ideas:

The present-day properties of our Solar System hold important clues to its origin.

Primordial Solar Nebula:• Process of the Sun’s formation• Condensation of grains & ices

From Planetesimals to Planets:• Aggregation of small grains into planetesimals• Aggregation of planetesimals into planets• Terrestrial vs. Jovian planet formation.

Page 3: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

The Birth of the Solar System

The present-day properties of the Solar System preserves its formation history.

Relevant Observations:• Orbits of the planets and asteroids.• Rotation of the planets and the Sun.• Compositions of the planets

Page 4: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Clues from motions

Orbital Motions:• Planets all orbit in nearly the same plane.

• Most planet's orbits are nearly circular.

• Planets & Asteroids orbit in the same direction

Rotation:• Axes of the planets tends to align with the sense of

their orbits, with notable exceptions.

• Sun rotates in the same direction as planets orbit.

Jovian moon systems mimic the Solar System.

Page 5: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Pluto

Page 6: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004
Page 7: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Clues from planet composition

Inner Planets & Asteroids:• Small & rocky (silicates & iron)• Few ices or volatiles, no H or He

Jovian Planets:• Large ice & rock cores• Hydrogen atmospheres rich in volatiles.

Outer solar system moons & icy bodies:• Small ice & rock mixtures with frozen volatiles.

Page 8: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Icy Pluto

Giant Gas PlanetsMostly H, He, & Ices

RockyPlanets

Page 9: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Formation of the SunStars form out of interstellar gas clouds:

• Large cold cloud of H2 molecules and dust gravitationally collapses and fragments.

Rotating fragments collapse further:• Rapid collapse along the poles, but centrifugal

forces slow the collapse along the equator.• Result is collapse into a spinning disk

Central core collapses into a rotating proto-Sun surrounded by a “Solar Nebula”.

Page 10: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Cold Interstellar H2 Cloud

Page 11: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Interstellar Cloudof H2 and Dust

Page 12: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Stellar-mass fragment

Page 13: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Gas & dust disks observed around young stars

Page 14: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Primordial Solar Nebula

The rotating solar nebula is composed of• ~75% Hydrogen & 25% Helium• Traces of metals and dust grains

Starts out at ~2000 K, then cools:• As it cools, various elements condense out of the

gas into solid form as grains or ices.• Which elements condense out when depends on

their “condensation temperature”.

Page 15: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Temp (K) Elements Condensate>2000 K all are gaseous

1600 K Al, Ti, Ca Mineral oxides

1400 K Iron & Nickel Metal Grains

1300 K Silicon Silicate grains

300 K CarbonCarbonaceousGrains

300-100 K H, NIces (H2O, CO2,NH3, CH4)

Condensation Temperatures

Page 16: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

The “Frost Line”Rock & Metals form anywhere the gas cooler

than 1300 K.Carbon grains & ices only form when the gas is

cooler than 300 K.Inner Solar System:

• Too hot for ices & carbon grains.

Outer Solar System:• Carbon grains & ices form beyond the “frost line”.

Page 17: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004
Page 18: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

From Grains to Planetesimals

Grains that have low-velocity collisions can stick together, forming bigger grains.• Beyond the “frost line”, get additional growth by

condensing ices onto the grains.

Grow until their mutual gravitation assists in aggregation, accelerating the growth rate:• Form km-sized planetesimals after few 1000 years

of initial growth.

Page 19: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Terrestrial Planets

Only rocky planetesimals inside the frost line:• Collide to form small rocky bodies.

Hotter closer to the Sun:• Inner proto-planets cannot capture or retain H &

He gas.• Solar wind also disperses the solar nebula from the

inside out, removing H & He.

Result:• Form rocky terrestrial planets with few ices.

Page 20: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Formation of a Terrestrial planet

Page 21: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Jovian Planets

Ices augment the masses of the planetesimals.

These collide to form large rock and ice cores:• Jupiter & Saturn: 10-15 MEarth rock/ice cores.

• Uranus & Neptune: 1-2 MEarth rock/ice cores.

Larger masses & colder temperatures:• Accrete H & He gas from the Solar Nebula.• Planets with the biggest cores grow rapidly.

Page 22: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Formation of Jupiter

ProtoSun

Solar Nebula

Page 23: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Moons & AsteroidsGas gets attracted to the proto-Jovians & forms

rotating disks of material:• Get mini solar nebulae around the Jovians• Rocky/icy moons form in these disks.• Later moons added by asteroid/comet capture.

Asteroids:• Gravity of the proto-Jupiter keeps the

planetesimals in the main belt stirred up.• Never get to aggregate into a larger bodies.

Page 24: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Icy Bodies & Comets

Outer reaches are the coldest and thinnest parts of the Solar Nebula:• Ices condense very quickly onto rocky cores.• Stay small because of a lack of material.

Gravity of the proto-Neptune:• Assisted the formation of Pluto-sized bodies in 3:2

resonance orbits (Pluto & Plutinos)• Disperses the others into the Kuiper Belt.

Page 25: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Mopping up...

• The whole planetary assembly process took about 100 Million Years.

• Followed by ~1 Billion years of heavy bombardment of the planets by the remaining rocky & icy pieces.

• Sunlight dispersed the remaining gas in the Solar Nebula gas into the interstellar medium.

Page 26: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Planetary motions reflect the history of their formation.Planets formed from a thin rotating gas disk:

• The disk’s rotation was imprinted on the orbits of the planets.

• Planets share the same sense of rotation, but were perturbed from perfect alignment by strong collisions during formation.

The Sun “remembers” this original rotation:• Rotates in the same direction with its axis aligned

with the plane of the Solar System.

Page 27: Lecture 32: The Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 161 – Winter 2004

Planetary compositions reflect the different environments of formation.

Terrestrial planets are rock & metal:• Formed in the hot inner Solar Nebula. • Too hot to capture and retain Hydrogen & Helium.

Jovian planets contain ices, H, & He:• Formed in the cool outer Solar Nebula• Grew large enough to accrete lots of H & He.