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Moon and Rings 13

Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

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Page 1: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

Moon and Rings

13

Page 2: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

Astronomy Picture of the Day

Page 3: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

Moons of Jovian Planets• Jupiter alone has over 60• We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500

km • Why study the Jovian moons?

Page 4: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

Moons of Jovian Planets• Jupiter alone has over 60• We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500

km • Why: Similarity to terrestrials, possibility of

life!

Page 5: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

The Galilean Moons of Jupiter

Closest to Jupiter Furthest from Jupiter

(sizes to scale)

Europa - slightly smaller than our MoonGanymede - largest moon in Solar System, slightly larger than Mercury

Would you expect Jupiter to be hotter or cooler very early in its history? What might this imply for the Jupiter-Galilean moon system?

Page 6: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

The Galilean Moons of Jupiter

Closest to Jupiter Furthest from Jupiter

(sizes to scale)

Europa - slightly smaller than our MoonGanymede - largest moon in Solar System, slightly larger than Mercury

The closer to Jupiter, the higher the moon density (similar to behavior of terrestrial planets) => like mini “planetary” system! Intense heat of young Jupiter played role of sun.

Page 7: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

Io's Vulcanism

More than 80 active volcanoes have been observed. Can last months or years.

Largest is bigger than Maryland - emits more energy than all Earth volcanoes combined!

Io is about the size of our moon. Why is it's volcanic activity surprising?

Page 8: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

Volcanic activity requires internal heat. Io is a small body. Should be cold and geologically dead by now. What is source of heat?

Io and Europa are in a resonance orbit => Io stretched/squeezed => friction

Start the clock now

Europa

Io

Jupiter

One Orbit of Io

Europa

Io

Jupiter

Two Orbits of Io

Europa Io

Jupiter

Page 9: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

Europa may have Warm Ocean beneath Icy Surface

860 km

42 kmIcebergs?

Dark deposits along cracks suggest “volcanic” eruptions of water with dust/rock mixed in.

Fissures suggest large moving ice sheets.

Page 10: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

What is source of heat?

JupiterIoEuropa

Europa

Jupiter Ganymede

Page 11: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

What is source of heat? Similar to Io: resonance orbits with Ganymede and Io.

Lack of cratering => process is ongoing

Warm ocean => life?JupiterIo

Europa

Europa

Jupiter Ganymede

Page 12: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

Rings

What are the rings of Saturn made of?

Are they solid?

Page 13: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

Saturn's Rings (all Jovians have ring systems)

- Inner radius 60,000 km, outer radius 300,000 km. Thickness ~100 m!

- Composition: icy/rocky particles, <1 mm to >10m in diameter. Most a few cm.

- A few rings and divisions distinguishable from Earth.

Page 14: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

Question

• How did Saturn's rings form?

Page 15: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

Origin of Saturn's Rings:

If a large moon gets too close to Saturn, the tidal force breaks it apart into small pieces. The radius where this happens is called the Roche Limit.

Total mass of ring particles equivalent to moon 250 km in diameter.

Page 16: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

Neptune’s Triton

• Retrograde orbit => slowly spiralling towards Neptune, will be torn apart by gravity in 100 million years

• Why does a moon with a retrograde orbit slowly spiral closer to the planet?

Page 17: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

Voyager probes found that rings divide into 10,000's of ringlets.

What could maintain this ringlet structure?

Page 18: Moon and Rings 13. Astronomy Picture of the Day Moons of Jovian Planets Jupiter alone has over 60 We will focus on large: Diameter > 2,500 km Why study

Shepherd Moons• Some ringlets

maintained by gravitational influence of “shepherd moons”

• Keep particles from straying outside the path of the ringlet

• How can we tell the ages of the ringlets?