Astr 1050    Mon., May 3, 2004
   Today: Chapter 19, Pluto and “Debris”
Wednesday: Evaluations and Review (HW 10 due)
Friday: Exam #4, Ch. 16-19

Chapter 19:  Meteorites, Asteroids, Comets
Small bodies are not geologically active
They provide “fossil” record of early solar system
Asteroids
Mostly from region between Mars and Jupiter
Left over small debris from accretion, never assembled into a large planet
Meteorites come mostly from asteroids
Comets
“Stored” on large elliptical orbits beyond planets
Thought to be “planetesimals” from Jovian planet region, almost ejected from solar system in its early history
Meteorites provide only samples besides Apollo
With sample in hand, can perform very detailed analysis:  detailed chemistry; radioisotope age; other isotope info

Asteroids
Most located between Mars and Jupiter
Largest is Ceres
1/3 diameter of moon
Most much smaller
>8,000 known
Total mass << Earth
A few make it to earth
source of the meteorites

Meteorites from Asteroids
If meteorite speed and direction is observed as it enters Earth’s atmosphere, you can work backwards to find its orbit.
Almost all of the meteorites with well determined orbits have most distant part of orbit ellipse within the asteroid belt.

The larger asteroids

Are Asteroids Primitive?
Ida (56 km diam.) and its moon Dactyl (1.5 km diam.)
Colors have been “stretched” to show subtle differences
Imaged by Galileo on its way out to Jupiter

Another Galileo Asteroid:  Gaspra

Phobos & Deimos:  Two “misplaced” asteroids?
Phobos and Diemos are small (~25 km and ~15 km diam.) moons of Mars
Look like captured asteroids rather than moons formed in place
Are “C” class – i.e. dark “Carbonaceous” type “asteroids”

Clues from Meteorites
Three main kinds of meteorites
Carbonaceous chondrites: Most primitive material – dark because of C
Stones Similar to igneous rocks
Irons Metallic iron – with peculiarities
Why do we have different kinds?
How are the main types of meteorites related to the asteroids?

Origin of different asteroid types
Carbonaceous = undifferentiated?
Stones and Metals from differentiated planetesimals?
S = mantles
M = cores
Try to sort out using meteorite samples

Meteors vs. Meteorites
Meteor is seen as streak in sky
Meteorite is a rock on the ground
Meteoroid is a rock in space
Meteor showers (related to comet orbits) rarely produce meteorites
Apparently most comet debris is small and doesn’t survive reentry
Meteorites can be “finds” or “falls”
For a fall – descent actually observed and sometimes orbit computed
Most have orbits with aphelion in asteroid belt

Large Meteor over the Tetons (1972)

The Leonids  2001
APOD site:  Picture by Chen Huang-Ming

Meteor Showers and Comets
Meteor showers caused by large amount of small debris spread out along comet orbits
Almost none makes it to the ground – no meteorites
Occur each year as earth passes through orbit of comet
Appears to come from “radiant point” in sky
Leonids:  Mid November

Comets:         Hale-Bopp in April 1997

Comet characteristics
Most on long elliptical orbits
Short period comets – go to outer solar system
“Jupiter family” still ~ in plane of ecliptic
“Halley family” are highly inclined to ecliptic
Longer period ones go out thousands of AU
Most of these are highly inclined to ecliptic
Become active only in inner solar system
Made of volatile ices and dust
Sun heats and vaporizes ice, releasing dust
“Dirty snowball” model

Comet structure
Gas sublimates from nucleus
Dense coma surrounds nucleus
Ion tail is ionized gas points directly away from sun
shows emission spectrum
ions swept up in solar wind
Dust tail curves slightly outward from orbit
shows reflected sunlight
solar radiation pressure gently pushes dust out of orbit

Hale-Bopp clearly shows components

Where do comets come from?
Long period comets:  The Oort Cloud
Most (original) orbits have aphelions of  >1000 AU
Need ~6 trillion comets out there to produce number seen in here
Total mass of 38 MEarth
Passing stars deflect comets in from the cloud

Formation of Oort cloud comets
Composition indicates formation in region between Jupiter and Neptune
Ejected to the Oort cloud by near collisions as Jovian planets formed
Most probably lost from solar system – a few have just barely closed orbits
Occasional passing stars perturb more comets into orbits passing in close to sun

Where do the Jupiter family comets come from?:
  The recently discovered Kuiper Belt
Material beyond Neptune never ejected into the Oort cloud
Pluto and Charon the biggest members – now also Quarar, Sedna
Very hard to detect because very faint
far from the sun so little illumination
comets not active at that distance
Hubble and new large telescopes have recently detected ~100

Pluto and Charon

Importance of comets
Evidence of solar nebula
Source of H2O and CO2 for earth
Impacts continue
Impacts on Earth
Extinction of the dinosaurs
SL-9 impact on Jupiter