ASTR 130 (Whittle) Lecture Notes
4. SOLAR SYSTEM ASTRONOMY
Pseudo-color infrared image of
Saturn (HST)
A. INTRODUCTION
The Solar System consists of the Sun, 9 planets, over 60 satellites,
and a thin scattering of asteroids, comets, dust, and gas. The Sun is
the dominant object, being 1000 times more massive than the next
largest object (Jupiter). By terrestrial standards, the density of
matter in the Solar System is extremely low, and the planets are separated
by enormous gaps.
Other than the Sun, no solar system object is
self-luminous (at visible wavelengths), and all shine by reflected
sunlight. From the Earth, the second and third-brightest Solar System
objects are the Moon and Venus.
Many interesting features of the Solar System can be observed with the
naked eye, binoculars, and small telescopes, and this lecture is
aimed at exploring some of these.
Earth and Moon seen together from a spacecraft (click for larger view).
B. THE MOON
The Moon is the Earth's only natural satellite. Although it has only 1/4
the diameter of Earth, it is the largest satellite with respect to its
primary of any in the Solar System.
PHASES OF THE MOON
- All of the apparent motions in the sky discussed in Lecture 3 were produced by the motion of the
Earth. By contrast, the phases of the Moon are produced by the
motion of the Moon in its orbit around Earth.
- The Moon's sidereal orbital period with respect to the
stars is 27.3 days. Moves eastward (against the stars) in its
orbit as viewed from Earth, about 13 degrees per day (changing
rise/set times by ~50 minutes/day).
- Because Earth moves in its orbit
around the Sun, the Moon does not return to the same position with
respect to the Sun (e.g. 180 degrees away from Sun) for 29.5 days.
This is called its synodic period and defines (roughly) our
standard "month." (See illustration here .)
- The Moon exhibits drastic changes in apparent shape
throughout the month, from crescent to round and back. Click here for a
photographic mosaic.
The shapes are called the
phases of the Moon. Lunar phases had considerable practical
consequences in pre-industrial societies that had to rely on the Moon
for nighttime illumination.
Although it seems bright, the Moon's surface is actually very
unreflective (see the image above comparing the Earth and
Moon). Its reflectivity, or "albedo," is only about 10%.
Nonetheless, it is close enough to us to produce a large amount of
light, and it is the second brightest object in the sky after the Sun.
- The phases were understood as early as 500 BC by the Greeks. The
key clue is that the phase of the Moon correlates with its angular
distance from the Sun. For instance, the Moon is in its crescent
phase when it is near the Sun in the sky but full when it is opposite
the Sun.
The Greeks realized this implies the Moon is a solid
sphere, in orbit about the Earth, half of which is always illuminated
by the Sun. The situation is shown in this Java
demonstration.
- In the figure above you are looking down on the Earth's North
Pole. The Earth spins counterclockwise (in 24 hours), and the Moon
orbits counterclockwise (in 27 days). The fraction of the Moon's
sunlit hemisphere which we can see from Earth determines the lunar
phase at any time. We see a "full," "crescent," or dark ("new") Moon
depending on the angle between the Sun and Moon as viewed from
Earth. An alternative version of the diagram above, with photographs
of the Moon's appearance at each phase, is available here.
- The diagram shows that a first quarter Moon is 90o away (east)
of the Sun and that a full Moon is 180o away from the Sun. The Moon
will be in a crescent phase when is it less than 90o away from the
Sun and a gibbous phase when between 90o and 180o
away.
- You can also use the figure above to determine the time of day when the Moon in a
given phase will rise, transit, or set. Use the concept of the horizon
plane, and note that the positions A, B, C, and D correspond to places
where observers experience noon, sunset, midnight, and sunrise, respectively.
- Drawing a horizon plane at B, for instance, allows you to infer that
a first quarter Moon will transit at sunset; a full
Moon rises at sunset; and a waning gibbous Moon is not visible
at sunset (below the horizon and not yet risen).
-
This
time lapse movie (472K) composed of still
photographs of the Moon during a 29.5 day cycle vividly illustrates
the relationship between shadowing and phases. The changes in the
apparent size of the Moon and the slight "rocking" motion (known as
libration) are caused by the fact that the lunar orbit is
significantly non-circular in shape.
-
The Moon repeats its phases after its
synodic period of 29.5 days. This means the phases are almost, but not
quite, synchronous with our calendrical months (of 28, 30, or 31 days).
The phase of the moon on a given day of the month therefore shifts
systematically throughout the year and from one year to the next.
GRAVITATIONAL EFFECTS OF THE MOON
Because of its relatively large mass and proximity to Earth, the Moon
has significant gravitational effects on Earth.
- Tides. The gravity of the Moon combined with the Sun is
responsible for the tides in the ocean. We will not discuss tides
further in the course.
- Precession. A wobble in the orientation of the rotation axis of
the Earth that produces a long-term change in the position of
objects in the sky.
ECLIPSES
Eclipses are shadow effects in which the shadow of the Earth
strikes the Moon or the shadow of the Moon strikes the Earth. There
are two types: lunar eclipses and solar eclipses. Both
can be dramatic and beautiful events, for properly situated observers
on Earth.
Full Moon (extract from composite exposure). Click for entire
image.
SURFACE OF THE MOON
The Moon is the only "planetary" surface which can be examined
in detail through a small telescope, and it is a fascinating
study. Galileo's small telescopes first (1610) revealed the Moon's
remarkable terrain.
- The Moon has no atmosphere, so there is no obscuration of its
surface features. More importantly, these are not subject to
weathering. The Moon's surface has been shaped over 4.5 billion years
by the relentless infall of asteroids, meteoroids, and smaller
interplanetary debris. Almost all of its geology is related to
impacts.
- The numerous craters (up to 150 mi diameter) are the best indicators
of impacts. Unlike on the Earth, almost none of these are related
to volcanic activity. The mountains on the Moon (drawing at right), which
range up to 25,000 feet, are also impact effects, not the products
of plate tectonics as on Earth.
- The rounded, dark grey areas (part of the "man in the Moon" face)
are called maria ("seas"), even though we now know they
contain no water. They are the products of massive impacts by
asteroidal bodies which were later filled in by dark lava. They have
smooth surfaces except for a few craters. These regions are younger
than the lighter grey, rougher "highland" regions. Ages can be
estimated by the crater density (fewer craters implies younger
regions).
-
Click here for more
illustrations and descriptions of lunar topography.
C. PLANETARY ORBITS
- The planets condensed out of the solid debris which surrounded
the Sun as it formed. Their orbits consequently lie in almost the
same (physical, 3D) plane.
- The picture above shows an oblique view
of the planetary orbits to scale (though the planet sizes shown are
not to scale). Here is an
edge-on plot of the orbits showing the near-coincidence of the
orbital planes.
- This means that all of the planets (except Pluto) will always be
observed in a relatively narrow band in the sky, centered on the
ecliptic. They therefore move through the Zodiacal
constellations.
- The observed motions of the planets in the sky are determined by
orbital geometry and are a combination of the intrinsic motion of the
planets and the motion of the Earth.
- See the illustration above. All planets move in the same
direction around the Sun (counterclockwise as seen from above the
Earth's North Pole).
Right panel: As viewed from the Earth, the two planets inside
the Earth's orbit ("inferior" planets) will never appear at large
angles from the Sun. Mercury and Venus always stay within
27o and 48o, respectively, of the Sun.
Left panel: The planets outside Earth's orbit ("superior" planets), starting with
Mars, can be seen at up to 180o from the Sun. At that
point they transit at midnight and are said to be at "opposition" with
respect to the Sun. As the figure shows, planets at opposition are
also nearest the Earth then and are therefore brightest.
These angular relationships are called the planetary
configurations.
- The planetarium simulation in the image below shows the concentration
of the planetary orbits, as seen from Earth, to the ecliptic.
Time lapse exposure of a planetarium simulation
of several years
of planetary motions as seen from Earth.
- The loops in the trajectories in the image above are caused by the
Earth's annual motion around the Sun. Planetary motions are
generally eastward, with the "retrograde loop" caused by the Earth's
motion superposed. The retrograde motion for a superior planet is
greatest at opposition.
- Here
is an animation showing how retrograde motion is produced.
D. OBSERVING THE PLANETS
All the planets except Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto are easily visible
to the naked eye. With your 8-in telescopes, you can also observe
Uranus (5.5 mag) and Neptune (7.8 mag). But Pluto is 14.9 mag, and is
visible only in larger telescopes. Both Venus and Mercury can be
observed in daylight. Click
here for sketches of the appearance of the planets in small
telescopes.
- MERCURY: Hard to observe only because it is always near the Sun and
never very far from the horizon at night. Surface features are too subtle
to be detected in a small telescope. Like Venus, shows phases.
- VENUS: Dazzling white in the sky. Can be astonishingly bright
and is the source of more UFO reports than any other astronomical
object. [Reality check: Watch for 5 minutes; is the "UFO" stationary
with respect to the stars? Is it within about 40o of the
western or eastern horizon? Is it in a Zodiacal constellation? If yes,
then it's probably Venus.]
- Venus is the planet nearest Earth and has the orbital period most
closely matching Earth's. Consequently, it can "linger" near the
horizon before sunrise or after sunset, undergoing a complex set of
motions over several month's time. See our
Starry Night demonstration.
- Unfortunately, Venus is shrouded in dense clouds (made of
sulfuric acid droplets!), and you cannot observe its surface.
However, it shows pronounced phases, like the Moon's (see
illustration here), as it orbits the
Sun. Neither Venus nor Mercury have satellites.
- MARS: Undergoes large changes in distance, and consequently
apparent size & brightness, from Earth. Brightest at opposition (once every 2.1
years); but because of its relatively elliptical orbit, its distance
at opposition can vary by a factor of two (see diagram).
- Click here for
a Java animation of the relative motion of Earth and Mars. At
opposition, it can be brighter than Jupiter. In August 2003, Mars
was closer to Earth than at any time
since 57,617 BC (34,646,418 miles distant). The opposition in 2005 will
also be close but not quite as favorable.
- Mars' atmosphere is primarily CO2 and is transparent.
Its color is conspicuously red-pink (hence its association with the
God of War), caused by iron oxide compounds = rust on its
surface. Its surface has been explored with ever increasing
resolution by Earthbound telescopes, orbiting spacecraft, and lander
spacecraft. Use the links below to reach the large and beautiful set
of spacecraft images of Mars.
- Mars is distant enough that even at opposition telescopes on
Earth yield relatively poor resolution (especially since they must
contend with seeing), and this led to a long and controversial history
over whether or not there was evidence for "canals" or other artificial
features on its surface. (More details given
here.) The image at the right was taken from Earth orbit by
the Hubble Space Telescope
(click for enlargement).
- However, under good conditions with an 8-in telescope, you can
easily see the polar caps (some water but mainly frozen
CO2) and contrasting red and grey
markings on the surface. Monitoring these features over several
months will reveal slow changes, including growth or shrinking of the
caps with the seasons and effects of dust storms on the surface,
especially in the Martian spring.
- JUPITER: A very bright, yellowish object, normally the fourth
brightest in the sky (after the Sun, Moon, and Venus). Celestial
motion is much slower than any of the planets already discussed.
- Unlike the four terrestrial planets, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and
Neptune are gas giants and have no sharp boundary between
interior and atmosphere. Through your telescopes, what you will see
is the top of their cloud layers. The banded structures in Jupiter's
atmosphere, called "belts" (dark) and "zones" (light), are multiple cloud
layers, and an 8-in telescope often reveals beautiful details. The
red spot is an oval-shaped, perpetual cyclone in the
atmosphere, about 3 times the diameter of Earth (seen near the right
hand limb in the picture at right). Because Jupiter rotates in only
10 hours, you get to see a variety of features in just a few hours.
- Jupiter has a satellite system, consisting of 28 known
moons, mostly small. The four largest of these (Io, Europa, Ganymeade, Callisto)
were discovered by Galileo and are known as the Galilean
satellites. They are easy to see in a small telescope, and
their relatively rapid orbital motions around Jupiter can be readily
tracked. NASA's Voyager
and Galileo missions
revealed astonishing differences in surface constitution among the
four. In small telescopes, unfortunately, no surface details are
apparent.
- SATURN: Famous as the ringed planet, though all four gas giants
actually have rings.
Its cloud layers are deeper within its
atmosphere than are Jupiter's, so it typically shows only faint
surface banding and subtle structures.
The rings are
orbiting chunks of rock and ice and
lie exactly in the equatorial plane of the planet. They are
spectacular in small scopes, and a fair amount of substructure,
especially the dark "Cassini Division" seen in the
image at the top of
this page, is visible. Spacecraft reveal
hundreds of ringlets. A beautiful mosaic of the rings from
the Cassini orbiter is available at
this web site.
Six of Saturn's 22 satellites would be visible in an 8-in telescope.
Titan, Saturn's largest moon, is the only moon to have its own
atmosphere. It is the main target of the
Cassini-Huygens Mission, now in orbit around Saturn. The Huygens
probe made a successful soft landing on Titan in January, 2005.
Images of Titan and Saturn are continually updated on the Cassini site.
- URANUS and NEPTUNE: All of the above planets were known to naked
eye astronomers. The other three are products of the telescopic age
(Uranus was discovered in 1781). Uranus and Neptune are distant
enough that they show only small blue-green disks in an 8-in
telescope, without further details being visible (they have very low
contrast atmospheres even seen close up). You will need a finding
chart to locate them. Their satellites are too faint for detection in
the 8-in scopes.
E. INTERPLANETARY MATTER
Although only a trace constituent of the Solar System, the material
between the planets provides a number of interesting, even
spectacular, observational phenomena. These are all
"leftovers"---debris from the formation of the solar system.
- COMETS: are large chunks of ice which evaporate when they get within
several Astronomical Units of the Sun (one AU = the distance between
Sun and Earth), producing a gaseous coma and sometimes a
tail. The Solar System contains billions of comet nuclei,
but most are beyond the orbit of Neptune. Most have
very elongated
orbits and reach small distances from the Sun only infrequently.
Some, however, are gravitationally deflected by Jupiter into orbits
with shorter periods (< 100 years); these are called "periodic"
comets. Most are faint. Halley's is an exception as a bright
periodic comet. The most spectacular comets, like
Hale-Bopp (at right) are usually first-time visitors to the
inner Solar System. Click here for more information on
Hale-Bopp. There are always several faint comets available to observe
in the sky; but bright ones are rare: once a decade or so.
Comet Machholz is visible during the first part
of the Spring 2005 semester.
- METEORS: are the incandescent trails of tiny pieces of rocky or
icy debris burning up at high altitudes in the Earth's atmosphere. Up
to about 10 per hour can be seen on dark nights at any time of the
year. Debris left behind by comets along their orbits can produce
concentrated meteor showers with much higher rates, up to
1000's of meteors per hour in rare instances. The Leonid shower
(Nov. 17-18) was good in 1998, 1999, and 2002.
- ASTEROIDS: Also called "minor planets," asteroids are large
rocky or metallic chunks ranging from less than a few meters
to hundreds of kilometers in diameter. They move in their
own orbits around the Sun. Most orbits are concentrated between
Mars and Jupiter, but many cross the Earth's orbit.
Ceres, 1000 km in diameters, was the first discovered (1801).
There are now over 38,000 known(!)
-
Here is
a snapshot plot of the location of asteroids in the inner Solar
System.
- Many asteroids are detectable with an 8-in telescope, but you
need finding charts. Their signature is a fairly rapid motion with
respect to the background stars.
-
Here is a video (266 kb) of the asteroid Eros
taken by amateur astronomer Gordon Garradd.
Homework:
- Consult Norton's Star Atlas for additional
information on Solar System observations, as needed. You are not
required to know all the material there.
- Finish Lab 2 and move on to work on Lab 3.
- A set of sample questions & problems concerning the material
covered in the first four lectures will be handed out in class and is
available on the course
webpage. These are not to be handed in and will not be graded,
but you should work through them in preparation for the Midterm Exam.
Web links:
Last modified
Feburary 2005 by rwo
Moon phase and precession drawings copyright © by Nick Strobel. Eclipse images
copyright © Fred Espenak.
Eclipse drawing copyright © 2000 Harcourt, Inc., from the ASTR
121-4 text by Fraknoi et al. Mars orbit graphic by A. Huffman. Text
copyright © 2000-2005 Robert W. O'Connell. All rights reserved.
These notes are intended for the private, noncommercial use of
students enrolled in Astronomy 130 at the University of Virginia.