ASTR 130 (Whittle) Lecture Notes


4. SOLAR SYSTEM ASTRONOMY


Saturn

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


GRAVITATIONAL EFFECTS OF THE MOON

Because of its relatively large mass and proximity to Earth, the Moon has significant gravitational effects on Earth.

  1. 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.

  2. 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.


Plan Orbits


C. PLANETARY ORBITS


Planets

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.


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. Hale-Bopp
Homework:

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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.