The Terrestrial Planets, Part III

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The Terrestrial Planets, Part III Mars

description

The Terrestrial Planets, Part III. Mars. MARS The God of War. Physical Data. Diameter: 6,794 km (0.531 D earth ) Mass: 6.40x10 27 g (0.107 M earth ) Density: 3.96 g/cm 3 Rotation Period: 24.6 hours Tilt of Axis: 25 o Surface Temperature: 130-290 K. Physical Data. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Terrestrial Planets, Part III

Page 1: The Terrestrial Planets, Part III

The Terrestrial Planets,Part III

Mars

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MARSThe God of War

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Physical Data

Diameter: 6,794 km (0.531 Dearth)

Mass: 6.40x1027 g (0.107 Mearth) Density: 3.96 g/cm3

Rotation Period: 24.6 hours Tilt of Axis: 25o

Surface Temperature: 130-290 K

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Physical Data

Orbital Semi-major Axis: 1.524 AU Orbital Period: 1.881 years Orbital Inclination: 2o

Orbital Eccentricity: 0.093 Surface Gravity: 0.38 Earth Gravity

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Physical Data

Satellites: 2 Magnetic Field: no

Surface Pressure: 0.01 Earth’s Pressure

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Mars’ Interior

Relatively small core size compared to the mantle

Smallest core of all the terrestrial planets compared to the overall volume (~9%)

Exact composition of mantle is unknown

3393 km

1520 km

CORE( iron +

iron sulfide )

MANTLE( iron-magnesium

silicates ? )

CRUST( aluminum silicates )

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Mars’ Atmosphere

Clouds

Planet-wide Clouds( from Hubble)

A Cyclonic Event

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Mars’ Atmosphere

95% Carbon Dioxide 2.7% Nitrogen 1.6% Argon 0.6% Carbon Monoxide 0.15% Oxygen 0.03% Water Vapor (variable)

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Mars’ Surface

Polar Caps: Composed of both carbon

dioxide and water

South Polar Cap: Consists mainly of frozen

carbon dioxide. This cap never melts

completely. This picture shows it at

its minimum size of 400 km (249 miles).

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Mars’ SurfaceNorth Polar Cap: Consists of mainly water-

ice.

Seasonal Changes: When spring begins in a

hemisphere, the corresponding cap shrinks as the carbon dioxide turns directly into a gas.

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Mars’ Surface

Polar caps change in size depending on the Martian seasons.

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Mars’ Surface

Olympus Mons: Largest mountain

(volcano) in the Solar System

24 km (78,000 ft) high Base is 500 km in

diameter Rimmed by a 6 km

(20,000 ft) high cliff

500 km

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Mars’ Surface

Valles Marineris: Huge canyon Would stretch coast to

coast across the U.S. It is 4000 km (2500

miles) long and up to 6 km (4 miles) deep

4000 km

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Mars’ Surface

Flight over the Martian Terrain, includingValles Marineris and Three Volcanos

m

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Mars’ Surface

Viking Lander: Landed in Chryse

Planitia on July 20, 1976 Took panoramic pictures

of the surface On-board experiments

tested soil for signs of life. Results were inconclusive.

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Mars’ Surface

Viking Photos:

To the right: Morning ground frost

Below: Panoramaand Mars’ pink sky.

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Mars’ Surface

Pathfinder Photos:

Rover and “Yogi”

Martian Sunset

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Mars’ Surface

Water on Mars? There is evidence of

liquid water once flowing over the surface of Mars.

Fluvial Features: Created by water

flowing around a crater (right). Probably caused by a flood.

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Mars’ Surface

Dry Riverbeds: Created by slow

erosion of running water.

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Mars’ SurfaceDust Storms: Mars’ surface winds

churn up surface material

Storm sizes range in size from small local “dust-devils” to plumes that sweep over the entire planet (right)

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Mars’ Moons

PHOBOS:

“Phobos” is Greek for “fear”Mars’ innermost moonSize: 27 x 21.6 x 18.8 km

Above: Crater Stickney

Left: Image by Soviet spacecraft Phobos 2, launched in 1988

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Mars’ Moons

DEIMOS:

“Deimos” is Greek

for “panic”

Smallest known moon

in the solar system:

15 x 12.2 x 11 km

Phobos and Deimos are probably captured asteroids

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Martian Myths of Yesterday Canals of Mars: “Discovered” by G.V. Schiaparelli in 1877 Percival Lowell (below) built an observatory in

1894 pricipally for the study of the Martian canals The canals are actually optical illusions

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Martian Myths of Today “The Face”: Lies in the Cydonia

region, a region of weathered, isolated hills

One hill resembling a face was photograghed by Viking 1

Some people believe this is a monument builtby a Martian intelligence, and that other surfacefeatures resemble pyramids, cities, and fortresses