Category Archives: planetary history

More Planet Stuff: Here and Abroad

Perseid Thoughts

So, did you see any Perseids last night?  We went out after midnight and saw maybe 20 before the Moon’s brightness lit the sky up too much.  There were several really bright blue-white ones flaring across the sky and a lot of smaller flashes that went by pretty quickly.  Did you know that each time you see a meteor flare in the sky, you’re seeing the vaporization of something that likely formed well before the planets did?  That may have been the leftovers of a stellar explosion long before our Sun was born?  Meteors are usually always bits of dust and grains thrown off by comets as they round the Sun, or are the crumbs of ancient collisions between asteroids. Those crumbs and bits of dust are scattered along the comet’s path, and occasionally they intersect with Earth. Those that aren’t bounced off the top of the atmosphere come heading straight in. As these bits of cosmic debris blast speed through the air, they get heated and vaporized — giving off light in the process. That’s what we see as a meteor.

There’s debris scattered throughout the solar system, the leftovers from the formation of the planets, moons, rings, and Sun.  Of course, it’s spread very thin — chances are if you were going through interplanetary space you’d encounter little of it, but it’s out there. However, when it encounters Earth, that’s when things get all flashy and bright for these little bits of dust. Think about that the next time you’re out stargazing and see that telltale flash of light go across the sky.  You’re watching the demise of something that’s likely OLDER than this planet.

Planetary Billiards

Artists impression of what the WASP-17 system might look like. Courtesy KASI/CBNU/ARCSEC
Artists' impression of what the WASP-17 system might look like. Courtesy KASI/CBNU/ARCSEC (Click to embiggen.)

Speaking of planetary systems, there’s a new world joining the ever-growing list of exoplanets out there. A team of scientists from the United Kingdom’s Wide Angle Search for Planets (WASP) project and the Geneva Observatory Extrasolar Planet Search program  announced today that they found a giant planet they named WASP-17. It’s orbiting around a star about a thousand light-years away.  That in itself would be sort of ho-hum in these days of “oh, gee, there’s another planet out there — how about finding us an Earthlike one” attitude from the press — but this planet is orbiting is star the “wrong” way. That is, it’s in a retrograde orbit, moving opposite the direction of anything else that’s in orbit around the star. This is a big honkin’ clue that something happened to knock the planet out of the orbit it formed in and send it careening like a billiard ball off in an entirely different orbit.  The best guess is that WASP-17 had a close encounter with an even bigger planet during the often-violent period of planetary formation around the star.  It’s a dangerous time for objects orbiting newly formed stars — things smash into each other, forming larger planets or grinding smaller objects to dust.

Not only is this planet headed the wrong way, but it’s huge — and that’s also a clue to its violent experiences in the past. As it got shoved into its current highly elliptical retrograde orbit, WASP-17 experienced some intense tidal interactions (caused by the gravitational pull of the star, perhaps, and at least by nearby objects). Those tides alternately compress and stretch the planet, which has the density of polystyrene (think foam cups), which heats it up (same as at Io, the volcano world orbiting Jupiter here in our own solar system).  Heating causes bloating, and voila — you get WASP-17.

This discovery doesn’t just tell astronomers about that particular system however — it also gives really good insight into what conditions were like when the Sun and planets formed 4 billion years or so ago.  It wasn’t just a “here’s a Sun, here are some planets, now start evolving” kind of thing. The process is long, drawn out, involves lots of crashes of objects, and apparently, some cosmic billiards!

It Looks So Familiar

Where in the Solar System is It?

What planet do we know of that has deserts and crater fields and looks rather reddish?  Where the sands of time have covered up any traces of water that may have flowed across the surface? That has scenes like this one?

Where is this?
Where is this?

One of the most intriguing things about studying the surfaces of other worlds is figuring out just how they came to be the way they are. Planetary scientists know of several processes that shape solid surfaces: cratering (made by incoming projectiles), weathering (caused by liquid or wind erosion (which is itself often termed “aeolian”)), volcanism (molten materials from deep beneath the surface that flow across terrains and cover over what was there before, or disrupt the landscapes with calderas and pits), and tectonism (the processes that fault and fold the surface of a planet or moon (such as earthquakes, mountain-building)).

So, if you look at a surface like the one shown above, you see no water, but you do see dunes and fields of sand and  dust. This tells you that at least wind-blown erosion and deposition are taking place.  You can also see some circular impressions that turn out to be the ancient, eroded remains of impact craters. Erosion takes time, which means that this surface is not  young and fresh. Weathering and deposition are covering up what’s left of these craters and various surface measurements give an estimated age of the craters themselves at about 140 million years old. And so we ask again: what planets in the solar system have evidence of aeolian (wind-blown) weathering and ancient impact cratering?  And, whose sands look some what reddish?

What does scene this tell you about the planet where this terrain lies? What assumptions can you make to help you guess where this scene is?  Think about it before dragging your pointer across the blank-looking area between the ( ) for the answer.

(It’s on Earth — in a desert area in Libya (northern Africa), that sports a pair of ancient impact sites called the Arkenu craters. This image was provided by astronauts aboard the International Space Station.)