Solar system composition Flashcards

1
Q

Why does stellar nucleosynthesis make elements only up to iron

A

Elements after that require more energy put in than you get out

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2
Q

What kinds of achondrites are there

A

Iron rich and basaltic

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3
Q

What are the big four terrestrial building elements

A

O, Fe, Mg, Si

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4
Q

What is the total mass of the asteroid belt between mars and jupiter

A

4% of the moons mass

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5
Q

Why Jovian planets are further away from the sun

A

since composed of volatile gases, they stay where it is cold so they can make ice from the those volatile gases

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6
Q

Define escape velocity

A

The minimum energy needed for a atom to escape the gravitational pull of a planet

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7
Q

What two factors discussed in class can influence the escape velocity of an atom

A

The heat of the planet, and the mass of the planet

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8
Q

Define homogenous accretion

A

The metal core of earth formed by separation of metal from silicate rock

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9
Q

Define impact hypothesis

A

Huge asteroid hits earth, debris flung up accumulate into the formation of the moon

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10
Q

Define the Kuiper belt

A

belt of dusty ice that extends beyond neptune

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11
Q

Why did the earth segregate into layers?

A

The molten planet separated into relative density and chemical affinity

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12
Q

Define atmophile elements

A

Gas and liquid loving elements. Contain water, CO2, and nitrogen. found mostly in sea and atmosphere

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13
Q

Define lithophile elements

A

Reside in silicate materials. Found primarily in crust and mantle. contain Si, Mg, O, Ca, and Al.

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14
Q

Define the siderphile elements

A

Prefer to be in metallic state. Include iron, nickel, gold, silver, and platinum. Found primarily in the earths core.

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15
Q

Define chalcophile elements

A

Sulfur- (Ore) loving. substantial overlap with siderphile elements.

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16
Q

What element can reside in lithophiles, siderphiles, and chalcophiles?

A

Iron

17
Q

Define magmaphile elements

A

Elements with very large size and weight that do not combine to form silicates. Therefore, dissociate into magma when partial melting occurs. Found primarily, however, in the crust.

18
Q

Define heterogenous accretion

A

Theory that the iron-rich meteorites accreted first, forming core, and the silicate meteorites accreted after, forming mantle

19
Q

What is peculiar about the moon? (4)

A
  1. Very low density
  2. very large (larger than mercury)
  3. almost perfect circular orbit
  4. oxygen isotope signature is identical to earth
20
Q

What is the capture hypothesis

A

Earth and moon were two planets with similar orbits, earth captured moon to an orbit around it

21
Q

What is the fission hypothesis

A

states that a piece of moten earth blebbed off and formed moon

22
Q

What is the mini solar system hypothesis (co-accretion process)

A

The moon formed from left over debris that orbited around earth

23
Q

what was likely the compositionof the first crust?

A

basaltic

24
Q

over time, due to periods of partial melting of the basaltic crust, what would have been the composition of the knew continental crust?

A

granite

25
Q

What is the lunar maria

A

the black, relatively uncratered areas of the moons surface

26
Q

What are the lunar highlands

A

Areas of the moon that are cratered

27
Q

What does the amount of cratering on the moon tell about its age?

A

The more craters, the older it is

28
Q

What has not happened on the moon surface in 2.5 billion years

A

surface renewal processes

29
Q

How were the sea and atmosphere formed?

A

volcanic degassing, comet impacts, and core-mantle segregation

30
Q

The asteroid belt contains

A

asteroids

b) refractory elements
c) volatile elements
d) radioactive elements

31
Q

The Kuiper belt contains

A

a) comets
b) refractory elements
c) volatile elements
d) radioactive elements

32
Q

Terrestrial planets include

A

Mercury, Venus, Mars, and Earth

33
Q

Jovian planets are larger than terrestrial planets because

A

) there was more solid matter in the outer solar system

b) the temperature was lower in the outer solar system
c) they accreted both ices and refractory elements

34
Q

The Moon and Mercury lack significant atmospheres primarily because

A

they are too small

35
Q

The Earth’s core consists primarily of

A

siderophile elements

36
Q

One argument against heterogeneous accretion of the Earth (i.e., metals first, then
silicates) is that

A

achondrites are younger than chondrites

37
Q

Which of the following statements is false regarding the impact hypothesis of Moon
origin?

A

The hypothesis helps explain the scarcity of lithophile elements in the Moon

38
Q

How do we know that planetary bombardment stopped 4 billion years ago

A

The moon has places 4 billion years old that aren’t bombarded

39
Q

Why couldn’t all of earths water have come from comets

A

The chemistry of hydrogen isotopes in most comets is dissimilar to earth isotopes of hydrogen. More likely a chondritic source