Planet interiors Flashcards

1
Q

relative moment of inertia about the x,y,z axis of a planet

A

z: the moment of inertia about the axis through the poles

Z > Y (if the planet has an equatorial bulge)
Y=X (if symmetric)

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2
Q

how can the moments of inertia be measured for a planet

A

how:
deviations in a satellite’s orbit are caused by the equatorial bulge. these are used to measure the gravitational field. knowing this, we can determine the difference in the MoI (Z - X)

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3
Q

how can the MoI about the z-axis be determined from (Z-X)

A
  1. measure the spin precession rate about the planet’s spin axis. This depends on (Z-X)/Z
  2. If the planet’s a fluid, its flattening comes from the angular velocity and MoI about the z-axis
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4
Q

what are P and S waves

A

P-waves: longitudinal, primary waves
S-waves: transverse, secondary waves

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5
Q

P and S wave shadow zones and what causes them

A

P-waves: 104 - 140 degrees from the point of origin
S-waves: 104- 180 degrees from the point of origin
(that’s in both clockwise and anti-clockwise directions)

S-waves:
can’t travel through the liquid outer-core

P-waves:
Refracted as its velocity increases with depth. Also refracted at the mantle-core interface

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6
Q

mechanisms that heated the interior

A

residual heat: impacts falling to the centre liberate G.P.E

gravitational settling: Heavier elements sinking to the centre, liberating G.P.E

internal radioactive decay: significant for rocky planets

tidal forces: most significant in satellites

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7
Q

rate of planetary cooling

A

internal heat is proportional to the volume: ∝ R³
cooling is proportional to the surface area: ∝ R²

hence the timescale of cooling is proportional to R.
therefore larger planets take longer to cool

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8
Q

what planets don’t have a B-field and why

A

venus and mars

Mars:
it has a residual field at the surface, indicating it used to have one.
Unknown why it doesn’t anymore. (due to large impactor?)

Venus:
Surface is too hot to have residual B-fields. Its rotation is probably too slow to generate the currents required in the core.

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