fbpx
Wikipedia

Comparative planetary science

Comparative planetary science or comparative planetology is a branch of space science and planetary science in which different natural processes and systems are studied by their effects and phenomena on and between multiple bodies. The planetary processes in question include geology, hydrology, atmospheric physics, and interactions such as impact cratering, space weathering, and magnetospheric physics in the solar wind, and possibly biology, via astrobiology.

Comparison of multiple bodies assists the researcher, if for no other reason than the Earth is far more accessible than any other body. Those distant bodies may then be evaluated in the context of processes already characterized on Earth. Conversely, other bodies (including extrasolar ones) may provide additional examples, edge cases, and counterexamples to earthbound processes; without a greater context, studying these phenomena in relation to Earth alone may result in low sample sizes and observational biases.

Background edit

The term "comparative planetology" was coined by George Gamow, who reasoned that to fully understand our own planet, we must study others. Poldervaart focused on the Moon, stating "An adequate picture of this original planet and its development to the present earth is of great significance, is in fact the ultimate goal of geology as the science leading to knowledge and understanding of earth's history."[1]

Geology, geochemistry, and geophysics edit

All terrestrial planets (and some satellites, such as the Moon) are essentially composed of silicates wrapped around iron cores.[1][2] The large outer Solar System moons and Pluto have more ice, and less rock and metal, but still undergo analogous processes.

Volcanism edit

Volcanism on Earth is largely lava-based. Other terrestrial planets display volcanic features assumed to be lava-based, evaluated in the context of analogues readily studied on Earth. For example, Jupiter's moon Io displays extant volcanism, including lava flows. These flows were initially inferred to be composed mostly of various forms of molten elemental sulfur, based on analysis of imaging done by the Voyager probes.[3] However, Earth-based infrared studies done in the 1980s and 1990s caused the consensus to shift in favor of a primarily silicate-based model, with sulfur playing a secondary role.[4]

Much of the surface of Mars is composed of various basalts considered analogous to Hawaiian basalts, by their spectra and in situ chemical analyses (including Martian meteorites).[5][6] Mercury and Earth's Moon similarly feature large areas of basalts, formed by ancient volcanic processes. Surfaces in the polar regions show polygonal morphologies, also seen on Earth.[7][8]

In addition to basalt flows, Venus is home to a large number of pancake dome volcanoes created by highly viscous silica-rich lava flows. These domes lack a known Earth analogue. They do bear some morphological resemblance to terrestrial rhyolite-dacite lava domes, although the pancake domes are much flatter and uniformly round in nature.[9][10][11]

Certain regions further out in the Solar System exhibit cryovolcanism, a process not seen anywhere on earth. Cryovolcanism is studied through laboratory experiments, conceptual and numerical modeling, and by cross-comparison to other examples in the field. Examples of bodies with cryovolcanic features include comets, some asteroids and Centaurs, Mars, Europa, Enceladus, Triton, and possibly Titan, Ceres, Pluto, and Eris.

The trace dopants of Europa's ice are currently postulated to contain sulfur.[12] This is being evaluated via a Canadian sulfate spring as an analogue, in preparation for future Europa probes.[13]Small bodies such as comets, some asteroid types, and dust grains, on the other hand, serve as counterexamples. Assumed to have experienced little or no heating, these materials may contain (or be) samples representing the early Solar System, which have since been erased from Earth or any other large body.

Some extrasolar planets are covered entirely in lava oceans, and some are tidally locked planets, whose star-facing hemisphere is entirely lava.

Cratering edit

The craters observed on the Moon were once assumed to be volcanic. Earth, by comparison, did not show a similar crater count, nor a high frequency of large meteor events, which would be expected as two nearby bodies should experience similar impact rates. Eventually this volcanism model was overturned, as numerous Earth craters (demonstrated by e. g., shatter cones, shocked quartz and other impactites, and possibly spall) were found, after having been eroded over geologic time. Craters formed by larger and larger ordnance also served as models. The Moon, on the other hand, shows no atmosphere or hydrosphere, and could thus accumulate and preserve impact craters over billions of years despite a low impact rate at any one time. In addition, more searches by more groups with better equipment highlighted the great number of asteroids, presumed to have been even more numerous in earlier Solar System periods.[14][15]

As on Earth, a low crater count on other bodies indicates young surfaces. This is particularly credible if nearby regions or bodies show heavier cratering. Young surfaces, in turn, indicate atmospheric, tectonic or volcanic, or hydrological processing on large bodies and comets, or dust redistribution or a relatively recent formation on asteroids (i. e., splitting from a parent body).[16]

Examination of the cratering record on multiple bodies, at multiple areas in the Solar System, points to a Late Heavy Bombardment, which in turn gives evidence of the Solar System's early history. However, the Late Heavy Bombardment as currently proposed has some issues and is not completely accepted.[17][18][19]

One model for Mercury's exceptionally high density compared to other terrestrial planets[20] is the stripping off of a significant amount of crust and/or mantle from extremely heavy bombardment.[21][22]

Differentiation edit

As a large body, Earth can efficiently retain its internal heat (from its initial formation plus decay of its radioisotopes) over the long timescale of the Solar System. It thus retains a molten core, and has differentiated- dense materials have sunk to the core, while light materials float to form a crust.

Other bodies, by comparison, may or may not have differentiated, based on their formation history, radioisotope content, further energy input via bombardment, distance from the Sun, size, etc. Studying bodies of various sizes and distances from the Sun provides examples and places constraints on the differentiation process. Differentiation itself is evaluated indirectly, by the mineralogy of a body's surface, versus its expected bulk density and mineralogy, or via shape effects due to slight variations in gravity.[23] Differentiation may also be measured directly, by the higher-order terms of a body's gravity field as measured by a flyby or gravitational assist, and in some cases by librations.[24]

Edge cases include Vesta and some of the larger moons, which show differentiation but are assumed to have since fully solidified. The question of whether Earth's Moon has solidified, or retains some molten layers, has not been definitively answered. Additionally, differentiation processes are expected to vary along a continuum. Bodies may be composed of lighter and heavier rocks and metals, a high water ice and volatiles content (with less mechanical strength) in cooler regions of the Solar System, or primarily ices with a low rock/metal content even farther from the Sun. This continuum is thought to record the varying chemistries of the early Solar System, with refractories surviving in warm regions, and volatiles driven outward by the young Sun.

The cores of planets are inaccessible, studied indirectly by seismometry, gravimetry, and in some cases magnetometry. However, iron and stony-iron meteorites are likely fragments from the cores of parent bodies which have partially or completely differentiated, then shattered. These meteorites are thus the only means of directly examining deep-interior materials and their processes.

Gas giant planets represent another form of differentiation, with multiple fluid layers by density. Some distinguish further between true gas giants, and ice giants further from the Sun.[25][26]

Tectonics edit

In turn, a molten core may allow plate tectonics, of which Earth shows major features. Mars, as a smaller body than Earth, shows no current tectonic activity, nor mountain ridges from geologically recent activity. This is assumed to be due to an interior that has cooled faster than the Earth (see geomagnetism below). An edge case may be Venus, which does not appear to have extant tectonics. However, in its history, it likely has had tectonic activity but lost it.[27][28] It is possible tectonic activity on Venus may still be sufficient to restart after a long era of accumulation.[29]

Io, despite having high volcanism, does not show any tectonic activity, possibly due to sulfur-based magmas with higher temperatures, or simply higher volumetric fluxes.[30] Meanwhile, Vesta's fossae may be considered a form of tectonics, despite that body's small size and cool temperatures.[31]

Europa is a key demonstration of outer-planet tectonics. Its surface shows movement of ice blocks or rafts, strike-slip faults, and possibly diapirs. The question of extant tectonics is far less certain, possibly having been replaced by local cryomagmatism.[32] Ganymede and Triton may contain tectonically or cryovolcanically resurfaced areas, and Miranda's irregular terrains may be tectonic.

Earthquakes are well-studied on Earth, as multiple seismometers or large arrays can be used to derive quake waveforms in multiple dimensions. The Moon is the only other body to successfully receive a seismometer array; "marsquakes" and the Mars interior are based on simple models and Earth-derived assumptions. Venus has received negligible seismometry.

Gas giants may in turn show different forms of heat transfer and mixing.[33] Furthermore, gas giants show different heat effects by size and distance to the Sun. Uranus shows a net negative heat budget to space, but the others (including Neptune, farther out) are net positive.

Geomagnetism edit

Two terrestrial planets (Earth and Mercury) display magnetospheres, and thus have molten metal layers. Similarly, all four gas giants have magnetospheres, which indicate layers of conductive fluids. Ganymede also shows a weak magnetosphere, taken as evidence of a subsurface layer of salt water, while the volume around Rhea shows symmetrical effects which may be rings or a magnetic phenomenon. Of these, Earth's magnetosphere is by far the most accessible, including from the surface. It is therefore the most studied, and extraterrestrial magnetospheres are examined in light of prior Earth studies.

Still, differences exist between magnetospheres, pointing to areas needing further research. Jupiter's magnetosphere is stronger than the other gas giants, while Earth's is stronger than Mercury's. Mercury and Uranus have offset magnetospheres, which have no satisfactory explanation yet. Uranus' tipped axis causes its magnetotail to corkscrew behind the planet, with no known analogue. Future Uranian studies may show new magnetospheric phenomena.

Mars shows remnants of an earlier, planetary-scale magnetic field, with stripes as on Earth. This is taken as evidence that the planet had a molten metal core in its prior history, allowing both a magnetosphere and tectonic activity (as on Earth). Both of these have since dissipated. Earth's Moon shows localized magnetic fields, indicating some process other than a large, molten metal core. This may be the source of lunar swirls, not seen on Earth.[34]

Geochemistry edit

Apart from their distance to the Sun, different bodies show chemical variations indicating their formation and history. Neptune is denser than Uranus, taken as one piece of evidence that the two may have switched places in the early Solar System. Comets show both high volatile content, and grains containing refractory materials. This also indicates some mixing of materials through the Solar System when those comets formed. Mercury's inventory of materials by volatility is being used to evaluate different models for its formation and/or subsequent modification.

Isotopic abundances indicate processes over the history of the Solar System. To an extent, all bodies formed from the presolar nebula. Various subsequent processes then alter elemental and isotopic ratios. The gas giants in particular have enough gravity to retain primary atmospheres, taken largely from the presolar nebula, as opposed to the later outgassing and reactions of secondary atmospheres. Differences in gas giant atmospheres compared to solar abundances then indicate some process in that planet's history. Meanwhile, gases at small planets such as Venus and Mars have isotopic differences indicating atmospheric escape processes.{argon isotope ratio planet meteorite}{neon isotope ratio meteorite}

The various modifications of surface minerals, or space weathering, is used to evaluate meteorite and asteroid types and ages. Rocks and metals shielded by atmospheres (particularly thick ones), or other minerals, experience less weathering and fewer implantation chemistries and cosmic ray tracks. Asteroids are currently graded by their spectra, indicating surface properties and mineralogies. Some asteroids appear to have less space weathering, by various processes including a relatively recent formation date or a "freshening" event. As Earth's minerals are well shielded, space weathering is studied via extraterrestrial bodies, and preferably multiple examples.

Kuiper Belt Objects display very weathered or in some cases very fresh surfaces. As the long distances result in low spatial and spectral resolutions, KBO surface chemistries are currently evaluated via analogous moons and asteroids closer to Earth.

Aeronomy and atmospheric physics edit

Earth's atmosphere is far thicker than that of Mars, while far thinner than Venus'. In turn, the envelopes of gas giants are a different class entirely, and show their own gradations. Meanwhile, smaller bodies show tenuous atmospheres ("surface-bound exospheres"), with the exception of Titan and arguably Triton. Comets vary between negligible atmospheres in the outer Solar System, and active comas millions of miles across at perihelion. Exoplanets may in turn possess atmospheric properties known and unknown in the Milky Way Galaxy.

Aeronomy edit

Atmospheric escape is largely a thermal process. The atmosphere a body can retain therefore varies from the warmer inner Solar System, to the cooler outer regions. Different bodies in different Solar System regions provide analogous or contrasting examples. The atmosphere of Titan is considered analogous to an early, colder Earth; the atmosphere of Pluto is considered analogous to an enormous comet.[35][36]

The presence or absence of a magnetic field affects an upper atmosphere, and in turn the overall atmosphere. Impacts of solar wind particles create chemical reactions and ionic species, which may in turn affect magnetospheric phenomena. Earth serves as a counterexample to Venus and Mars, which have no planetary magnetospheres, and to Mercury, with a magnetosphere but negligible atmosphere.

Jupiter's moon Io creates sulfur emissions, and a feature of sulfur and some sodium around that planet. Similarly, Earth's Moon has trace sodium emissions, and a far weaker tail. Mercury also has a trace sodium atmosphere.

Jupiter itself is assumed to have some characteristics of extrasolar "super Jupiters" and brown dwarves.

Seasons edit

Uranus, tipped on its side, is postulated to have seasonal effects far stronger than on Earth. Similarly, Mars is postulated to have varied its axial tilt over eons, and to a far greater extent than on Earth. This is hypothesized to have dramatically altered not only seasons but climates on Mars, for which some evidence has been observed.[37] Venus has negligible tilt, eliminating seasons, and a slow, retrograde rotation, causing different diurnal effects than on Earth and Mars.

Clouds and haze layers edit

From Earth, a planetwide cloud layer is the dominant feature of Venus in the visible spectrum; this is also true of Titan. Venus' cloud layer is composed of sulfur dioxide particles, while Titan's is a mixture of organics.

The gas giant planets display clouds or belts of various compositions, including ammonia and methane.[38]

Circulation and winds edit

Venus and Titan, and to a lesser extent Earth, are super-rotators: the atmosphere turns about the planet faster than the surface beneath. While these atmospheres share physical processes, they exhibit diverse characteristics.[39]

Hadley cells, first postulated and confirmed on Earth, are seen in different forms in other atmospheres. Earth has Hadley cells north and south of its equator, leading to additional cells by latitude. Mars' Hadley circulation is offset from its equator.[40] Titan, a far smaller body, likely has one enormous cell, flipping polarity from northerly to southerly with its seasons.[41][42]

The bands of Jupiter are thought to be numerous Hadley-like cells by latitude.

Storms and cyclonic activity edit

The large storms seen on the gas giants are considered analogous to Earth cyclones. However, this is an imperfect metaphor as expected, due to the large differences in sizes, temperature, and composition between Earth and the gas giants, and even between gas giants.

Polar vortices were observed on Venus and Saturn. In turn, Earth's thinner atmosphere shows weaker polar vorticity and effects.

Lightning and aurorae edit

Both lightning and aurorae have been observed on other bodies after extensive study at Earth. Lightning has been detected on Venus, and may be a sign of active volcanism on that planet, as volcanic lightning is known on Earth.[43][44] Aurorae have been observed on Jupiter and its moon Ganymede.[45]

Comparative climatology edit

An understanding of the evolutionary histories and current states of the Venus and Mars climates is directly relevant for studies of the past, present and future climates of Earth.[46]

Hydrology edit

A growing number of bodies display relict or current hydrological modification. Earth, the "ocean planet," is the prime example. Other bodies display lesser modifications, indicating their similarities and differences. This may be defined to include fluids other than water, such as light hydrocarbons on Titan, or possibly supercritical carbon dioxide on Mars, which do not persist in Earth conditions. Ancient lava flows in turn may be considered a form of hydrological modification, which may be confounded with other fluids.[47] Io currently has lava calderas and lakes. Fluid modification may have occurred on bodies as small as Vesta;[48] hydration in general has been observed.[49]

If fluids include groundwater and vapor, the list of bodies with hydrological modification includes Earth, Mars, and Enceladus, to a lesser extent comets and some asteroids, likely Europa and Triton, and possibly Ceres, Titan, and Pluto. Venus may have had hydrology in its early history, which would since have been erased.

Fluid modification and mineral deposition on Mars, as observed by the MER and MSL rovers, is studied in light of Earth features and minerals.[50] Minerals observed from orbiters and landers indicates formation in aqueous conditions;[51] morphologies indicate fluid action and deposition.[52]

Extant Mars hydrology includes brief, seasonal flows on slopes; however, most Martian water is frozen into its polar caps and subsurface, as indicated by ground penetrating radars and pedestal craters.[53][54] Antifreeze mixtures such as salts, peroxides, and perchlorates may allow fluid flow at Martian temperatures.

Analogues of Mars landforms on Earth include Siberian and Hawaiian valleys, Greenland slopes, the Columbian Plateau, and various playas. Analogues for human expeditions (e.g. geology and hydrology fieldwork) include Devon Island, Canada, Antarctica, Utah, the Euro-Mars project, and Arkaroola, South Australia.[55][56]

The Moon, on the other hand, is a natural laboratory for regolith processes and weathering on anhydrous airless bodies- modification and alteration by meteoroid and micrometeoroid impacts, the implantation of solar and interstellar charged particles, radiation damage, spallation, exposure to ultraviolet radiation, and so on. Knowledge of the processes that create and modify the lunar regolith is essential to understanding the compositional and structural attributes of other airless planet and asteroid regoliths.[57]

Other possibilities include extrasolar planets completely covered by oceans, which would lack some Earthly processes.

Dynamics edit

Earth, alone among terrestrial planets, possesses a large moon. This is thought to confer stability to Earth's axial tilt, and thus seasons and climates. The closest analogue is the Pluto-Charon system, though its axial tilt is completely different. Both the Moon and Charon are hypothesized to have formed via giant impacts.

Giant impacts are hypothesized to account for both the tilt of Uranus, and the retrograde rotation of Venus. Giant impacts are also candidates for the Mars ocean hypothesis, and the high density of Mercury.

Most giant planets (except Neptune) have retinues of moons, rings, ring shepherds, and moon Trojans analogous to mini-solar systems. These systems are postulated to have accreted from analogous gas clouds, and possibly with analogous migrations during their formation periods. The Cassini mission was defended on the grounds that Saturn system dynamics would contribute to studies of Solar System dynamics and formation.

Studies of ring systems inform us of many-body dynamics. This is applicable to the asteroid and Kuiper Belts, and the early Solar System, which had more objects, dust, and gas. It is relevant to the magnetospherics of those bodies. It is also relevant to the dynamics of the Milky Way galaxy and others. In turn, though the Saturnian system is readily studied (by Cassini, ground telescopes, and space telescopes), the simpler and lower mass ring systems of the other giants makes their explanations somewhat easier to fathom. The Jupiter ring system is perhaps more completely understood at present than any of the other three.[58]

Asteroid families and gaps indicate their local dynamics. They are in turn indicative of the Kuiper Belt, and its hypothesized Kuiper cliff. The Hildas and Jupiter Trojans are then relevant to the Neptune Trojans and Plutinos, Twotinos, etc.

Neptune's relative lack of a moon system suggests its formation and dynamics. The migration of Triton explains the ejection or destruction of competing moons, analogous to Hot Jupiters (also in sparse systems), and the Grand Tack hypothesis of Jupiter itself, on a smaller scale.

The planets are considered to have formed by accretion of larger and larger particles, into asteroids and planetesimals, and into today's bodies. Vesta and Ceres are hypothesized to be the only surviving examples of planetesimals, and thus samples of the formative period of the Solar System.

Transits of Mercury and Venus have been observed as analogues of extrasolar transits. As Mercury and Venus transits are far closer and thus appear "deeper," they can be studied in far finer detail. Similarly, analogues to the Solar System's asteroid and Kuiper belts have been observed around other star systems, though in far less detail.

Astrobiology edit

Earth is the only body known to contain life; this results in geologic and atmospheric life signatures apart from the organisms themselves. Methane observed on Mars has been postulated but cannot be definitively ascribed as a biosignature. Multiple processes of non-biological methane generation are seen on Earth as well.[59][60]

The detection of biomarkers or biosignatures on other worlds is an active area of research.[61] Although oxygen and/or ozone are generally considered strong signs of life, these too have alternate, non-biological explanations.[62]

The Galileo mission, while performing a gravity assist flyby of Earth, treated the planet as an extraterrestrial one, in a test of life detection techniques. Conversely, the Deep Impact mission's High Resolution Imager, intended for examining comets starting from great distances, could be repurposed for exoplanet observations in its EPOXI extended mission.

Conversely, detection of life entails identification of those processes favoring or preventing life. This occurs primarily via study of Earth life and Earth processes,[63] though this is in effect a sample size of one. Care must be taken to avoid observation and selection biases. Astrobiologists consider alternative chemistries for life, and study on Earth extremophile organisms that expand the potential definitions of habitable worlds.

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • Murray, B. Earthlike Planets (1981) W. H. Freeman and Company ISBN 0-7167-1148-6[2]
  • Consolmagno, G.; Schaefer, M. (1994). Worlds Apart: A Textbook In Planetary Sciences. ISBN 978-0-13-964131-2.
  • Cattermole, P. (1995). Earth And Other Planets. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-521138-2.
  • Petersen, C.; Beatty, K.; Chaikin, A. (1999). The New Solar System, 4th Edition. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521645874.
  • K. Condie (2005). Earth as an Evolving Planetary System. Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-12-088392-9.
  • C. Cockell (2007). Space on Earth. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-00752-9.
  • J. Bennett; et al. (2012). The Cosmic Perspective, 7th Edition. Addison-Wesley. ISBN 9780321841063.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Lowman, P. (15 August 2002). "6.1". Exploring Space, Exploring Earth: New Understanding of the Earth from Space Research. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-89062-5.
  2. ^ a b Murray, Bruce; Malin, Michael C.; Greeley, Ronald (1981). Earthlike Planets: Surfaces of Mercury, Venus, Earth, Moon, Mars. San Francisco, California: W. H. Freeman & Co. ISBN 978-0716711483.
  3. ^ Sagan, C. (1979). "Sulphur flows on Io". Nature. 280 (5725): 750–53. Bibcode:1979Natur.280..750S. doi:10.1038/280750a0.
  4. ^ Spencer, J. R.; Schneider, N. M. (1996). "Io on the Eve of the Galileo Mission". Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences. 24: 125–90. Bibcode:1996AREPS..24..125S. doi:10.1146/annurev.earth.24.1.125.
  5. ^ Chemtob, S.; Jolliff, B.; et al. (1 April 2010). "Silica coatings in the Ka'u Desert, Hawaii, a Mars analog terrain: A micromorphological, spectral, chemical, and isotopic study" (PDF). Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets. 115 (E4): E04001. Bibcode:2010JGRE..115.4001C. doi:10.1029/2009JE003473.
  6. ^ "Aloha, Mars".
  7. ^ Levy, J.; Marchant, D.; Head, J. (12 September 2009). "Thermal contraction crack polygons on Mars: A synthesis from HiRISE, Phoenix, and terrestrial analog studies". Icarus. 206 (1): 229–252. Bibcode:2010Icar..206..229L. doi:10.1016/j.icarus.2009.09.005.
  8. ^ "Permafrost on Mars and Earth". Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  9. ^ de Pater, Imke; Lissauer, Jack J. (31 December 2014). Planetary Sciences (2nd, revised ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-316-19569-7.
  10. ^ "pancake dome: Venus". Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  11. ^ "Unusual Volcanoes on Venus". Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  12. ^ "NASA - Europa's Hidden Ice Chemistry". Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  13. ^ "NASA mission to Jupiter's moon Europa gets boost from Nunavut glacier". Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  14. ^ Wilhelms, D. (1993). "1-3". To a Rocky Moon: A geologist's history of lunar exploration. University of Arizona Press.
  15. ^ Koerberl, C (2000). Craters on the Moon from Galileo to Wegener: A short history of the Impact Hypothesis and Implications for the Study of terrestrial Impact Craters. Kluver.
  16. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 May 2015. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  17. ^ Hartmann, W. K. (2003). "Megaregolith evolution and cratering cataclysm models--Lunar cataclysm as a misconception (28 years later)". Meteoritics & Planetary Science. 38 (4): 579–593. Bibcode:2003M&PS...38..579H. doi:10.1111/j.1945-5100.2003.tb00028.x.
  18. ^ Arrhenius, G.; Hill, J. (26 April 2010). "The Late Heavy Bombardment of the Moon – an Evolving Problem". Astrobiology Science Conference 2010. 1538: 5519. Bibcode:2010LPICo1538.5519A.
  19. ^ "Dating Planetary Surfaces with Craters Why There Is No Crisis In Crater Count Dating". 2008-10-22. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 September 2014. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  21. ^ "Why Mercury is a hard orange, not a soft peach". Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  22. ^ Jesse Emspak (6 July 2014). "Did Huge Impact Shape Planet Mercury?". Space.com. from the original on 1 June 2015. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  23. ^ Thomas, P.; Parker, J.; et al. (8 Sep 2005). "Differentiation of the asteroid Ceres as revealed by its shape". Nature. 437 (7056): 224–226. Bibcode:2005Natur.437..224T. doi:10.1038/nature03938. PMID 16148926.
  24. ^ Peale, S.; Stanton, R.; et al. (2002). "A Procedure for Determining the Nature of Mercury's core". Meteoritics & Planetary Science. 37 (9): 1269–1283. Bibcode:2002M&PS...37.1269P. doi:10.1111/j.1945-5100.2002.tb00895.x.
  25. ^ Boss, A. (30 September 2002). "Formation of gas and ice giant planets". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 202 (3–4): 513–523. Bibcode:2002E&PSL.202..513B. doi:10.1016/S0012-821X(02)00808-7.
  26. ^ Lambrechts, M.; Johansen, A.; Morbidelli, A. (25 Nov 2014). "Separating gas-giant and ice-giant planets by halting pebble accretion". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 572: A35. arXiv:1408.6087. Bibcode:2014A&A...572A..35L. doi:10.1051/0004-6361/201423814.
  27. ^ Cherkashina, O.; Guseva, E.; Krassilnikov, A. (15 Mar 2004). "Mapping of Rift Zones on Venus, Preliminary Results: Spatial Distribution, Relationship with Regional Plains, Morphology of Fracturing, Topography and Style of Volcanism". 35th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference: 1525. Bibcode:2004LPI....35.1525C.
  28. ^ "The Surface Features of Venus". Retrieved 26 Apr 2015.
  29. ^ Solomon, S. (1993). "A Tectonic Resurfacing Model for Venus". LPSC Xxiv.
  30. ^ Davies, A. Volcanism on Io. Cambridge University Press. p. 292.
  31. ^ Buczowski, D.; Wyrick, D.; Iyer, K.; Kahn, E.; Scully, J.; Nathues, A.; Gaskell, R.; Roatsch, T.; et al. (29 Sep 2012). "Large-scale troughs on Vesta: A signature of planetary tectonics". Geophysical Research Letters. 39 (18): 205. Bibcode:2012GeoRL..3918205B. doi:10.1029/2012gl052959. S2CID 33459478.
  32. ^ Pappalardo, R.; McKinnon, W.; Khurana, K. Europa.
  33. ^ Li, C.; Ingersoll, A. (13 Apr 2015). "Moist convection in hydrogen atmospheres and the frequency of Saturn's giant storms" (PDF). Nature Geoscience. 8 (5): 398–403. Bibcode:2015NatGe...8..398L. doi:10.1038/ngeo2405.
  34. ^ "Magnetic And Spectral Properties Of Lunar Swirls, And A New Mechanism For Their Formation" (PDF). Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  35. ^ Greaves, J.; Helling, C. (2011). "Discovery of carbon monoxide in the upper atmosphere of Pluto". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 414 (1): L36. arXiv:1104.3014. Bibcode:2011MNRAS.414L..36G. doi:10.1111/j.1745-3933.2011.01052.x.
  36. ^ "Is Pluto a giant comet?". Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  37. ^ "NASA Orbiter Finds Martian Rock Record With 10 Beats to the Bar". Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  38. ^ Adumitroaie, V; Gulkis, S; Oyafuso, F (2014). Ammonia-water solution cloud modeling of gas giant planets via phase equilibrium calculations, in 2014 IEEE Aerospace Conference. IEEE.
  39. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  40. ^ De Pateris, I; Lissauer, J. Planetary Sciences. Cambridge University Press.
  41. ^ Rannou, P; Montmessin, F (Jan 2006). "The latitudinal distribution of clouds on Titan". Science. 311 (5758): 201–5. Bibcode:2006Sci...311..201R. doi:10.1126/science.1118424. PMID 16410519.
  42. ^ "Ice Cloud Heralds Fall at Titan's South Pole". 2013-06-08. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  43. ^ "EVIDENCE FOR LIGHTNING ON VENUS". Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  44. ^ "Lightning Strikes Venus". 2014-12-19. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  45. ^ "Comparative Planetary Auroralogy" (PDF). Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  46. ^ "Decadal Survey: Comparative Climatology White Paper" (PDF). Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  47. ^ Leverington, D. (Sep 2011). "A volcanic origin for the outflow channels of Mars: Key evidence and major implications". Geomorphology. 132 (3–4): 51–75. Bibcode:2011Geomo.132...51L. doi:10.1016/j.geomorph.2011.05.022.
  48. ^ Scully, J.; Russell, C.; et al. (1 Feb 2015). "Geomorphological evidence for transient water flow on Vesta". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 411: 151–163. Bibcode:2015E&PSL.411..151S. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2014.12.004.
  49. ^ De Sanctis, M.; Combe, J.; Ammanito, E.; Palomba, E.; Longobardo, A.; McCord, T.; Marchi, S.; Capaccioni, F.; Capria, M.; et al. (3 Oct 2012). "Detection of Widespread Hydrated Materials on Vesta by the VIR Imaging Spectrometer on board the Dawn Mission". Astrophysical Journal Letters. 758 (2): L36. Bibcode:2012ApJ...758L..36D. doi:10.1088/2041-8205/758/2/l36.
  50. ^ "Duststone on Mars: source, transport, deposition, and erosion". Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  51. ^ "NASA's Curiosity Mars Rover Finds Mineral Match". NASA/JPL. November 4, 2014.
  52. ^ Arvidson, R.; Squyres, S.; et al. (24 Jan 2014). "Ancient Aqueous Environments at Endeavour Crater, Mars" (PDF). Science. 343 (6169): 1248097. Bibcode:2014Sci...343G.386A. doi:10.1126/science.1248097. PMID 24458648.
  53. ^ Kadish, S.; Barlow, N. (Jan 2006). "Pedestal Crater Distribution and Implications for a New Model of Formation". 37th Annual Lunar and Planetary Science Conference: 1254. Bibcode:2006LPI....37.1254K.
  54. ^ Kadish, S.; Head (Aug 2008). "Martian pedestal craters: Marginal sublimation pits implicate a climate-related formation mechanism". Geophysical Research Letters. 35 (16): L16104. Bibcode:2008GeoRL..3516104K. doi:10.1029/2008gl034990.
  55. ^ Chapman, M. (2011). The Geology of Mars: Evidence from Earth-Based Analogs. Cambridge University Press.
  56. ^ Clarke, J. (ed.). Mars Analog Research. The Astronautical Society.
  57. ^ National Research Council (2007). The Scientific Context for Exploration of the Moon.
  58. ^ Miner, E.; Wessen, R.; Cuzzi, J. (2007). Planetary Ring Systems. Springer-Praxis.
  59. ^ Müntener, Othmar (2010). "Serpentine and serpentinization: A link between planet formation and life". Geology. 38 (10): 959–960. Bibcode:2010Geo....38..959M. doi:10.1130/focus102010.1.
  60. ^ Velbel, M (Dec 2010). Weathering of olivine and pyroxene on Mars: Evidence from missions, meteorites, and terrestrial mineral analogs, in American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2010. American Geophysical Union.
  61. ^ . University of Delaware. Archived from the original on 19 May 2015. Retrieved 17 May 2015.
  62. ^ "NASA's New Carbon Observatory Will Help Us Understand Alien Worlds". 2014-09-04. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  63. ^ Lim, D.; et al. "Pavilion Lake Research Project" (PDF). Lunar and Planetary Institute. Retrieved 17 May 2015.
  64. ^ "Europlanet Society".

External links edit

  • NASA Astrobiology[1]
  • Astrobiology Magazine- Comparative Planetology[2]
  • Laboratory for Comparative Planetology, Vernadsky Institute[3]
  1. ^ "NASA Astrobiology". Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  2. ^ "Astrobiology Magazine- Comparative Planetology". Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  3. ^ "Laboratory for Comparative Planetology, Vernadsky Institute". Retrieved 2 May 2015.

comparative, planetary, science, comparative, planetology, branch, space, science, planetary, science, which, different, natural, processes, systems, studied, their, effects, phenomena, between, multiple, bodies, planetary, processes, question, include, geolog. Comparative planetary science or comparative planetology is a branch of space science and planetary science in which different natural processes and systems are studied by their effects and phenomena on and between multiple bodies The planetary processes in question include geology hydrology atmospheric physics and interactions such as impact cratering space weathering and magnetospheric physics in the solar wind and possibly biology via astrobiology Comparison of multiple bodies assists the researcher if for no other reason than the Earth is far more accessible than any other body Those distant bodies may then be evaluated in the context of processes already characterized on Earth Conversely other bodies including extrasolar ones may provide additional examples edge cases and counterexamples to earthbound processes without a greater context studying these phenomena in relation to Earth alone may result in low sample sizes and observational biases Contents 1 Background 2 Geology geochemistry and geophysics 2 1 Volcanism 2 2 Cratering 2 3 Differentiation 2 4 Tectonics 2 5 Geomagnetism 2 6 Geochemistry 3 Aeronomy and atmospheric physics 3 1 Aeronomy 3 2 Seasons 3 3 Clouds and haze layers 3 4 Circulation and winds 3 5 Storms and cyclonic activity 3 6 Lightning and aurorae 3 7 Comparative climatology 4 Hydrology 5 Dynamics 6 Astrobiology 7 See also 8 Bibliography 9 References 10 External linksBackground editThe term comparative planetology was coined by George Gamow who reasoned that to fully understand our own planet we must study others Poldervaart focused on the Moon stating An adequate picture of this original planet and its development to the present earth is of great significance is in fact the ultimate goal of geology as the science leading to knowledge and understanding of earth s history 1 Geology geochemistry and geophysics editAll terrestrial planets and some satellites such as the Moon are essentially composed of silicates wrapped around iron cores 1 2 The large outer Solar System moons and Pluto have more ice and less rock and metal but still undergo analogous processes Volcanism edit Main article Volcanism Volcanism on Earth is largely lava based Other terrestrial planets display volcanic features assumed to be lava based evaluated in the context of analogues readily studied on Earth For example Jupiter s moon Io displays extant volcanism including lava flows These flows were initially inferred to be composed mostly of various forms of molten elemental sulfur based on analysis of imaging done by the Voyager probes 3 However Earth based infrared studies done in the 1980s and 1990s caused the consensus to shift in favor of a primarily silicate based model with sulfur playing a secondary role 4 Much of the surface of Mars is composed of various basalts considered analogous to Hawaiian basalts by their spectra and in situ chemical analyses including Martian meteorites 5 6 Mercury and Earth s Moon similarly feature large areas of basalts formed by ancient volcanic processes Surfaces in the polar regions show polygonal morphologies also seen on Earth 7 8 In addition to basalt flows Venus is home to a large number of pancake dome volcanoes created by highly viscous silica rich lava flows These domes lack a known Earth analogue They do bear some morphological resemblance to terrestrial rhyolite dacite lava domes although the pancake domes are much flatter and uniformly round in nature 9 10 11 Certain regions further out in the Solar System exhibit cryovolcanism a process not seen anywhere on earth Cryovolcanism is studied through laboratory experiments conceptual and numerical modeling and by cross comparison to other examples in the field Examples of bodies with cryovolcanic features include comets some asteroids and Centaurs Mars Europa Enceladus Triton and possibly Titan Ceres Pluto and Eris The trace dopants of Europa s ice are currently postulated to contain sulfur 12 This is being evaluated via a Canadian sulfate spring as an analogue in preparation for future Europa probes 13 Small bodies such as comets some asteroid types and dust grains on the other hand serve as counterexamples Assumed to have experienced little or no heating these materials may contain or be samples representing the early Solar System which have since been erased from Earth or any other large body Some extrasolar planets are covered entirely in lava oceans and some are tidally locked planets whose star facing hemisphere is entirely lava Cratering edit Main article Impact crater The craters observed on the Moon were once assumed to be volcanic Earth by comparison did not show a similar crater count nor a high frequency of large meteor events which would be expected as two nearby bodies should experience similar impact rates Eventually this volcanism model was overturned as numerous Earth craters demonstrated by e g shatter cones shocked quartz and other impactites and possibly spall were found after having been eroded over geologic time Craters formed by larger and larger ordnance also served as models The Moon on the other hand shows no atmosphere or hydrosphere and could thus accumulate and preserve impact craters over billions of years despite a low impact rate at any one time In addition more searches by more groups with better equipment highlighted the great number of asteroids presumed to have been even more numerous in earlier Solar System periods 14 15 As on Earth a low crater count on other bodies indicates young surfaces This is particularly credible if nearby regions or bodies show heavier cratering Young surfaces in turn indicate atmospheric tectonic or volcanic or hydrological processing on large bodies and comets or dust redistribution or a relatively recent formation on asteroids i e splitting from a parent body 16 Examination of the cratering record on multiple bodies at multiple areas in the Solar System points to a Late Heavy Bombardment which in turn gives evidence of the Solar System s early history However the Late Heavy Bombardment as currently proposed has some issues and is not completely accepted 17 18 19 One model for Mercury s exceptionally high density compared to other terrestrial planets 20 is the stripping off of a significant amount of crust and or mantle from extremely heavy bombardment 21 22 Differentiation edit Main article Planetary differentiation As a large body Earth can efficiently retain its internal heat from its initial formation plus decay of its radioisotopes over the long timescale of the Solar System It thus retains a molten core and has differentiated dense materials have sunk to the core while light materials float to form a crust Other bodies by comparison may or may not have differentiated based on their formation history radioisotope content further energy input via bombardment distance from the Sun size etc Studying bodies of various sizes and distances from the Sun provides examples and places constraints on the differentiation process Differentiation itself is evaluated indirectly by the mineralogy of a body s surface versus its expected bulk density and mineralogy or via shape effects due to slight variations in gravity 23 Differentiation may also be measured directly by the higher order terms of a body s gravity field as measured by a flyby or gravitational assist and in some cases by librations 24 Edge cases include Vesta and some of the larger moons which show differentiation but are assumed to have since fully solidified The question of whether Earth s Moon has solidified or retains some molten layers has not been definitively answered Additionally differentiation processes are expected to vary along a continuum Bodies may be composed of lighter and heavier rocks and metals a high water ice and volatiles content with less mechanical strength in cooler regions of the Solar System or primarily ices with a low rock metal content even farther from the Sun This continuum is thought to record the varying chemistries of the early Solar System with refractories surviving in warm regions and volatiles driven outward by the young Sun The cores of planets are inaccessible studied indirectly by seismometry gravimetry and in some cases magnetometry However iron and stony iron meteorites are likely fragments from the cores of parent bodies which have partially or completely differentiated then shattered These meteorites are thus the only means of directly examining deep interior materials and their processes Gas giant planets represent another form of differentiation with multiple fluid layers by density Some distinguish further between true gas giants and ice giants further from the Sun 25 26 Tectonics edit Main article Tectonics In turn a molten core may allow plate tectonics of which Earth shows major features Mars as a smaller body than Earth shows no current tectonic activity nor mountain ridges from geologically recent activity This is assumed to be due to an interior that has cooled faster than the Earth see geomagnetism below An edge case may be Venus which does not appear to have extant tectonics However in its history it likely has had tectonic activity but lost it 27 28 It is possible tectonic activity on Venus may still be sufficient to restart after a long era of accumulation 29 Io despite having high volcanism does not show any tectonic activity possibly due to sulfur based magmas with higher temperatures or simply higher volumetric fluxes 30 Meanwhile Vesta s fossae may be considered a form of tectonics despite that body s small size and cool temperatures 31 Europa is a key demonstration of outer planet tectonics Its surface shows movement of ice blocks or rafts strike slip faults and possibly diapirs The question of extant tectonics is far less certain possibly having been replaced by local cryomagmatism 32 Ganymede and Triton may contain tectonically or cryovolcanically resurfaced areas and Miranda s irregular terrains may be tectonic Earthquakes are well studied on Earth as multiple seismometers or large arrays can be used to derive quake waveforms in multiple dimensions The Moon is the only other body to successfully receive a seismometer array marsquakes and the Mars interior are based on simple models and Earth derived assumptions Venus has received negligible seismometry Gas giants may in turn show different forms of heat transfer and mixing 33 Furthermore gas giants show different heat effects by size and distance to the Sun Uranus shows a net negative heat budget to space but the others including Neptune farther out are net positive Geomagnetism edit Main article Magnetosphere Two terrestrial planets Earth and Mercury display magnetospheres and thus have molten metal layers Similarly all four gas giants have magnetospheres which indicate layers of conductive fluids Ganymede also shows a weak magnetosphere taken as evidence of a subsurface layer of salt water while the volume around Rhea shows symmetrical effects which may be rings or a magnetic phenomenon Of these Earth s magnetosphere is by far the most accessible including from the surface It is therefore the most studied and extraterrestrial magnetospheres are examined in light of prior Earth studies Still differences exist between magnetospheres pointing to areas needing further research Jupiter s magnetosphere is stronger than the other gas giants while Earth s is stronger than Mercury s Mercury and Uranus have offset magnetospheres which have no satisfactory explanation yet Uranus tipped axis causes its magnetotail to corkscrew behind the planet with no known analogue Future Uranian studies may show new magnetospheric phenomena Mars shows remnants of an earlier planetary scale magnetic field with stripes as on Earth This is taken as evidence that the planet had a molten metal core in its prior history allowing both a magnetosphere and tectonic activity as on Earth Both of these have since dissipated Earth s Moon shows localized magnetic fields indicating some process other than a large molten metal core This may be the source of lunar swirls not seen on Earth 34 Geochemistry edit Main article Geochemistry Apart from their distance to the Sun different bodies show chemical variations indicating their formation and history Neptune is denser than Uranus taken as one piece of evidence that the two may have switched places in the early Solar System Comets show both high volatile content and grains containing refractory materials This also indicates some mixing of materials through the Solar System when those comets formed Mercury s inventory of materials by volatility is being used to evaluate different models for its formation and or subsequent modification Isotopic abundances indicate processes over the history of the Solar System To an extent all bodies formed from the presolar nebula Various subsequent processes then alter elemental and isotopic ratios The gas giants in particular have enough gravity to retain primary atmospheres taken largely from the presolar nebula as opposed to the later outgassing and reactions of secondary atmospheres Differences in gas giant atmospheres compared to solar abundances then indicate some process in that planet s history Meanwhile gases at small planets such as Venus and Mars have isotopic differences indicating atmospheric escape processes argon isotope ratio planet meteorite neon isotope ratio meteorite The various modifications of surface minerals or space weathering is used to evaluate meteorite and asteroid types and ages Rocks and metals shielded by atmospheres particularly thick ones or other minerals experience less weathering and fewer implantation chemistries and cosmic ray tracks Asteroids are currently graded by their spectra indicating surface properties and mineralogies Some asteroids appear to have less space weathering by various processes including a relatively recent formation date or a freshening event As Earth s minerals are well shielded space weathering is studied via extraterrestrial bodies and preferably multiple examples Kuiper Belt Objects display very weathered or in some cases very fresh surfaces As the long distances result in low spatial and spectral resolutions KBO surface chemistries are currently evaluated via analogous moons and asteroids closer to Earth See also MeteoriticsAeronomy and atmospheric physics editEarth s atmosphere is far thicker than that of Mars while far thinner than Venus In turn the envelopes of gas giants are a different class entirely and show their own gradations Meanwhile smaller bodies show tenuous atmospheres surface bound exospheres with the exception of Titan and arguably Triton Comets vary between negligible atmospheres in the outer Solar System and active comas millions of miles across at perihelion Exoplanets may in turn possess atmospheric properties known and unknown in the Milky Way Galaxy Aeronomy edit Main article Aeronomy Atmospheric escape is largely a thermal process The atmosphere a body can retain therefore varies from the warmer inner Solar System to the cooler outer regions Different bodies in different Solar System regions provide analogous or contrasting examples The atmosphere of Titan is considered analogous to an early colder Earth the atmosphere of Pluto is considered analogous to an enormous comet 35 36 The presence or absence of a magnetic field affects an upper atmosphere and in turn the overall atmosphere Impacts of solar wind particles create chemical reactions and ionic species which may in turn affect magnetospheric phenomena Earth serves as a counterexample to Venus and Mars which have no planetary magnetospheres and to Mercury with a magnetosphere but negligible atmosphere Jupiter s moon Io creates sulfur emissions and a feature of sulfur and some sodium around that planet Similarly Earth s Moon has trace sodium emissions and a far weaker tail Mercury also has a trace sodium atmosphere Jupiter itself is assumed to have some characteristics of extrasolar super Jupiters and brown dwarves Seasons edit Uranus tipped on its side is postulated to have seasonal effects far stronger than on Earth Similarly Mars is postulated to have varied its axial tilt over eons and to a far greater extent than on Earth This is hypothesized to have dramatically altered not only seasons but climates on Mars for which some evidence has been observed 37 Venus has negligible tilt eliminating seasons and a slow retrograde rotation causing different diurnal effects than on Earth and Mars Clouds and haze layers edit From Earth a planetwide cloud layer is the dominant feature of Venus in the visible spectrum this is also true of Titan Venus cloud layer is composed of sulfur dioxide particles while Titan s is a mixture of organics The gas giant planets display clouds or belts of various compositions including ammonia and methane 38 Circulation and winds edit Venus and Titan and to a lesser extent Earth are super rotators the atmosphere turns about the planet faster than the surface beneath While these atmospheres share physical processes they exhibit diverse characteristics 39 Hadley cells first postulated and confirmed on Earth are seen in different forms in other atmospheres Earth has Hadley cells north and south of its equator leading to additional cells by latitude Mars Hadley circulation is offset from its equator 40 Titan a far smaller body likely has one enormous cell flipping polarity from northerly to southerly with its seasons 41 42 The bands of Jupiter are thought to be numerous Hadley like cells by latitude Storms and cyclonic activity edit The large storms seen on the gas giants are considered analogous to Earth cyclones However this is an imperfect metaphor as expected due to the large differences in sizes temperature and composition between Earth and the gas giants and even between gas giants Polar vortices were observed on Venus and Saturn In turn Earth s thinner atmosphere shows weaker polar vorticity and effects Lightning and aurorae edit Both lightning and aurorae have been observed on other bodies after extensive study at Earth Lightning has been detected on Venus and may be a sign of active volcanism on that planet as volcanic lightning is known on Earth 43 44 Aurorae have been observed on Jupiter and its moon Ganymede 45 Comparative climatology edit An understanding of the evolutionary histories and current states of the Venus and Mars climates is directly relevant for studies of the past present and future climates of Earth 46 Hydrology editMain article Hydrology A growing number of bodies display relict or current hydrological modification Earth the ocean planet is the prime example Other bodies display lesser modifications indicating their similarities and differences This may be defined to include fluids other than water such as light hydrocarbons on Titan or possibly supercritical carbon dioxide on Mars which do not persist in Earth conditions Ancient lava flows in turn may be considered a form of hydrological modification which may be confounded with other fluids 47 Io currently has lava calderas and lakes Fluid modification may have occurred on bodies as small as Vesta 48 hydration in general has been observed 49 If fluids include groundwater and vapor the list of bodies with hydrological modification includes Earth Mars and Enceladus to a lesser extent comets and some asteroids likely Europa and Triton and possibly Ceres Titan and Pluto Venus may have had hydrology in its early history which would since have been erased Fluid modification and mineral deposition on Mars as observed by the MER and MSL rovers is studied in light of Earth features and minerals 50 Minerals observed from orbiters and landers indicates formation in aqueous conditions 51 morphologies indicate fluid action and deposition 52 Extant Mars hydrology includes brief seasonal flows on slopes however most Martian water is frozen into its polar caps and subsurface as indicated by ground penetrating radars and pedestal craters 53 54 Antifreeze mixtures such as salts peroxides and perchlorates may allow fluid flow at Martian temperatures Analogues of Mars landforms on Earth include Siberian and Hawaiian valleys Greenland slopes the Columbian Plateau and various playas Analogues for human expeditions e g geology and hydrology fieldwork include Devon Island Canada Antarctica Utah the Euro Mars project and Arkaroola South Australia 55 56 The Moon on the other hand is a natural laboratory for regolith processes and weathering on anhydrous airless bodies modification and alteration by meteoroid and micrometeoroid impacts the implantation of solar and interstellar charged particles radiation damage spallation exposure to ultraviolet radiation and so on Knowledge of the processes that create and modify the lunar regolith is essential to understanding the compositional and structural attributes of other airless planet and asteroid regoliths 57 Other possibilities include extrasolar planets completely covered by oceans which would lack some Earthly processes See also Extraterrestrial liquid water and Water on MarsDynamics editMain article Celestial mechanics Earth alone among terrestrial planets possesses a large moon This is thought to confer stability to Earth s axial tilt and thus seasons and climates The closest analogue is the Pluto Charon system though its axial tilt is completely different Both the Moon and Charon are hypothesized to have formed via giant impacts Giant impacts are hypothesized to account for both the tilt of Uranus and the retrograde rotation of Venus Giant impacts are also candidates for the Mars ocean hypothesis and the high density of Mercury Most giant planets except Neptune have retinues of moons rings ring shepherds and moon Trojans analogous to mini solar systems These systems are postulated to have accreted from analogous gas clouds and possibly with analogous migrations during their formation periods The Cassini mission was defended on the grounds that Saturn system dynamics would contribute to studies of Solar System dynamics and formation Studies of ring systems inform us of many body dynamics This is applicable to the asteroid and Kuiper Belts and the early Solar System which had more objects dust and gas It is relevant to the magnetospherics of those bodies It is also relevant to the dynamics of the Milky Way galaxy and others In turn though the Saturnian system is readily studied by Cassini ground telescopes and space telescopes the simpler and lower mass ring systems of the other giants makes their explanations somewhat easier to fathom The Jupiter ring system is perhaps more completely understood at present than any of the other three 58 Asteroid families and gaps indicate their local dynamics They are in turn indicative of the Kuiper Belt and its hypothesized Kuiper cliff The Hildas and Jupiter Trojans are then relevant to the Neptune Trojans and Plutinos Twotinos etc Neptune s relative lack of a moon system suggests its formation and dynamics The migration of Triton explains the ejection or destruction of competing moons analogous to Hot Jupiters also in sparse systems and the Grand Tack hypothesis of Jupiter itself on a smaller scale The planets are considered to have formed by accretion of larger and larger particles into asteroids and planetesimals and into today s bodies Vesta and Ceres are hypothesized to be the only surviving examples of planetesimals and thus samples of the formative period of the Solar System Transits of Mercury and Venus have been observed as analogues of extrasolar transits As Mercury and Venus transits are far closer and thus appear deeper they can be studied in far finer detail Similarly analogues to the Solar System s asteroid and Kuiper belts have been observed around other star systems though in far less detail See also Formation and evolution of the Solar System and Numerical model of the Solar SystemAstrobiology editMain article Astrobiology Earth is the only body known to contain life this results in geologic and atmospheric life signatures apart from the organisms themselves Methane observed on Mars has been postulated but cannot be definitively ascribed as a biosignature Multiple processes of non biological methane generation are seen on Earth as well 59 60 The detection of biomarkers or biosignatures on other worlds is an active area of research 61 Although oxygen and or ozone are generally considered strong signs of life these too have alternate non biological explanations 62 The Galileo mission while performing a gravity assist flyby of Earth treated the planet as an extraterrestrial one in a test of life detection techniques Conversely the Deep Impact mission s High Resolution Imager intended for examining comets starting from great distances could be repurposed for exoplanet observations in its EPOXI extended mission Conversely detection of life entails identification of those processes favoring or preventing life This occurs primarily via study of Earth life and Earth processes 63 though this is in effect a sample size of one Care must be taken to avoid observation and selection biases Astrobiologists consider alternative chemistries for life and study on Earth extremophile organisms that expand the potential definitions of habitable worlds See also editEuroplanet 64 List of Mars analogs Lunar Crater National Natural Landmark Terrestrial Analogue SitesBibliography editMurray B Earthlike Planets 1981 W H Freeman and Company ISBN 0 7167 1148 6 2 Consolmagno G Schaefer M 1994 Worlds Apart A Textbook In Planetary Sciences ISBN 978 0 13 964131 2 Cattermole P 1995 Earth And Other Planets Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 521138 2 Petersen C Beatty K Chaikin A 1999 The New Solar System 4th Edition Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521645874 K Condie 2005 Earth as an Evolving Planetary System Elsevier ISBN 978 0 12 088392 9 C Cockell 2007 Space on Earth Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 00752 9 J Bennett et al 2012 The Cosmic Perspective 7th Edition Addison Wesley ISBN 9780321841063 References edit a b Lowman P 15 August 2002 6 1 Exploring Space Exploring Earth New Understanding of the Earth from Space Research Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 89062 5 a b Murray Bruce Malin Michael C Greeley Ronald 1981 Earthlike Planets Surfaces of Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars San Francisco California W H Freeman amp Co ISBN 978 0716711483 Sagan C 1979 Sulphur flows on Io Nature 280 5725 750 53 Bibcode 1979Natur 280 750S doi 10 1038 280750a0 Spencer J R Schneider N M 1996 Io on the Eve of the Galileo Mission Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences 24 125 90 Bibcode 1996AREPS 24 125S doi 10 1146 annurev earth 24 1 125 Chemtob S Jolliff B et al 1 April 2010 Silica coatings in the Ka u Desert Hawaii a Mars analog terrain A micromorphological spectral chemical and isotopic study PDF Journal of Geophysical Research Planets 115 E4 E04001 Bibcode 2010JGRE 115 4001C doi 10 1029 2009JE003473 Aloha Mars Levy J Marchant D Head J 12 September 2009 Thermal contraction crack polygons on Mars A synthesis from HiRISE Phoenix and terrestrial analog studies Icarus 206 1 229 252 Bibcode 2010Icar 206 229L doi 10 1016 j icarus 2009 09 005 Permafrost on Mars and Earth Retrieved 26 April 2015 de Pater Imke Lissauer Jack J 31 December 2014 Planetary Sciences 2nd revised ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 316 19569 7 pancake dome Venus Retrieved 26 April 2015 Unusual Volcanoes on Venus Retrieved 26 April 2015 NASA Europa s Hidden Ice Chemistry Retrieved 26 April 2015 NASA mission to Jupiter s moon Europa gets boost from Nunavut glacier Retrieved 26 April 2015 Wilhelms D 1993 1 3 To a Rocky Moon A geologist s history of lunar exploration University of Arizona Press Koerberl C 2000 Craters on the Moon from Galileo to Wegener A short history of the Impact Hypothesis and Implications for the Study of terrestrial Impact Craters Kluver Comparative Cratering Processes PDF Archived from the original PDF on 20 May 2015 Retrieved 26 April 2015 Hartmann W K 2003 Megaregolith evolution and cratering cataclysm models Lunar cataclysm as a misconception 28 years later Meteoritics amp Planetary Science 38 4 579 593 Bibcode 2003M amp PS 38 579H doi 10 1111 j 1945 5100 2003 tb00028 x Arrhenius G Hill J 26 April 2010 The Late Heavy Bombardment of the Moon an Evolving Problem Astrobiology Science Conference 2010 1538 5519 Bibcode 2010LPICo1538 5519A Dating Planetary Surfaces with Craters Why There Is No Crisis In Crater Count Dating 2008 10 22 Retrieved 26 April 2015 Question 1 Why is Mercury so dense MESSENGER Archived from the original on 4 September 2014 Retrieved 26 April 2015 Why Mercury is a hard orange not a soft peach Retrieved 26 April 2015 Jesse Emspak 6 July 2014 Did Huge Impact Shape Planet Mercury Space com Archived from the original on 1 June 2015 Retrieved 26 April 2015 Thomas P Parker J et al 8 Sep 2005 Differentiation of the asteroid Ceres as revealed by its shape Nature 437 7056 224 226 Bibcode 2005Natur 437 224T doi 10 1038 nature03938 PMID 16148926 Peale S Stanton R et al 2002 A Procedure for Determining the Nature of Mercury s core Meteoritics amp Planetary Science 37 9 1269 1283 Bibcode 2002M amp PS 37 1269P doi 10 1111 j 1945 5100 2002 tb00895 x Boss A 30 September 2002 Formation of gas and ice giant planets Earth and Planetary Science Letters 202 3 4 513 523 Bibcode 2002E amp PSL 202 513B doi 10 1016 S0012 821X 02 00808 7 Lambrechts M Johansen A Morbidelli A 25 Nov 2014 Separating gas giant and ice giant planets by halting pebble accretion Astronomy and Astrophysics 572 A35 arXiv 1408 6087 Bibcode 2014A amp A 572A 35L doi 10 1051 0004 6361 201423814 Cherkashina O Guseva E Krassilnikov A 15 Mar 2004 Mapping of Rift Zones on Venus Preliminary Results Spatial Distribution Relationship with Regional Plains Morphology of Fracturing Topography and Style of Volcanism 35th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference 1525 Bibcode 2004LPI 35 1525C The Surface Features of Venus Retrieved 26 Apr 2015 Solomon S 1993 A Tectonic Resurfacing Model for Venus LPSC Xxiv Davies A Volcanism on Io Cambridge University Press p 292 Buczowski D Wyrick D Iyer K Kahn E Scully J Nathues A Gaskell R Roatsch T et al 29 Sep 2012 Large scale troughs on Vesta A signature of planetary tectonics Geophysical Research Letters 39 18 205 Bibcode 2012GeoRL 3918205B doi 10 1029 2012gl052959 S2CID 33459478 Pappalardo R McKinnon W Khurana K Europa Li C Ingersoll A 13 Apr 2015 Moist convection in hydrogen atmospheres and the frequency of Saturn s giant storms PDF Nature Geoscience 8 5 398 403 Bibcode 2015NatGe 8 398L doi 10 1038 ngeo2405 Magnetic And Spectral Properties Of Lunar Swirls And A New Mechanism For Their Formation PDF Retrieved 26 April 2015 Greaves J Helling C 2011 Discovery of carbon monoxide in the upper atmosphere of Pluto Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 414 1 L36 arXiv 1104 3014 Bibcode 2011MNRAS 414L 36G doi 10 1111 j 1745 3933 2011 01052 x Is Pluto a giant comet Retrieved 9 May 2015 NASA Orbiter Finds Martian Rock Record With 10 Beats to the Bar Retrieved 9 May 2015 Adumitroaie V Gulkis S Oyafuso F 2014 Ammonia water solution cloud modeling of gas giant planets via phase equilibrium calculations in 2014 IEEE Aerospace Conference IEEE Dynamics in planetary Atmospheric Physics comparative studies of equatorial superrotation for Venus Titan and earth PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 26 April 2015 De Pateris I Lissauer J Planetary Sciences Cambridge University Press Rannou P Montmessin F Jan 2006 The latitudinal distribution of clouds on Titan Science 311 5758 201 5 Bibcode 2006Sci 311 201R doi 10 1126 science 1118424 PMID 16410519 Ice Cloud Heralds Fall at Titan s South Pole 2013 06 08 Retrieved 9 May 2015 EVIDENCE FOR LIGHTNING ON VENUS Retrieved 9 May 2015 Lightning Strikes Venus 2014 12 19 Retrieved 9 May 2015 Comparative Planetary Auroralogy PDF Retrieved 26 April 2015 Decadal Survey Comparative Climatology White Paper PDF Retrieved 26 April 2015 Leverington D Sep 2011 A volcanic origin for the outflow channels of Mars Key evidence and major implications Geomorphology 132 3 4 51 75 Bibcode 2011Geomo 132 51L doi 10 1016 j geomorph 2011 05 022 Scully J Russell C et al 1 Feb 2015 Geomorphological evidence for transient water flow on Vesta Earth and Planetary Science Letters 411 151 163 Bibcode 2015E amp PSL 411 151S doi 10 1016 j epsl 2014 12 004 De Sanctis M Combe J Ammanito E Palomba E Longobardo A McCord T Marchi S Capaccioni F Capria M et al 3 Oct 2012 Detection of Widespread Hydrated Materials on Vesta by the VIR Imaging Spectrometer on board the Dawn Mission Astrophysical Journal Letters 758 2 L36 Bibcode 2012ApJ 758L 36D doi 10 1088 2041 8205 758 2 l36 Duststone on Mars source transport deposition and erosion Retrieved 12 May 2015 NASA s Curiosity Mars Rover Finds Mineral Match NASA JPL November 4 2014 Arvidson R Squyres S et al 24 Jan 2014 Ancient Aqueous Environments at Endeavour Crater Mars PDF Science 343 6169 1248097 Bibcode 2014Sci 343G 386A doi 10 1126 science 1248097 PMID 24458648 Kadish S Barlow N Jan 2006 Pedestal Crater Distribution and Implications for a New Model of Formation 37th Annual Lunar and Planetary Science Conference 1254 Bibcode 2006LPI 37 1254K Kadish S Head Aug 2008 Martian pedestal craters Marginal sublimation pits implicate a climate related formation mechanism Geophysical Research Letters 35 16 L16104 Bibcode 2008GeoRL 3516104K doi 10 1029 2008gl034990 Chapman M 2011 The Geology of Mars Evidence from Earth Based Analogs Cambridge University Press Clarke J ed Mars Analog Research The Astronautical Society National Research Council 2007 The Scientific Context for Exploration of the Moon Miner E Wessen R Cuzzi J 2007 Planetary Ring Systems Springer Praxis Muntener Othmar 2010 Serpentine and serpentinization A link between planet formation and life Geology 38 10 959 960 Bibcode 2010Geo 38 959M doi 10 1130 focus102010 1 Velbel M Dec 2010 Weathering of olivine and pyroxene on Mars Evidence from missions meteorites and terrestrial mineral analogs in American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting 2010 American Geophysical Union Biosignatures of Fe oxidizing microbes University of Delaware Archived from the original on 19 May 2015 Retrieved 17 May 2015 NASA s New Carbon Observatory Will Help Us Understand Alien Worlds 2014 09 04 Retrieved 26 April 2015 Lim D et al Pavilion Lake Research Project PDF Lunar and Planetary Institute Retrieved 17 May 2015 Europlanet Society External links editNASA Astrobiology 1 Astrobiology Magazine Comparative Planetology 2 Laboratory for Comparative Planetology Vernadsky Institute 3 NASA Astrobiology Retrieved 2 May 2015 Astrobiology Magazine Comparative Planetology Retrieved 2 May 2015 Laboratory for Comparative Planetology Vernadsky Institute Retrieved 2 May 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Comparative planetary science amp oldid 1190723383, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.