courses:ast100:4.2
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| courses:ast100:4.2 [2026/03/18 05:57] – asad | courses:ast100:4.2 [2026/03/18 06:20] (current) – [2. Saturn] asad | ||
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| ====== 4.2 Types of planets ====== | ====== 4.2 Types of planets ====== | ||
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| + | ===== - Classification ===== | ||
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| - | The relationship between planetary mass and radius provides a critical diagnostic for internal composition and density, as illustrated by the distribution of discovery methods. Planets | + | While orbital period and radius define these broad categories, the relationship between planetary mass and radius provides a critical diagnostic for internal composition and density. As illustrated by the distribution of discovery methods, planets |
| ===== - Saturn ===== | ===== - Saturn ===== | ||
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| - | Saturn functions as a complex miniature solar system, characterized | + | Understanding the low-density regime of gas giants is best achieved by examining |
| ===== - The Earth ===== | ===== - The Earth ===== | ||
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| + | In contrast to the diffuse gas giants, the terrestrial regime is defined by the high-density, | ||
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| + | These internal dynamics manifest at the surface through plate tectonics, driven by convection currents within the asthenosphere where heated material rises and cooler material sinks in a continuous cycle. At convergent boundaries, oceanic crust undergoes subduction, sinking into the mantle to be recycled, a process marked by oceanic sediments being dragged into the subduction zone. This recycling periodically renews the crust, while rising molten lava at volcanic arcs creates new continental material, effectively making the surface " | ||
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| + | Over the last billion years, this tectonic history has been defined by the cyclic assembly and dispersal of supercontinents. Approximately 1000 Ma (million years ago), the supercontinent Rodinia dominated the planetary surface before beginning its fragmentation around 750 Ma. As plates drifted across the globe, individual continental fragments eventually converged again, leading to the formation of Pangea roughly 335 Ma. This massive landmass centralized Earth' | ||
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| + | While internal heat drives the surface' | ||
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| + | This magnetic field extends over 1 million kilometers into space, forming a teardrop-shaped envelope that deflects high-energy charged particles streaming from the Sun. As solar wind interacts with this field, particles become trapped, spiraling along magnetic field lines and concentrating into the Van Allen radiation belts. These toroidal regions of intense radiation prevent lethal solar plasma from stripping away the atmosphere, effectively sheltering the planet. The field lines converge at the magnetic north and south poles, where particles occasionally leak into the upper atmosphere to create auroras. Without this sustained magnetic protection, the Earth' | ||
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