![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Posted to uplink.space.com:
exoscientist dust 10/25/04 10:42 PM A closer Mars orbit as the cause of its early "warm, wet period." [ exoscientist] In reply to: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Planetary accretion in the inner Solar System [ AlexBlackwell] Thanks for the link. This reminds me of research on the position of planets at their formation and where they wind up: Moving the Orbits of Planets http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/faculty/je...b/migrate.html This notes that present theories suggest some planets moved outwards while others moved inwards. There is also a paper on the outwards migration of Neptune in the August issue of Icarus. I wonder if this can explain the "faint-Sun paradox" in regards to the Earth and Mars. This is the problem that the Sun was supposed to be significantly fainter early in the life of the Solar System but both Earth and Mars show signs of liquid water carved channels at this early time. This is a big part of the justification for the viewpoint of some Mars scientists that Mars was cold and dry early in its history because theories that propose greenhouse heating under a thicker atmosphere have difficulty getting the required amount of heating. But perhaps the explanation lies in the possibility that these planets were closer to the Sun early on and that is what allowed them to have the extensive liquid water carved features. Bob Clark ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A report to be presented to the Fall 2004 AGU meeting will argue that a Mars orbit closer to the Sun may partially explain how Mars was able to remain warm enough for large scale water carved features to be formed early in its history: ====================================== 0800h AN: P21A-0211 TI: Mars Orbit and Temperatu Why and When an Early wet Mars AU: * Leubner, I H EM: AF: Rochester Institute for Fundamental Research, 35 Hillcrest Drive, Penfield, NY 14526 United States AB: It is the intent of this work to present a model which predicts the time when liquid water was present on Mars. Experimental evidence indicates that liquid water existed on the planet Mars at 2.9 - 3.4 billion years ago, when Mars was considered to be cold. A model is presented that predicts Mars orbit and temperature variations based on solar radiative and non-radiative (solar wind) mass losses which affect planetary orbits. Mars orbits are predicted between 198 and 206 million Km at its formation five billion years ago vs. presently 228 million Km. The correlation between the solar (radiative) constant and planetary orbit estimates the transition from liquid water to ice (273K) to have occurred at about 3.4-3.8 billion years before the present time, which is in good agreement with the experimental estimate (2.9 - 3.4 Byr). Additional effects that are expected to extend higher Mars surface temperatures closer to the present are discussed. Examples are the planetary cooling rate after formation and effects due to hothouse gases, like carbon dioxide and water vapor, and effects dependent on variations in solar volume. ====================================== These are non-peer reviewed abstracts of course. Bob Clark http://uplink.space.com/showflat.php...r=6275&fpart=3 |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Robert Clark wrote:
[snip] --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Planetary accretion in the inner Solar System [ AlexBlackwell] Thanks for the link. This reminds me of research on the position of planets at their formation and where they wind up: Moving the Orbits of Planets http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/faculty/je...b/migrate.html This notes that present theories suggest some planets moved outwards while others moved inwards. [snop] If Mars moved, originally being in an orbit closer to the sun, why are the asteroids still there? Orbital resonances with Jupiter-Mars would not have existed. -- Uncle Al http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/ (Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals) http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/qz.pdf |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Uncle Al wrote:
If Mars moved, originally being in an orbit closer to the sun, why are the asteroids still there? Orbital resonances with Jupiter-Mars would not have existed. Din anyone calculated that Orbital resonance betwen Jupiter-Mars caused the "missing plannet" not to aggregate ? Mars mass is so small. I would rather suspect gravitational influence betwen Jupiter and Sun to be the cause for the asteroid belt. So Mars may been free to hover around without disturbing to much the site. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Space Calendar - January 27, 2004 | Ron | Astronomy Misc | 7 | January 29th 04 09:29 PM |
Major Mars Express scheduled orbit change successful (Forwarded) | Andrew Yee | Astronomy Misc | 0 | December 30th 03 10:21 PM |
Japan admits its Mars probe is failing | JimO | Policy | 16 | December 6th 03 02:23 PM |
Space Calendar - August 28, 2003 | Ron Baalke | Misc | 0 | August 28th 03 05:32 PM |
Space Calendar - June 27, 2003 | Ron Baalke | Misc | 3 | June 28th 03 05:36 PM |