Mercury Data (Table 11-1) 11a. Sun-Scorched Mercury. Mercury Data: Numbers

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11a. Sun-Scorched Mercury Earth-based observations of Mercury Mercury s rotation & year Mariner 10 s images of Mercury Mercury s interior Mercury Data (Table 11-1) Mercury Data: Numbers Diameter: 4,878.km 0.38. Earth Mass: 3.3. 10 23 kg 0.055. Earth Density: 5.4. water 0.99. Earth Orbit: 5.8. 10 7 km 0.39 AU Day: 58.65 days 58.65. Earth Year: 87.97 days 0.24. Earth Mercury Data: Special Features Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun Mercury is the smallest terrestrial planet Mercury has essentially no atmosphere 3 sidereal days = 2 sidereal years Mercury exhibits unique 3-to-2 spin-orbit coupling Mercury is very heavily cratered Mercury is a visual twin of the Moon except Mercury does not have any maria (i.e., seas ) Mercury s interior is dominated by an iron core 75% the diameter & 42% the volume Mercury is very difficult to observe from Earth Mercury is never >28 from the Sun This third week of February 2013 Earth-Based Observations of Mercury Brighter than any star (at times) Albedo is only 0.12, the same as weathered asphalt Difficult to observe from Earth Copernicus apparently never saw Mercury Neither did I until April 2002 despite many attempts Elongation maxima of Mercury Maximum eastern elongation of 18 Evening sky Maximum western elongation of 28 Morning sky Elongation favorability of Mercury Unfavorable Eastern & low angle to the horizon Favorable Western & high angle to the horizon Conjunctions Three inferior per year Solar transits Crossing in front of the Sun Aphelion in May & perihelion in November Transit of Mercury: 8 November 2006 2006 Transit

Mercury s Elongations Favorable & Unfavorable Elongations Evening Morning Western elongation Eastern elongation High-angle to horizon Low-angle to horizon Morning sky Evening sky Mercury s Greatest Elongations Eastern (Evening) Western (Morning) Friday 26 October 2012 Tuesday 4 December 2012 Saturday 16 February 2013 Sunday 31 March 2013 Wednesday 12 June 2013 Tuesday 30 July 2013 Wednesday 9 October 2013 Monday 18 November 2013 Friday 31 January 2014 Friday 14 March 2014 Sunday 25 May 2014 Saturday 12 July 2014 Sunday 21 September 2014 Saturday 1 November 2014 Mercury Chaser's Calculator Mercury s Rotation & Revolution Determining Mercury s axial rotation rate 1880s Schiaparelli wrongly concludes 1-to-1 S.O.C. Unable to see enough surface detail with his telescopes 1962 Radio noise emitted from Mercury Passive Sunlit side blackbody radiation curve ~623 K Expected radiant temperature Sunless side blackbody radiation curve ~103 K Unexpected radiant temperature Too high! Implied that Mercury has no permanent sunless side 1965 Arecibo radio telescope Active Transmitted 1 precise radio λ to Mercury Reflected radio signal analyzed for Doppler shift Mercury s left side Very small blue shift Approaching Mercury s right side Very small red shift Receding Measured at very nearly 59 days 2/3 of Mercury s year 3-to-2 spin-orbit coupling Unique in the Solar System Measuring Mercury s Axial Rotation Mercury s 3-to-2 Spin-Orbit Coupling

Causes of 3-to-2 Spin-Orbit Coupling Solid Sun tides distort Mercury into an ellipsoid There is a tidal bulge on opposite sides of Mercury Mercury is in a highly elliptical orbit Mercury s aphelion distance is ~ 1.52 x perihelion The Sun s gravitational force varies ~ 2.3 x The Sun s gravitational force cannot lock onto one side The Sun s gravitational force can lock onto one axis Some effects 1.00 Mercury day = 2.00 Mercury years Occasional retrograde Sun motion in Mercury s sky Slow East -to-west sunset Slow West-to-East sunrise Slow East -to-west sunset Mariner 10 at Mercury (1974 & 1975) Mariner 10 s Images of Mercury Only three passes of Mercury Mariner 10 orbited the Sun, not Mercury 1.00 Mariner 10 orbit every 2.00 Mercury years March 29, 1974 ~704 km above Mercury September 21, 1974 ~47,000 km above Mercury March 16, 1975 ~327 km above Mercury Same hemisphere toward the Sun each time Mariner 10 obtained images approaching & leaving Detailed mosaics of only one hemisphere Mercury & the Moon Compared Mercury s Surface Casually, Mercury looks much like the Moon Mercury is heavily cratered but Crater density is not as high as on the Moon Mercury has gray intercrater plains, not black maria Mercury has long, irregular ridges & scarps Probably shrinkage features as Mercury cooled Most materials shrink as they solidify The surface solidifies before the interior When the interior solidifies, the surface gets compressed Only ½ of Mercury s surface was well-known The Mariner 10 spacecraft went past three times Precisely the same face toward the Sun both times Mercury & Moon: Subtle Differences Mercurian craters & plains Lunar highland craters

Mercury s Shrinkage Scarps (Cliffs) Mercury s Caloris Basin Very similar to the Moon s Mare Orientale Much larger than any other impact crater Multi-ringed Not flooded with lava Jumbled terrain on opposite side of Mercury Seismic wave energy focused by Mercury s core Similar to 17 October 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake Seismic wave energy focused on San Francisco Bay area Much stronger shaking than closer to the quake epicenter Strong enough to fracture the surface Chaotic hills ~100 to ~1,800 m high Large smooth-floor crater superimposed on hills Impact after formation of the Caloris Basin Mercury & Moon: Impact Basins Caloris Basin Mercury Mare Orientale Moon The Caloris Basin: A Second Look http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/file:mercury_double-ring_impact_basin.png The Caloris Basin: A Third Look Mercury s Interior Dominated by a very large iron core Mercury ~75% of diameter ~42% of volume Earth ~55% of diameter ~17% of volume Moon ~20% of diameter ~ 1% of volume Proposed causes Too hot for condensation of low-density minerals Strong solar wind removed low-density materials Head-on impact with a planetesimal Computer simulations favor this hypothesis

Planetary Interiors: Mercury & Earth Mercury Messenger Spacecraft Mercury s de Graft Crater Mercury s Jumbled (Weird) Terrain http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/gallery/sciencephotos/pics/ew1017384139g.3band.mapped.png http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/gallery/sciencephotos/pics/caloris_antipode.jpg Mercury s Formation: Head-On Impact Important Concepts Mercury seen from Earth Very bright yet very elusive Always close to Earth s horizon Maximum E. & W. elongations Never more than 28 from the Sun Mercury s unusual axial rotation 3-to-2 spin-orbit coupling Solid tides distort Mercury s shape Radically changing solar gravity Mariner 10 at Mercury Made three passes Exactly 2 Mercurial years apart Imaged only one-half of its surface Result of 3-to-2 spin-orbit coupling Remarkably Moon-like surface Heavily cratered Caloris Basin & jumbled terrain Intercrater plains & no maria Ridges & scarps Mercury s interior Completely core dominated Comparison with the Earth & Moon Probable head-on planetesimal impact