Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

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Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy

Transcript of Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Page 1: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Water, Water, Everywhere?

Anuradha Koratkar,

Susan Hoban,

Albert Hill, and

Brendan Shaughnessy

Page 2: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Water is the driver of Nature. - Leonardo da Vinci

Let us brainstorm the importance of water to life

1.

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5.

6.

Page 3: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Water is a necessity for every form of life known

Does anyone have any other suggestion?

Use the chat to respond, or *6 on your telephone

Page 4: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Importance of water to life

• Water to drink; we need to stay hydrated to remain alive; we are 55 – 75% water!

• Solar energy converted by plants; water is the catalyst that helps plants grow.

• Water vapor in the atmosphere traps radiation and warms up the Earth.

• Earth’s oceans affect climate and store heat.

Page 5: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Importance of water in space exploration

• Water to drink.

• Water to grow plants.

• Water can be broken apart to make air (oxygen) and rocket fuel (oxygen + hydrogen).

• Water for protection.

• Water is heavy, too expensive to carry.

Page 6: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Where can we find water?

Page 7: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Water in the solar system - Comets

• Detected in comet’s tails.

• Up to 80% can be water ice.

Page 8: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

• Indications that water once flowed on the surface.

• Much of the water may exist as subsurface ice.

Water in the solar system - Mars

Page 9: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Water in the solar system - Mars

• Polar ice caps are mostly frozen carbon di-oxide and trace amounts of water.

Page 10: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Water in the solar system – Europa and Ganymede

• Cracked surface with many fissures

• There may actually be a liquid ocean under the ice!

Europa

Ganymede

Page 11: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Why is water unusual?

• Earth is the only known location in the solar system where liquid water exists.

• All three states of water are found on Earth.

• Solid form, ice, is less dense than the liquid form.

Page 12: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Water in the Earth-Moon System

• Comets and asteroids may have provided all the water on Earth.

• The Earth and Moon are about the same distance from the Sun.

• The Earth has plenty of evidence for water in all states.

• We do not see such evidence on the Moon.

Page 13: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Why is water not abundant on the Moon? 1.

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Page 14: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Temperature and distance

• Temperature of a planet depends on– Distance from

the Sun– The greenhouse

effect

Page 15: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Mercury

Venus

Earth

Mars Jupiter

SaturnUranus

Neptune

Pluto

Page 16: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Phase diagrams

Pressure

Temperature

1 atm

Page 17: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Phase Diagram for Water

1 atm

Liquid

Gas

Solid

Pressure

Temperature (C)0 100

T

C

Page 18: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Facts about the Moon• The temperature on the Moon is expected to

be -20 degrees C because of its distance from the Sun.

• A “day” on the Moon is 14 Earth days

– The recorded temperatures are -233 degrees C (night-time) and 123 degrees C (day-time)

– Gas can be heated to high temperatures

• The Moon is smaller than the Earth.

– One-sixth the gravity so gas can escape

– Moon has no atmosphere

Page 19: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Poll Question

What can you say about water if we put all these facts

together?

Page 20: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

Can there be ice on the Moon?

• Comets and asteroids could have left water on the Moon – just like on Earth

• Effects of temperature and pressure implies water sublimates in sunlight and drifts off into space.

• But the Moon has deep cold craters where sunlight cannot reach!– Water may exist in such places as frozen

ice

Page 21: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

There are many craters near the poles that are permanently shadowed

South Pole North Pole

Page 22: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

What is the evidence for ice on the Moon?

• Lunar Prospector shows enhancement of H, indicating possible presence of ice

Page 23: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

What is the evidence for ice on the Moon?

Lunar Prospector and Clementine:

• Signs of ice in shadowed craters near the moon's poles--perhaps as much as a cubic kilometer.

• Radio and optical observations of crash site show no water.

• There is NO conclusive evidence.

Page 24: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

The search for ice on the Moon• Search permanently shadowed

craters at the Moon's poles

• Detect ice crystals in lunar soil

• Map the temperature of the Moon

• Search for regions that could have hydrogen-bearing compounds like water

Page 25: Water, Water, Everywhere? Anuradha Koratkar, Susan Hoban, Albert Hill, and Brendan Shaughnessy.

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For those of you working on earning two credits, there is homework. Flavio will send you a message with a link to it.Please send it in by 21st Nov. 2006

See you at the next session which will be Radiation: Can’t live with it, can’t live

without it!