Earth !!!! incoming transmission!!!!
Earth is the third planet from the Sun and the fifth largest.
orbit: 149,600,000 km (1.00 AU) from Sun diameter: 12,756.3 km mass: 5.9736e24 kg |
Earth is the only planet whose English name does not derive from Greek/Roman mythology.
The name derives from Old English and Germanic. There are, of course, hundreds of other
names for the planet in other languages. In Roman Mythology, the goddess of the Earth was
Tellus - the fertile soil (Greek: Gaia, terra mater - Mother Earth).
It was not until the time of Copernicus (the
sixteenth century) that it was understood that the Earth is just another planet.
Earth, of course, can be studied without the aid of spacecraft. Nevertheless it was not
until the twentieth century that we had maps of the entire planet. Pictures of the planet
taken from space are of considerable importance. They are an enormous help in
weather prediction and especially in tracking and predicting hurricanes. And they are
extraordinarily beautiful.
The Earth is divided into several layers which have distinct chemical and seismic
properties (depths in km):
0- 40 Crust
40- 400 Upper mantle
400- 650 Transition region (asthenosphere)
650-2700 Lower mantle
2700-2890 D'' layer
2890-5150 Outer core
5150-6378 Inner core
The crust varies considerably in thickness, it is thinner under the oceans (5km), thicker
under the continents (30km). The inner core and crust are solid; the outer core and mantle
layers are plastic or semi-fluid. The various layers are separated by discontinuities
which are evident in seismic data; the best known of these is the Mohorovicic
discontinuity between the crust and upper mantle.
Most of the mass of the Earth is in the mantle, most of the rest in the core; the part we
inhabit is a tiny fraction of the whole (values below x1024 kilograms):
atmosphere = 0.0000051
oceans = 0.0014
crust = 0.026
mantle = 4.043
outer core = 1.835
inner core = 0.09675
The core is probably composed mostly of iron (or nickel/iron) though it is possible that
some lighter elements may be present, too. Temperatures at the center of the core may be
as high as 7500 K, hotter than the surface of the Sun. The lower mantle is probably mostly
silicon, magnesium and oxygen with some iron, calcium and aluminum. The upper mantle is
mostly olivene and pyroxene (iron/magnesium silicates), calcium and aluminum. We know most
of this only from seismic techniques; samples from the upper mantle arrive at the surface
as lava from volcanoes but the majority of the Earth is inaccessible. The crust is
primarily quartz (silicon dioxide) and other silicates like feldspar. Taken as a whole,
the Earth's chemical composition (by mass) is:
34.6% Iron
29.5% Oxygen
15.2% Silicon
12.7% Magnesium
2.4% Nickel
1.9% Sulfur
0.05% Titanium
The Earth is the densest major body in the solar system.
The other terrestrial planets probably have similar structures and compositions with some
differences: the Moon has at most a small core; Mercury has an extra large core (relative
to its diameter); the mantles of Mars and the Moon are much thicker; the Moon and Mercury
may not have chemically distinct crusts; Earth may be the only one with distinct inner and
outer cores. Note, however, that our knowledge of planetary interiors is mostly
theoretical even for the Earth.
Unlike the other terrestrial planets, Earth's crust is divided into several separate solid
plates which float around independently on top of the hot mantle below. The theory that
describes this is known as plate tectonics. It is characterized by two major processes:
spreading and subduction. Spreading occurs when two plates move away from each other and
new crust is created by upwelling magma from below. Subduction occurs when two plates
collide and the edge of one dives beneath the other and ends up being destroyed in the
mantle. There is also transverse motion at some plate boundaries (i.e. the San Andreas
Fault in California) and collisions between continental plates (i.e. India/Eurasia). There
are (at present) eight major plates:
North American Plate - North America, western North
Atlantic and Greenland
South American Plate - South America and western South Atlantic
Antarctic Plate - Antarctica and the "Southern Ocean"
Eurasian Plate - eastern North Atlantic, Europe and Asia except for India
African Plate - Africa, eastern South Atlantic and western Indian Ocean
Indian-Australian Plate - India, Australia, New Zealand and most of
Indian Ocean
Nazca Plate - eastern Pacific Ocean adjacent to South America
Pacific Plate - most of the Pacific Ocean (and the southern coast of
California!)
There are also twenty or more small plates such as the Arabian, Cocos, and Philippine
Plates. Earthquakes are much more common at the plate boundaries. Plotting their locations
makes it easy to see the plate boundaries (see above).
The Earth's surface is very young. In the relatively short (by astronomical standards)
period of 500,000,000 years or so erosion and tectonic processes destroy and recreate most
of the Earth's surface and thereby eliminate almost all traces of earlier geologic surface
history (such as impact craters). Thus the very early history of the Earth has mostly been
erased. The Earth is 4.5 to 4.6 billion years old, but the oldest known rocks are about 4
billion years old and rocks older than 3 billion years are rare. The oldest fossils of
living organisms are less than 3.9 billion years old. There is no record of the critical
period when life was first getting started.
71 Percent of the Earth's surface is covered with water. Earth is the only planet on which
water can exist in liquid form on the surface (though there may be liquid ethane or
methane on Titan's surface and liquid water beneath the surface of Europa). Liquid water
is, of course, essential for life as we know it. The heat capacity of the oceans is also
very important in keeping the Earth's temperature relatively stable. Liquid water is also
reponsible for most of the erosion and weathering of the Earth's continents, a process
unique in the solar system today (though it may have occurred on Mars in the past).
The Earth's atmosphere is 77% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, with traces of argon, carbon dioxide
and water. There was probably a very much larger amount of carbon dioxide in the Earth's
atmosphere when the Earth was first formed, but it has since been almost all incorporated
into carbonate rocks and to a lesser extent dissolved into the oceans and consumed by
living plants. Plate tectonics and biological processes now maintain a continual flow of
carbon dioxide from the atmosphere to these various "sinks" and back again. The
tiny amount of carbon dioxide resident in the atmosphere at any time is extremely
important to the maintenance of the Earth's surface temperature via the greenhouse effect.
The greenhouse effect raises the average surface temperature about 35 degrees C above what
it would otherwise be (from a frigid -21 C to a comfortable +14 C); without it the oceans
would freeze and life as we know it would be impossible.
The presence of free oxygen is quite remarkable from a chemical point of view. Oxygen is a
very reactive gas and under "normal" circumstances would quickly combine with
other elements. The oxygen in Earth's atmosphere is produced and maintained by biological
processes. Without life there would be no free oxygen.
The interaction of the Earth and the Moon slows the Earth's rotation by about 2
milliseconds per century. Current research indicates that about 900 million years ago
there were 481 18-hour days in a year.
Earth has a modest magnetic field produced by electric currents in the core. The
interaction of the solar wind, the Earth's magnetic field and the Earth's upper atmosphere
causes the auroras (see the Interplanetary Medium). Irregularities in these factors cause
the magnetic poles to move relative to the surface; the north magnetic pole is currently
located in northern Canada.
The Earth's magnetic field and its interaction with the solar wind also produce the Van
Allen radiation belts, a pair of doughnut shaped rings of ionized gas (or plasma) trapped
in orbit around the Earth. The outer belt stretches from 19,000 km in altitude to 41,000
km; the inner belt lies between 13,000 km and 7,600 km in altitude.
Earth has only one natural satellite, the Moon.
!!!!end of transmission!!!!
Satellite | Distance (x1000 km) | Radius (km) | Mass (kg) |
Moon | 384 | 1738 | 7.35e22 |