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Study Guide

📖 Core Concepts Solar System – Sun + all objects gravitationally bound to it (planets, dwarf planets, moons, asteroids, comets, Kuiper‑belt, Oort‑cloud). Protoplanetary disc – Rotating, flattened disc of gas & dust (≈ 200 AU) that formed after the pre‑solar nebula collapsed. Frost line (5 AU) – Inside: only refractory (silicate/metal) solids → rocky planets. Outside: ices condense → gas‑giants. Nice model – Post‑gas‑disc gravitational encounters cause giant‑planet migration to present orbits. Grand Tack hypothesis – Jupiter migrated inward to 1.5 AU then outward, scattering asteroids & triggering the Late Heavy Bombardment. Mass & angular‑momentum distribution – Sun ≈ 99.86 % of mass but only 2 % of total angular momentum; Jupiter + other planets hold ≈ 98 %. Kepler’s laws – (1) Orbits are ellipses with Sun at one focus. (2) $P^{2}=a^{3}$ (period P in yr, semi‑major axis a in AU). (3) Equal areas swept in equal time → constant areal velocity. Habitable (Goldilocks) Zone – Region where solar flux permits liquid water on a planetary surface (≈ 0.95–1.37 AU). Heliosphere – Bubble of solar wind; termination shock (80–100 AU), heliopause (70–90 AU), defines the Sun’s protective reach. Classification – Planet: orbits Sun, hydrostatic equilibrium, cleared neighbourhood. Dwarf planet: first two criteria only. 📌 Must Remember Solar System age: 4.6 Gyr. Sun’s mass fraction: 99.86 %; remaining mass ≈ 0.14 %, with ≈ 99 % of that in the four giant planets. Frost line ≈ 5 AU → rocky vs. icy planet formation. Jupiter’s orbital radius: 5.2 AU; Saturn: 9.5 AU; Uranus: 19.2 AU; Neptune: 30 AU. Hill sphere of Sun: ≈ 230 000 AU (gravitational dominance). Oort cloud extent: up to ≈ 200 000 AU (≈ 3.2 ly). Habitable zone: 0.95–1.37 AU (Earth’s orbit). Angular momentum: Sun ≈ 2 %; planets ≈ 98 %. Main‑sequence lifetime left for Sun: ≈ 5 Gyr. Planetary mass hierarchy: Jupiter > Saturn > Uranus ≈ Neptune > all terrestrial planets combined. 🔄 Key Processes Nebular Collapse → Disc Formation Gravitational collapse of molecular cloud → rotating, flattened disc (conservation of angular momentum). Dust Coagulation → Planetesimals Micron‑sized grains collide → stick → grow to km‑scale planetesimals. Accretion of Planetesimals → Protoplanets Runaway growth inside frost line → rocky planets; beyond frost line → icy cores → capture H‑He envelopes → gas/ice giants. Planetary Migration (Nice & Grand Tack) Interactions with residual planetesimal disc → giant planets shift inward/outward, reshaping asteroid belt and delivering impactors. Late Heavy Bombardment (LHB) Resonance crossing (e.g., Jupiter–Saturn) scatters leftover planetesimals → spike in inner‑planet cratering. Heliosphere Formation Solar wind expands outward → termination shock → heliosheath → heliopause (balance with interstellar pressure). 🔍 Key Comparisons Rocky inner planets vs. Gas giants Composition: metals/silicates vs. H‑He envelopes. Location: inside vs. outside frost line. Mass: ≤ 2 × 10⁻⁶ M☉ vs. ≈ 0.001 M☉ (Jupiter). Prograde vs. Retrograde moons Prograde: orbit same direction as planet’s spin (most large moons). Retrograde: opposite direction (e.g., Neptune’s Triton). Kuiper Belt vs. Scattered Disc Kuiper Belt: relatively low‑eccentricity, 30–55 AU, many resonant “cubewanos”. Scattered Disc: high‑eccentricity, up to several hundred AU, source of many short‑period comets. Short‑period vs. Long‑period comets Source: Kuiper Belt vs. Oort Cloud. Period: < 200 yr vs. > 200 yr. ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “The Sun contains almost all angular momentum.” – False; Sun holds 2 % only. “All dwarf planets are in the Kuiper Belt.” – Not all; e.g., Ceres resides in the asteroid belt. “The heliopause is the edge of the Solar System.” – Objects (e.g., Oort Cloud) lie well beyond; heliopause just marks solar‑wind pressure balance. “Mercury and Venus have moons because they are close to the Sun.” – They have no moons; proximity to Sun makes stable satellite orbits difficult. 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition Angular momentum “lever arm” – Massive planets far from the Sun (large radius × velocity) dominate system angular momentum despite smaller masses than the Sun. Frost line as a “condensation wall” – Imagine a kitchen oven: inside a certain radius water stays liquid (no ice), outside it freezes, allowing icy building blocks. Migration as “traffic jam” – Giant planets interact with leftover planetesimals like cars in a jam, pushing each other outward or inward. 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases Neptune’s moon Triton – Retrograde, likely captured Kuiper‑belt object, unlike other regular moons. Mercury’s extreme temperature swings – No atmosphere → rapid heating/cooling. Venus’s runaway greenhouse – Thick CO₂ atmosphere creates surface pressure 90 × Earth’s, unique among terrestrial planets. Trojan asteroids for every planet except Mercury – Even Earth has Trojans (e.g., 2010 TK₇). 📍 When to Use Which Estimating orbital period → Use Kepler’s third law $P^{2}=a^{3}$ when orbit is near‑circular and mass of the planet is negligible compared to the Sun. Assessing habitability → Check if semi‑major axis lies within 0.95–1.37 AU and the body has a stable atmosphere & magnetic field. Classifying a small body → If it is spherical (hydrostatic equilibrium) but has not cleared its orbit → dwarf planet; if not spherical → asteroid/comet. Identifying source of a comet → Period < 200 yr → Kuiper Belt; period > 200 yr → Oort Cloud. 👀 Patterns to Recognize Resonant ratios – 3:2 (Pluto–Neptune), 2:1 (Hilda asteroids with Jupiter). Mass concentration – > 70 % of planetary mass in Jupiter; > 90 % of non‑stellar mass in Jupiter + Saturn. Density gradient – Inner objects high density (metal/silicate) → outer objects low density (ices). Solar wind effects – Space weather (flares, CMEs) → geomagnetic storms → auroras. 🗂️ Exam Traps “The Sun holds most of the Solar System’s angular momentum.” – The opposite is true; planets dominate. Confusing the heliopause with the termination shock. – Termination shock is where solar wind slows; heliopause is the pressure balance point. Assuming all Trojans are only around Jupiter. – Every planet (except Mercury) has known Trojans. Mixing up the frost line with the asteroid belt. – Frost line is a temperature/condensation boundary (5 AU); the asteroid belt lies just beyond it but is primarily rocky due to early dynamical clearing. Thinking Ceres is an asteroid only. – Ceres meets dwarf‑planet criteria (round shape, differentiated interior). --- If any heading lacked sufficient source material, a placeholder line would have been added, but all sections are fully supported by the outline.
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