Lecture 3 - Space Hazards Flashcards

1
Q

What generates Earth’s magnetic field?

A

Convective flow of electrically-conducting liquid iron in the
outer core is organized into spinning columns by Earth’s rotation.

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2
Q

What is the magnetosphere?

A

A region of space surrounding Earth in into which Earth’s magnetic field lines extend.

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3
Q

What is solar wind?

A

An energetic stream of charged particles (mostly electrons and protons) that flow out from the Sun across the solar system at speeds as high as 900 km/s.

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4
Q

How long does it take solar wind to reach earth?

A

2-5 days

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5
Q

What happens when solar wind reaches earth?

A

The magnetosphere deflects most of it from impacting Earth.

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6
Q

How are the aurora created?

A

Disturbances to the geomagnetic field from solar wind induce electric currents in the ionosphere, especially at high latitudes. These electric currents are the aurora.

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7
Q

Why does Mars lack a thick atmosphere?

A

We suspect that its outer core has solidified so there is no convection and therefore no magnetic field. This means that solar wind was able to strip away its atmosphere.

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8
Q

What is a Coronal Mass Ejection?

A

A larger release of energetic particles from the sun.

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9
Q

When do sunspots generally occur?

A

Before a coronal mass ejection. Sunspots are on an 11 year cycle.

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10
Q

What was the Carrington event?

A

A huge coronal mass ejection and a powerful geomagnetic storm on 1-2 September 1859. Telegraph systems in Europe and North America failed, giving their operators electric shocks and setting their offices on fire. The northern lights were seen almost as far south as the equator.

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11
Q

What happened on the 13th of March 1989 in Quebec?

A

There was an electrical power blackout three days after astronomers witnessed a huge coronal mass ejection on the Sun. The aurora could be seen as far south as Florida.

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12
Q

What would be the cost of a Carrington scale event today?

A

around 40 billion dollars per day in the US alone

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13
Q

What impacts a place’s tendency for geomagnetic storms?

A

geology

latitude

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14
Q

What are impact events?

A

Collisions of extraterrestrial asteriods, comets, or their fragments, with Earth.

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15
Q

What are asteroids?

A

They are stony or metallic bodies orbiting the Sun, mostly in the Asteroid Belt between Mars & Jupiter or the Kuiper Belt beyond Neptune. Collisions can bump asteroids into orbits that intersect Earth’s.
Asteroid belt objects vary from 100s of meters to 100s of km in diameter.

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16
Q

What are the largest asteroids?

A

Ceres ~950 km in diameter

Vesta ~525 km in diameter

17
Q

What are comets?

A

They are 0.1–60 km bodies composed of rock, dust and ice (frozen water, methane, ammonia etc.). Most originate from the Kuiper Belt or the distant Oort Cloud and orbit the Sun in highly elliptical orbits.

18
Q

Why do comets appear to have “tails”?

A

When in the inner solar system, solar radiation vaporises volatiles in the comet nucleus, which stream away from the comet as a tail (points away from the Sun).

19
Q

What is a meteor?

A

When asteroids, comets or meteoroids or their fragments enter the atmosphere they produce a meteor.

20
Q

What is a meteorite?

A

When asteroids, comets, meteors, meteoroids or their fragments enter the atmosphere and survive passage through the atmosphere to impact Earth, they produce a meteorite.

21
Q

What is most likely to survive passage through the atmosphere and impact the surface of earth?

A

Asteroids (>1 m)

22
Q

What normally burns up in the atmosphere and rarely produces meteorites?

A

Meteoroids (1 mm–1 m)

23
Q

What happened on the 15th of February 2013 in Chelyabinsk, Russia?

A

A meteor was observed. It exploded in a damaging air burst before it could reach the surface.

24
Q

What was observed over Siberia on the 30th of June 1908?

A

A massive fireball was observed, followed by an explosion that was heard 1000 km away. People 480 km away were knocked off their feet.

25
Q

What did a 1927 expedition discover about the 1908 fireball?

A

They found 2,000 km² of flattened trees, with many charred on one side.
No impact crater was found - the meteor exploded a few kilometres above the surface. It was likely ~50 m in diameter.

26
Q

What is capable of producing impact craters?

A

Asteroids >50-100 m diameter

These occur on average every few thousand years

27
Q

What does impact energy depend on?

A

the impactor size and speed

28
Q

What are simple impact craters?

A

created by smaller and/or slower impactors

they have raised rims and bowl-shaped central cavities

29
Q

What are complex impact craters?

A

created by larger, faster impacts
they have ring structures from gravitational collapse of crater walls and central peaks from rebound of the compressed crater floor

30
Q

What factors indicate an impact site on Yucatan Peninsula?

A

distribution of melted rock globules
shocked quartz
tsunami deposits

31
Q

Why is the Chicxulub crater on the Yucatan Peninsula significant?

A

It is believed to be the crater from the meteorite that caused the extinction of the dinosaurs.

32
Q

How many confirmed impact craters are there worldwide?

A

~190, including ~60 in North America

33
Q

Which two mass extinctions are believed to have been caused by meteorites?

A

End of Cretaceous

Late Devonian