CHAPTER 19 | THE ORIGIN OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM 407
surface is not geologically active like Earth’s surface, some
moon rocks might have survived unaltered since early in
the history of the solar system. In fact, the oldest moon rocks
are 4.5 billion years old. Th at means the moon must be at least
4.5 billion years old.
Although no one has yet been to Mars, over a dozen mete-
orites found on Earth have been identifi ed by their chemical
composition as having come from Mars. Most of these have ages
of only a billion years or so, but one has an age of approximately
4.5 billion years. Mars must be at least that old.
Th e most important source for determining the age of the
solar system is meteorites. Radioactive dating of meteorites yields
a range of ages, but there is a fairly precise upper limit—many
meteorite samples have ages of 4.56 billion years old, and none
are older. Th at fi gure is widely accepted as the age of the solar
system and is often rounded to 4.6 billion years. Th e true ages of
Earth, the moon, and Mars are also assumed to be 4.6 billion
years, although no rocks from those bodies have yet been found
that have remained unaltered for that entire stretch of time.
One last celestial body deserves mention: the sun.
Astronomers estimate the age of the sun to be about 5 billion
years, but that is not a radioactive date because we have no
samples of radioactive material from the sun. Instead, an inde-
pendent estimate for the age of the sun can be made using helio-
seismological observations and mathematical models of the sun’s
interior (see Chapters 8 and 12). Th is yields a value of about
5 billion years, plus or minus 1.5 billion years, a number that is
in agreement with the age of the solar system derived from the
age of meteorites.
Apparently, all the bodies of the solar system formed at
about the same time, some 4.6 billion years ago. You can add this
as the fi nal item to your list of characteristic properties of the
solar system (■ Table 19-1).
CHAPTER 1CHAPTER 1
■ Table19-1 ❙ Characteristic Properties
of the Solar System
- Disk shape of the solar system
Orbits in nearly the same plane
Common direction of rotation and revolution - Two planetary types
Terrestrial—inner planets; high density
Jovian—outer planets; low density - Planetary rings and large satellite systems
Yes for Jovian Planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune)
No for Terrestrial Planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars) - Space debris—asteroids, comets, and meteoroids
Composition, Orbits
Asteroids in inner solar system, composition like
Terrestrial planets
Comets in outer solar system, composition like
Jovian planets - Common age of about 4.6 billion years measured or inferred for
Earth, the moon, Mars, meteorites, and the sun
SCIENTIFIC ARGUMENT
In what ways does the solar system resemble a disk?
Notice that this argument is really a summary of pieces of evidence.
First, the general shape of the solar system is that of a disk. The orbit
of Mercury is inclined 7° to the plane of Earth’s orbit, and the rest of
the planets are in orbits inclined less than that. In other words, the
planets are confi ned to a thin disk with the sun at its center.
Second, the motions of the sun and planets also follow this disk
theme. The sun and most of the planets rotate in the same direc-
tion, counterclockwise as seen from the north, with their equators
near the plane of the solar system. Also, all of the planets revolve
around the sun in that same direction. The objects in our solar
system mostly move in the same direction, which further refl ects
a disk theme.
One of the basic characteristics of our solar system is its disk
shape, but another dramatic characteristic is the division of the
planets into two groups. Build an argument to detail that evidence.
What are the distinguishing differences between the Terrestrial
and Jovian planets?
The Story of Planet
Building
The challenge for modern planetary scientists is to compare
the characteristics of the solar system with predictions of the
solar nebula theory, so they can work out details of how the
planets formed.
The Chemical Composition of the
Solar Nebula
Everything astronomers know about the solar system and star
formation suggests that the solar nebula was a fragment of an
interstellar gas cloud. Such a cloud would have been mostly
hydrogen with some helium and small amounts of the heavier
elements.
Th at is precisely what you see in the composition of the sun
(look back at Table 7-2). Analysis of the solar spectrum shows
that the sun is mostly hydrogen, with a quarter of its mass being
helium and only about 2 percent being heavier elements. Of
course, nuclear reactions have fused some hydrogen into helium,
but this happens in the sun’s core and has not aff ected the com-
position of its surface and atmosphere, which are the parts you
can observe directly. Th at means the composition revealed in the
sun’s spectrum is essentially the composition of the gases from
which the sun formed.
Th is must have been the composition of the solar nebula,
and you can also see that composition refl ected in the chemical
compositions of the planets. Th e inner planets are composed of
rock and metal, and the outer planets are rich in low-density
19-3