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The Solar System
Pre-solar nebulae, circumstellar dust shells and
dust rings are the building blocks of solar systems and it is believed,
are closely related to the origin of life. Our solar system is the
obvious place to study the conditions and processes which lead to
the formation of planets and the evolution of their surfaces and
atmospheres, and to search for traces of pre-biological chemistry.
It is therefore essential to study primordial bodies like comets
and asteroids as well as the evolved planets and their satellites.
Comets and Asteroids
Comets are composites of ice and dust with diameters
up to several 10s of km, which orbit in the Kuiper Belt and Oort
cloud. If they are somehow deflected towards the inner solar system,
their surfaces are exposed to intense solar radiation and the ices
start to vaporize. Since this interaction with solar radiation is
very probably the first chemical processing in billions of years,
comets provides us with information about the composition of matter
at the time of their formation. Their different compositions seem
to represent different regions of the pre-solar nebula. Some are
rich in silicates, others in reduced carbon or hydrocarbons; others
show various proportions of minerals like olivine. Most of them
seem to be rich in water. Spectroscopic information of the most
important volatile components of comets like H2O and
CO2 or organic C-X stretch bands cannot be obtained from
the ground since the absorption from water and carbon dioxide in
the lower atmosphere blends out those bands. SOFIA is therefore
ideally suited to address those questions.
Most asteroids orbit in the main belt between the
orbits of Mars and Jupiter. Asteroids are thought to be remnant
material from the processes of formation and initial development
of planets and therefore an important source of information on conditions
in the early solar system. Apart from the scientific question of
their origin and composition, the so-called near-Earth asteroids
(NEAs) are also interesting as potential sources of raw materials
for future generations and as targets for current space missions
such as NEAR and DS1. Observations of asteroids in the MIR and FIR
with SOFIA will provide crucial information on their physical
characteristics, such as sizes, albedos and the thermal properties
of their surfaces (see, e.g. Harris et al.1998). Well-studied asteroids
with accurately known characteristics will serve as important photometric
standards for SOFIA in the MIR and FIR, as in the case of
ISO (Mueller and Lagerros 1998).
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Planets and their satellites
The composition of the planets is directly linked
to the distribution of matter and volatiles during the formation
of our solar system. The radial partitioning of matter during the
formation of planets should reflect itself in the different compositions
of the planets. For the big outer planets, which are difficult to
investigate, models range between two extremes: outer planets and
their satellites consist of (1) water, methane, and ammonia or (2)
carbon monoxide, water, and molecular nitrogen. In the currently
accepted model, the giant planets consist of (2), while their satellite's
compositions are dominated by (1). The satellites of the outer planets
may retain surface spectral signatures of the primordial partitioning
of these constituents. It is therefore important to determine the
composition of the volatile-rich outer planet satellites and Pluto,
the composition of their atmospheres (if any) and the nature of
the surface-atmosphere interactions.
The spatial-seeing-limited NIR resolution of SOFIA
is about 2 arcsec, high enough to spatially resolve several of the
planetary disks and study their zonal atmospheres. The following
table lists SOFIA's spatial NIR resolution on planets and
satellites.
| Body |
Diameter
[km] |
2"
resolution on body [km] |
No.
of resolution elements across diameter |
| Mars |
6800 |
760 |
9.0 |
| Jupiter |
1428000 |
6100 |
23.4 |
| Saturn |
120000 |
12400 |
9.7 |
| Uranus |
52000 |
26400 |
2.0 |
On Mars, SOFIA will be able to study the transport
of the volatiles CO2 and perhaps H2O between
the polar caps and the equator region due to seasonal cycles. On
Jupiter, SOFIA can spectroscopically map the cloud band system
and its variations in NIR and MIR lines. SOFIA will be able
to resolve the Great Red Spot, which color is still unexplained.
Stellar occultations of planets and satellites have
been a very valuable source of information on planetary atmospheres
and rings during the KAO flights. SOFIA's mobility is ideally
suited for observations of these occultations, which provide a spatial
resolution of only a few kilometers. In 1997, the rings of Uranus
were discovered with the KAO during a stellar occultation. SOFIA
not only will provide a much-improved sensitivity but also long
term monitoring of changes within these atmospheres and rings.
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