Encyclopedia > Celestial body's atmosphere

  Article Content

Celestial body atmosphere

Redirected from Celestial body's atmosphere

Atmosphere is the general name for a layer of gases that may surround a material body of sufficient mass. The gases are attracted by the gravity of the body, and held fast if gravity is sufficient and the atmosphere's temperature is low. Some planets consist mainly of various gases, and thus have very deep atmospheres (see gas giant).

Atmospheric gases are lost to space when the individual molecules' thermal motion exceeds the escape velocity of the body. Since a gas at any particular temperature will have molecules moving at a wide range of velocities, there will almost always be some slow leakage of gas into space. Lighter molecules move faster than heavier ones with the same thermal kinetic energy, and so gases of low molecular weight are lost more rapidly than those of high molecular weight. It is thought that Venus and Mars may have both lost much of their water when, after being photodissociated into hydrogen and oxygen by solar ultraviolet, the hydrogen escaped. Earth's ozone layer helps to prevent this.

Other mechanisms that can cause atmosphere depletion are solar wind-induced sputtering[?], impact erosion, weathering, and sequestration into the regolith and polar caps[?],



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
BBC News 24

... view it. In 1999, with the advent of digital television in the UK, satellite viewers were able to view the service. The BBC were initially criticized for the cost of ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 36 ms