The Birth-Time of the World and Other Scientific Essays - BestLightNovel.com
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going against the other satellite; that is, he would move apparently from west to east.
We may at least a.s.sume as probable that other satellites have been gathered by Mars in the past from the army of asteroids.
Some of the satellites so picked up would be direct: that is, would move round the planet in the direction of his axial rotation. Others, on the chances, would be retrograde: that is, would move against his axial rotation. They would describe orbits making the same various angles with the ecliptic as do the asteroids; and we may be sure they would be of the same varying dimensions.
We go on to inquire what would be the consequence to Mars of such captures.
A satellite captured in this manner is very likely to be pulled into the Planet. This is a probable end of a satellite in any case. It will probably be the end of our satellite too. The satellite Phobos is indeed believed to be about to take this very plunge into his planet. But in the case when the satellite picked up happens to be rotating round the planet in the opposite direction to the axial rotation of the planet, it is pretty certain that its career as a satellite will be a brief one. The reasons for this I cannot now give. If, then, Mars picked up satellites he is very sure to have absorbed them sooner or later.
Sooner if they happened to be retrograde satellites, later if direct satellites. His present satellites are recent additions.
They are direct.
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The path of an expiring satellite will be a slow spiral described round the planet. The spiral will at last, after many years, bring the satellite down upon the surface of the primary. Its final approach will be accelerated if the planet possesses an atmosphere, as Mars probably does. A satellite of the dimensions of Phobos--that is 36 miles in diameter--would hardly survive more than 30 to 60 years within seventy miles of Mars' surface. It will then be rotating round Mars in an hour and forty minutes, moving, in fact, at the rate of 2.2 miles per second. In the course of this 30 or 60 years it will, therefore, get round perhaps 200,000 times, before it finally crashes down upon the Martians. During this closing history of the satellite there is reason to believe, however, that it would by no means pursue continually the same path over the surface of the planet. There are many disturbing factors to be considered. Being so small any large surface features of Mars would probably act to perturb the orbit of the satellite.
The explanation of Mars' lines which I suggest, is that they were formed by the approach of such satellites in former times. I do not mean that they are lines cut into his surface by the actual infall of a satellite. The final end of the satellite would be too rapid for this, I think. But I hope to be able to show you that there is reason to believe that the mere pa.s.sage of the satellite, say at 70 miles above the surface of the planet, will, in itself, give rise to effects on the crust of the planet capable
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of accounting for just such single or parallel lines as we see.
In the first place we have to consider the stability of the satellite. Even in the case of a small satellite we cannot overlook the fact that the half of the satellite near the planet is pulled towards the planet by a gravitational force greater than that attracting the outer half, and that the centrifugal force is less on the inner than on the outer hemisphere. Hence there exists a force tending to tear the satellite asunder on the equatorial section tangential
{Fig. 11}
to the planet's surface. If in a fluid or plastic state, Phobos, for instance, could not possibly exist near the planet's surface.
The forces referred to would decide its fate. It may be shown by calculation, however, that if Phobos has the strength of basalt or gla.s.s there would remain a considerable coefficient of safety in favour of the satellite's stability; even when the surfaces of planet and satellite were separated by only five miles.
We have now to consider some things which we expect will happen before the satellite takes its final plunge into the planet.
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This diagram (Fig. 11) shows you the satellite travelling above the surface of the planet. The satellite is advancing towards, or away from, the spectator. The planet is supposed to show its solid crust in cross section, which may be a few miles in thickness. Below this is such a hot plastic magma as we have reason to believe underlies much of the solid crust of our own Earth. Now there is an attraction between the satellite and the crust of the planet; the same gravitational attraction which exists between every particle of matter in the universe. Let us consider how this attraction will affect the planet's crust. I have drawn little arrows to show how we may consider the attraction of the satellite pulling the crust of the planet not only upwards, but also pulling it inwards beneath the satellite.
I have made these arrows longer where calculation shows the stress is greater. You see that the greatest lifting stress is just beneath the satellite, whereas the greatest stress pulling the crust in under the satellite is at a point which lies out from under the satellite, at a considerable distance. At each side of the satellite there is a point where the stress pulling on the crust is the greatest. Of the two stresses the lifting stress will tend to raise the crust a little; the pulling stress may in certain cases actually tear the crust across; as at A and B.
It is possible to calculate the amount of the stress at the point at each side of the satellite where the stress is at its greatest. We must a.s.sume the satellite to be a certain size and density; we must also a.s.sume the crust of
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Mars to be of some certain density. To fix our ideas on these points I take the case of the present satellite Phobos. What amount of stress will he exert upon the crust of Mars when he approaches within, say, 40 miles of the planet's surface? We know his size approximately--he is about 36 miles in diameter. We can guess his density to be between four times that of water and eight times that of water. We may a.s.sume the density of Mars'
surface to be about the same as that of our Earth's surface, that is three times as dense as water. We now find that the greatest stress tending to rend open the surface crust of Mars will be between 4,000 and 8,000 pounds to the square foot according to the density we a.s.sign to Phobos.
Will such a stress actually tear open the crust? We are not able to answer this question with any certainty. Much will depend upon the nature and condition of the crust. Thus, suppose that we are here (Fig. 12) looking down upon the satellite which is moving along slowly relatively to Mars' surface, in the direction of the arrow. The satellite has just pa.s.sed over a weak and cracked part of the planet's crust. Here the stress has been sufficient to start two cracks. Now you know how easy it is to tear a piece of cloth when you go to the edge of it in order to make a beginning.
Here the stress from the satellite has got to the edge of the crust. It is greatly concentrated just at the extremities of the cracks. It will, unler such circ.u.mstances probably carry on the
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tear. If it does not do so this time, remember the satellite will some hours later be coming over the same place again, and then again for, at least, many hundreds of times. Then also we are not limited to the a.s.sumption that the
{Fig. 12}
satellite is as small as Phobos. Suppose we consider the case of a satellite approaching Mars which has a diameter double that of Phobos; a diameter still much less than that of the larger cla.s.s of asteroids. Even at the distance
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of 65 miles the stress will now amount to as much as from 15 to 30 tons per square foot. It is almost certain that such a stress repeated a comparatively few times over the same parts of the planet's surface would so rend the crust as to set up lines along which plutonic action would find a vent. That is, we might expect along these lines all the phenomena of upheaval and volcanic eruption which give rise to surface elevations.
The probable effect of a satellite of this dimension travelling slowly relatively to the surface of Mars is, then, to leave a very conspicuous memorial of his presence behind him. You see from the diagram that this memorial will consist o: two parallel lines of disturbance.
The linear character of the gravitational effects of the satellite is due entirely to the motion of the satellite relatively to the surface of the planet. If the satellite stood still above the surface the gravitational stress in the crust would, of course, be exerted radially outwards from the centre of the satellite. It would attain at the central point beneath the satellite its maximum vertical effect, and at some radial distance measured outwards from this point, which distance we can calculate, its maximum horizontal tearing effect. When the satellite moves relatively to the planet's crust, the horizontal tearing force acts differently according to whether it is directed in the line of motion or at right angles to this line.
In the direction of motion we see that the satellite
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creates as it pa.s.ses over the crust a wave of rarefaction or tension as at D, followed by compression just beneath the satellite and by a reversed direction of gravitational pull as the satellite pa.s.ses onwards. These stresses rapidly replace one another as the satellite travels along. They are resisted by the inertia of the crust, and are taken up by its elasticity. The nature of this succession of alternate compressions and rarefactions in the crust possess some resemblance to those arising in an earthquake shock.
If we consider the effects taking place laterally to the line of motion we see that there are no such changes in the nature of the forces in the crust. At each pa.s.sage of the satellite the horizontal tearing stress increases to a maximum, when it is exerted laterally, along the line pa.s.sing through the horizontal projection of the satellite and at right angles to the line of motion, and again dies away. It is always a tearing stress, renewed again and again.
This effect is at its maximum along two particular parallel lines which are tangents to the circle of maximum horizontal stress and which run parallel with the path of the satellite. The distance separating these lines depend upon the elevation of the satellite above the planet's surface. Such lines mark out the theoretical axes of the "double ca.n.a.ls" which future crustal movements will more fully develop.
It is interesting to consider what the effect of such
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conditions would be if they arose at the surface of our own planet. We a.s.sume a horizontal force in the crust adequate to set up tensile stresses of the order, say, of fifteen tons to the square foot and these stresses to be repeated every few hours; our world being also subject to the dynamic effects we recognise in and beneath its crust.
It is easy to see that the areas over which the satellite exerted its gravitational stresses must become the foci --foci of linear form--of tectonic developments or crust movements. The relief of stresses, from whatever cause arising, in and beneath the crust must surely take place in these regions of disturbance and along these linear areas. Here must become concentrated the folding movements, which are under existing conditions brought into the geosynclines, along with their attendant volcanic phenomena. In the case of Mars such a concentration of tectonic events would not, owing to the absence of extensive subaerial denudation and great oceans, be complicated by the existence of such synclinal acc.u.mulations as have controlled terrestrial surface development.
With the pa.s.sage of time the linear features would probably develop; the energetic substratum continually a.s.serting its influence along such lines of weakness. It is in the highest degree probable that radioactivity plays no less a part in Martian history than in terrestrial. The fact of radioactive heating allows us to a.s.sume the thin surface crust and continued sub-crustal energy throughout the entire period of the planet's history.
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How far willl these effects resemble the double ca.n.a.ls of Mars?
In this figure and in the calculations I have given you I have supposed the satellite engaged in marking the planet's surface with two lines separated by about the interval separating the wider double ca.n.a.ls of Mars--that is about 220 miles apart. What the distance between the lines will be, as already stated, will depend upon the height of the satellite above the surface when it comes upon a part of the crust in a condition to be affected by the stresses it sets up in it. If the satellite does its work at a point lower down above the surface the ca.n.a.l produced will be narrower. The stresses, too, will then be much greater. I must also observe that once the crust has yielded to the pulling stress, there is great probability that in future revolutions of the satellite a central fracture will result. For then all the pulling force adds itself to the lifting force and tends to crush the crust inwards on the central line beneath the satellite. It is thus quite possible that the pa.s.sage of a satellite may give rise to triple lines. There is reason to believe that the ca.n.a.ls on Mars are in some cases triple.
I have spoken all along of the satellite moving slowly over the surface of Mars. I have done so as I cannot at all p.r.o.nounce so readily on what will happen when the satellite's velocity over the surface of Mars is very great. To account for all the lines mapped by Lowell some of them must have been produced by satellities moving relatively to the surface of Mars at velocities so great
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as three miles a second or even rather more. The stresses set up are, in such cases, very difficult to estimate. It has not yet been done. Parallel lines of greatest stress or impulse ought to be formed as in the other case.
I now ask your attention to another kind of evidence that the lines are due in some way to the motion of satellites pa.s.sing over the surface of Mars.
I may put the fresh evidence to which I refer, in this way: In Lowell's map (P1. XXII, p. 192), and in a less degree in Schiaparelli's map (ante p. 166), we are given the course of the lines as fragments of incomplete curves. Now these curves might have been anything at all. We must take them as they are, however, when we apply them as a test of the theory that the motion of a satellite round Mars can strike such lines. If it can be shown that satellites revolving round Mars might strike just such curves then we a.s.sume this as an added confirmation of the hypothesis.
We must begin by realising what sort of curves a satellite which disturbs the surface of a planet would leave behind it after its demise. You might think that the satellite revolving round and round the planet must simply describe a circle upon the spherical surface of the planet: a "great circle" as it is called; that is the greatest circle which can be described upon a sphere. This great circle can, however, only be struck, as you will see, when the planet is not turning upon its axis: a condition not likely to be realised.