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Journal ArticleDOI

On the Internal Structures of Mercury and Venus

R. A. Lyttleton
- 01 Sep 1969 - 
- Vol. 5, Iss: 1, pp 18-35
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TLDR
In this paper, it was shown that the proportion of mass in the core of Venus (about 25% of the whole) is entirely consistent with the phase-change hypothesis as to its nature, as of course is also the absence of any liquid or iron core in both Mars and the Moon.
Abstract
Recent radar measures of the radius and mass of Mercury imply a composition for the planet containing about 60% iron. One or other of two conclusions seems inescapable: either that Mercury is a highly exceptional object among terrestrial planets, or that all measures to date of the planet involve substantial systematic error. In either case the situation is such that independent checking of the radius and mass of Mercury by some entirely different means has become of the greatest importance to planetary physics and cosmogony. The recent radar and other determinations of the solid radius of Venus imply an internal structure similar to that of the Earth, namely a liquid core surrounded by a solid mantle and outer-shell zone. The theory also implies that the temperatures within Venus should be slightly higher than at the corresponding parts of the Earth. The proportion of mass in the core of Venus (about 25% of the whole) is entirely consistent with the phase-change hypothesis as to its nature, as of course is also the absence of any liquid or iron core in both Mars and the Moon. On the older iron-core hypothesis, Venus with considerably less iron content by mass than the Earth, and Mars and the Moon with none, would all present problems in different degrees to account for the differences of composition. If Venus began as an all-solid planet, the initial radius would have been about 6300 km, and the total amount of surface reduction to date owing to contraction of the planet would have been almost 40 million km2, and as a proportion of the total area only slightly less than the contraction of the Earth. The theory thus predicts the existence of folded and thrusted mountain-systems of terrestrial type at the surface of Venus.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetic Field Observations near Mercury: Preliminary Results from Mariner 10.

TL;DR: The complete body of data favors the preliminary conclusion that Mercury has an intrinsic magnetic field, which represents a major scientific discovery in planetary magnetism and will have considerable impact on studies of the origin of the solar system.
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Evolution of the Solar System

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Structure and evolutionary history of the solar system

TL;DR: In this article, a sharp distinction is made between the large quantity of speculations about the interiors of the bodies and the rather meager facts known with a reasonable degree of certainty.
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Structure and Evolutionary History of the Solar System

TL;DR: In this article, a sharp distinction is made between the large quantity of speculations about the interiors of the bodies and the rather meager facts known with a reasonable degree of certainty.
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Structure and Evolutionary History of the Solar System, III

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors make a distinction between the large quantity of speculations about the interiors of the bodies and the rather meager facts known with a reasonable degree of certainty.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Prediction and confirmation of olivine—spinel transition in Ni2SiO4

TL;DR: In this article, it is shown that the transition pressure at which a compound will transform to a denser polymorph by a study of solid solutions of the given compound with compounds possessing closer atomic packing enables the free energy of transition and the density of the closer packed polymorph to be calculated.
Journal ArticleDOI

The case for the radar radius of venus.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the Venera 4 and Mariner 5 space probes to estimate the 6.5±10 km radius of the planet Venus from earth-based radar measurements.
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