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Are planets formed before their sun?
Why not?
Why not?
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You mean our planets? yesAre planets formed before their sun?
Good question.Why not?
It depends on the particular circumstances of the star system.Are planets formed before their sun?
Why not?
It depends on the particular circumstances of the star system.
In some cases, the planets are formed after the star or stars because giant gaseous protoplanets are ejected from stars at near orbits, first appearing as a bubble on the star's surface, as is currently the case with the pregnant red giant star Betelgeuse in the constellation Orion.
In other cases, the planets are formed before their star or stars as in some instances of planetary capture.
Wonderful question; I don't know.Agonaces, which came first: Earth or our former-star Saturn?
Are planets formed before their sun?
Why not?
Scientists believe that the solar system was formed when a cloud of gas and dust in space was disturbed, maybe by the explosion of a nearby star (called a supernova). This explosion made waves in space which squeezed the cloud of gas and dust. Squeezing made the cloud start to collapse, as gravity pulled the gas and dust together, forming a solar nebula. Just like a dancer that spins faster as she pulls in her arms, the cloud began to spin as it collapsed. Eventually, the cloud grew hotter and denser in the center, with a disk of gas and dust surrounding it that was hot in the center but cool at the edges. As the disk got thinner and thinner, particles began to stick together and form clumps. Some clumps got bigger, as particles and small clumps stuck to them, eventually forming planets or moons . Near the center of the cloud, where planets like Earth formed, only rocky material could stand the great heat. Icy matter settled in the outer regions of the disk along with rocky material, where the giant planets like Jupiter formed. As the cloud continued to fall in, the center eventually got so hot that it became a star, the Sun, and blew most of the gas and dust of the new solar system with a strong stellar wind. By studying meteorites, which are thought to be left over from this early phase of the solar system, scientists have found that the solar system is about 4,600 million years old!
Planets form at roughly the same time as their host stars, though generally the star has to be active (i.e., undergoing fusion) to clear the intersystem debris and help the planets remain stable.
Eventually, the cloud grew hotter and denser in the center, with a disk of gas and dust surrounding it that was hot in the center but cool at the edges. As the disk got thinner and thinner, particles began to stick together and form clumps. Some clumps got bigger, as particles and small clumps stuck to them, eventually forming planets or moons .
Because of how the gas would have behaved. Initially, there were little to no indications of the future planets - just a large dust cloud collapsing under its own gravity. As things get hotter and older (i.e., long after the central proto-stars have taken form), it's only then that irregularities in the outerlying dust have begun to form their own miniature gravity wells.So, the idea is still that the sun is activated first, then planets formed afterward. Even this is probably done in approximately the same time.
This is only an idea. Why should the star be activated first? And why couldn't the planet be condensed FIRST way before the majority of the gases condensed into the sun? Why should the planets start to form when the nebulous gases became thin enough? What is the support of of the alleged sequence according to physics?
Computer simulations beg to differ.I suggest the planets are made when the nebulous gases were still thick enough, which is way before the sun begin to take shape.
Because of how the gas would have behaved. Initially, there were little to no indications of the future planets - just a large dust cloud collapsing under its own gravity. As things get hotter and older (i.e., long after the central proto-stars have taken form), it's only then that irregularities in the outerlying dust have begun to form their own miniature gravity wells.
In other words, the centre of the cloud will by default attract everything towards it - that's just gravity. It takes much longer, however, for clumps of dust to aggregate into anything approaching a planet. The Sun forms first because the centre of the cloud is already a gravitational well, while the future planets won't form until more gravitational wells form - and that takes time.
Computer simulations beg to differ.
Could you provide one reference?
Why couldn't local gravity clumps formed in the early stage of nebula evolution? Look at a galaxy, the center of a galaxy is not as massive as a star to its planets.
Here's one.Could you provide one reference?
Any local clumps small enough to only form a planet would be swamped by the clumps large enough to form stars. It's only when the star has cleaned the surrounding area that planets can aggregate.Why couldn't local gravity clumps formed in the early stage of nebula evolution?
Indeed: it's much, much heavier. Galactic cores are so very much heavier that they don't just form stars, they form a single supermassive black hole.Look at a galaxy, the center of a galaxy is not as massive as a star to its planets.
I wonder when and how we will be able to understand how dark matter is involved in the formation of galaxies.Indeed: it's much, much heavier. Galactic cores are so very much heavier that they don't just form stars, they form a single supermassive black hole.
Interesting term (dark matter) -- it clears up a question I had pertaining to a passage:I could be wrong here, but my understanding is that dark matter isn't some mysterious complicated mass we can't explain without a formula, but rather it's just all the stuff in the universe that doesn't emit it's own light.