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rhamphotheca:

Solar System’s Origin Not So Special
by Bruce Dorminey
When it comes to the size of its protoplanetary disk, our solar system  is just an average Joe. That’s what researchers will report in an  upcoming         issue of The Astronomical Journal about the extent of  dust and gas from which our planetary system first formed. Using  observational data and computer models that rewound the solar system back to the time of  Jupiter’s formation some 4.56 billion years ago, the team argues that         our protoplantary disk stretched no farther than 80 astronomical units,  roughly double the distance of         Pluto’s orbit.
If the disk had been any bigger, gravitational  forces within it would have pushed some icy bodies smaller than Pluto  outward into         steeply tilted orbits—a situation astronomers have not observed  in our solar system. While disks around other young stars can run the  gamut from         tens to thousands of astronomical units, the average is roughly  60 AU. So even though we might think we’re special, the galaxy would  tend to         disagree.
(via: Science NOW)     (image: T. Pyle/NASA/JPL-CalTech)

rhamphotheca:

Solar System’s Origin Not So Special

by Bruce Dorminey

When it comes to the size of its protoplanetary disk, our solar system is just an average Joe. That’s what researchers will report in an upcoming issue of The Astronomical Journal about the extent of dust and gas from which our planetary system first formed. Using observational data and computer models that rewound the solar system back to the time of Jupiter’s formation some 4.56 billion years ago, the team argues that our protoplantary disk stretched no farther than 80 astronomical units, roughly double the distance of Pluto’s orbit.

If the disk had been any bigger, gravitational forces within it would have pushed some icy bodies smaller than Pluto outward into steeply tilted orbits—a situation astronomers have not observed in our solar system. While disks around other young stars can run the gamut from tens to thousands of astronomical units, the average is roughly 60 AU. So even though we might think we’re special, the galaxy would tend to disagree.

(via: Science NOW)     (image: T. Pyle/NASA/JPL-CalTech)


52 notes | Reblog | 3 months ago
Posted on February 24th at 12:14 AM
Reblogged from: rhamphotheca
Originally posted by: rhamphotheca
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