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Solutions
Solutions

The Sun and Stardust
The Sun and Stardust

... very quickly. At the end of their life heavier (metals) are formed such as vanadium, chromium, manganese, iron, cobalt, and nickel etc. Then massive stars (about ten times more massive than the Sun ,or even heavier) burst into what is called a supernova, spreading all of the elements that formed thr ...
How do stars form as a function of stellar mass
How do stars form as a function of stellar mass

... Abstract: How do stars form as a function of stellar mass? What are the effects of the immediate circumstellar environment? These are 2 fundamental questions that our study of companions to intermediate-mass pre-main sequence stars seeks to address. Herbig Ae/Be stars span the mass range from roughl ...
DTU 8e Chap 5 Formation of the Solar System
DTU 8e Chap 5 Formation of the Solar System

... Jupiter and Saturn were initially worlds of rock and metal that pulled onto themselves large amounts of hydrogen and helium, along with some water. Uranus and Neptune were also initially worlds of rock and metal, but they attracted more water and less hydrogen and helium than the other giant planets ...
The Sizes of Stars
The Sizes of Stars

... faster than material further away. If there’s a lot of material in a disk, this will cause the atoms will rub up against each other. There will be friction! So ƒ The material will lose orbital energy and spiral in ƒ The disk will get real hot. The faster the gas moves, the greater the friction, and ...
the search for planets - Cosmos
the search for planets - Cosmos

... they possess a relatively stable energy output which permits stable conditions in the orbiting planet. The simultaneous existence of at least one massive planet orbiting far from the star and a terrestrial planet orbiting in the habitable zone may be a favourable configuration for the presence of co ...
ES High mass star life cycle plus black holes
ES High mass star life cycle plus black holes

... What is the life cycle of a low mass star (5 stages)? What is the life cycle of a high mass star? What is the heaviest element forms in the center of a high mass star? Why is supernova crucial to our existence? Where is calcium formed in the life a high mass star? What is a supernova? What are the 2 ...
File
File

How was the Solar System Formed?
How was the Solar System Formed?

... Solar System: The Sun and all of the planets and other bodies that travel around it. Planet: any of the primary bodies that orbit the Sun; a similar body that orbits another star. Solar Nebula: a rotating cloud of dust and gas from which the sun and planets formed; also any nebula from which stars a ...
AST 301 Fall 2007 Review for Exam 3 This exam covers only
AST 301 Fall 2007 Review for Exam 3 This exam covers only

... planets (name them, explain them), but basically only one of them has been successful, so far, in detecting large numbers of extrasolar planets. Can you explain why that is? What do you learn from this technique? What could you learn about a planet from other techniques? Of the numerous extrasolar p ...
Giant planets in debris disks around nearby stars
Giant planets in debris disks around nearby stars

Document
Document

Document
Document

... 2003 UB313: The 10th Planet? ...
Solutions to problems
Solutions to problems

notes
notes

... • Planets form within a few tens of millions of years of their star forming, and there are stars that are forming today and other stars that are ten billion years old, so unlike the planets of the Solar System, which can only be observed as they are today, studying exoplanets allows the observation ...
part2
part2

... are meteorites, the bits of meteoroids that survive passing through the Earth’s atmosphere and land on our planet’s surface • Radioactive age-dating of meteorites, reveals that they are all nearly the same age, about 4.56 billion years old ...
Types of Planets and Stars
Types of Planets and Stars

... vary in size, mass, and brightness, but they all convert hydrogen into helium, also known as nuclear fusion. While our sun will spend 10 billion on its main sequence, a star ten times as massive will stick around for only 20 million years.  Red Dwarf -- most common stars in the universe. These star ...
Impossible planets.
Impossible planets.

... the way of a nice theory and, conversely, never gets thrown when an actual observation arrives to spoil it. Lack of data can actually be an advantage. Unhindered by facts, some theorist is bound to have come up with a model that explains even the strangest discovery. Doug Lin, from the University of ...
Useful Things to Study (#2)
Useful Things to Study (#2)

... Spectroscopic binaries, eclipsing binaries - what good are they? How does interstellar dust affect the light of stars along the line of sight? What fraction (by mass) of the interstellar medium is in gas and what fraction in dust? different components of the interstellar medium (cold atomic gas, eve ...
3. Stellar Formation and Evolution
3. Stellar Formation and Evolution

... • When stars > 0.4 M run out their hydrogen fuel in their core, their outer layers expand and cool to form a red giant. • In a red giant of up to 2 M, hydrogen fusion proceeds in a shell-layer surrounding the core. Eventually the core is compressed enough to start helium fusion. Stars shrinks in r ...
The Properties of Stars
The Properties of Stars

... Our theory must explain the data 1. Large bodies in the Solar System revolve and rotate in the same direction. 2. There are two types of planets. – small, rocky terrestrial planets – large, hydrogen-rich Jovian planets 3. Asteroids & comets exist in certain regions of the Solar System 4. There are e ...
Astronomy 12 Levelled Curriculum Project Origin of the Solar
Astronomy 12 Levelled Curriculum Project Origin of the Solar

... Create Your Own Extrasolar System. In this activity, you will create your own planetary system. You must include the following elements:  A star (or multiple stars; note: if you chose more than one star, you will have to research planetary orbits in such star systems…they are not elliptical)  At l ...
15 Aug 2009
15 Aug 2009

... mass of the exoplanet and can reveal small rocky planets similar to ours. Sixty transiting planets are known to date. A space-based transit survey by the European Space Agency's Corot satellite has detected planets as small as two Earth diameters. NASA's Kepler mission, launched this past March and ...
9 Intro to the Solar System
9 Intro to the Solar System

... gravity and it basically runs the solar system. In fact, the term “solar” comes from the Latin word sol for son. We named the whole shebang after the Sun, so there you go. • The planets are smaller but still pretty huge compared to us tiny humans Earth in comparison to Jupiter ◦ At the big end we ha ...
4 x What Powers the Sun? • Need to provide
4 x What Powers the Sun? • Need to provide

... 1.4 < Mfinal < 3M ...
< 1 ... 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 ... 158 >

Nebular hypothesis

The nebular hypothesis is the most widely accepted model in the field of cosmogony to explain the formation and evolution of the Solar System. It suggests that the Solar System formed from nebulous material. The theory was developed by Immanuel Kant and published in his Universal Natural History and Theory of the Heaven. Originally applied to our own Solar System, this process of planetary system formation is now thought to be at work throughout the universe. The widely accepted modern variant of the nebular hypothesis is the solar nebular disk model (SNDM) or simply solar nebular model. This nebular hypothesis offered explanations for a variety of properties of the Solar System, including the nearly circular and coplanar orbits of the planets, and their motion in the same direction as the Sun's rotation. Some elements of the nebular hypothesis are echoed in modern theories of planetary formation, but most elements have been superseded.According to the nebular hypothesis, stars form in massive and dense clouds of molecular hydrogen—giant molecular clouds (GMC). These clouds are gravitationally unstable, and matter coalesces within them to smaller denser clumps, which then rotate, collapse, and form stars. Star formation is a complex process, which always produces a gaseous protoplanetary disk around the young star. This may give birth to planets in certain circumstances, which are not well known. Thus the formation of planetary systems is thought to be a natural result of star formation. A Sun-like star usually takes approximately 1 million years to form, with the protoplanetary disk evolving into a planetary system over the next 10-100 million years.The protoplanetary disk is an accretion disk that feeds the central star. Initially very hot, the disk later cools in what is known as the T tauri star stage; here, formation of small dust grains made of rocks and ice is possible. The grains eventually may coagulate into kilometer-sized planetesimals. If the disk is massive enough, the runaway accretions begin, resulting in the rapid—100,000 to 300,000 years—formation of Moon- to Mars-sized planetary embryos. Near the star, the planetary embryos go through a stage of violent mergers, producing a few terrestrial planets. The last stage takes approximately 100 million to a billion years.The formation of giant planets is a more complicated process. It is thought to occur beyond the so-called frost line, where planetary embryos mainly are made of various types of ice. As a result, they are several times more massive than in the inner part of the protoplanetary disk. What follows after the embryo formation is not completely clear. Some embryos appear to continue to grow and eventually reach 5–10 Earth masses—the threshold value, which is necessary to begin accretion of the hydrogen–helium gas from the disk. The accumulation of gas by the core is initially a slow process, which continues for several million years, but after the forming protoplanet reaches about 30 Earth masses (M⊕) it accelerates and proceeds in a runaway manner. Jupiter- and Saturn-like planets are thought to accumulate the bulk of their mass during only 10,000 years. The accretion stops when the gas is exhausted. The formed planets can migrate over long distances during or after their formation. Ice giants such as Uranus and Neptune are thought to be failed cores, which formed too late when the disk had almost disappeared.
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