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EXOPLANET Due to increasing incursions by hostile alien forces
EXOPLANET Due to increasing incursions by hostile alien forces

... Due to increasing incursions by hostile alien forces, we have deemed it worthwhile to determine the potential locations of these alien home planets. Our high-powered telescopes are scanning the galaxy and beyond, looking for clues of life. Complicating the matter is that these star systems and plane ...
Giant Planets at Small Orbital Distances
Giant Planets at Small Orbital Distances

Test 3 Review
Test 3 Review

Reflected Light from Giant Planets in Habitable Zones
Reflected Light from Giant Planets in Habitable Zones

Search for Other Worlds - Science fiction 20 years
Search for Other Worlds - Science fiction 20 years

... that other worlds existed his words are remembered. At the beginning of the 20th century astronomer Edwin Hubble realised that the small fuzzy nebulae in his telescope were in fact neighboring galaxies. Along with this discovery came the realization that other galaxies had hundreds of millions of st ...
PPT
PPT

... DILEMMA! The rim FURTHEST from the star is brighter! ...
The Milky Way disk
The Milky Way disk

... Abstract / This review summarises the invited presentation I gave on the Milky Way disc. The idea underneath was to touch those topics that can be considered hot nowadays in the Galactic disk research: the reality of the thick disk, the spiral structure of the Milky Way, and the properties of the ou ...
- ORIGINS Space Telescope
- ORIGINS Space Telescope

slides
slides

... Today at that location we see a nebula, with gases in the cloud expanding outward at about 1,500 km/s. In 1967 a pulsar was discovered in it. – period 33 ms (flashes 30 times per second), slowin ...
5 Habitable zones and Planetary atmospheres
5 Habitable zones and Planetary atmospheres

... Solar System when it comes to organic molecules in the atmosphere. Being a moon of Saturn, it is actually larger than both Mercury and Pluto. The atmosphere of Titan has some similarities to the Earth’s.  surface pressure of 1.5 bar  N2 is the main atmospheric constituent  CH4 is the second most ...
Very high-density planets: a possible remnant of gas giants
Very high-density planets: a possible remnant of gas giants

... star, this study investigates the possibility for these planets to be remnant cores of giant planets that evaporated their gaseous envelope during their migration towards the star. In such a process, the important time scales are the evaporation rate of the planet and the relaxation of the interior ...
Micro_lect20a
Micro_lect20a

... Orionis, one of the brightest stars in the familiar constellation of Orion, the Hunter. 4. The name Betelgeuse is Arabic in origin. As a massive red supergiant, it is nearing the end of its life and will soon become a supernova. In this historic image, a bright hotspot is revealed on the star's surf ...
White Dwarfs - University of Maryland Astronomy
White Dwarfs - University of Maryland Astronomy

... electrons must move faster as they are squeezed into a very small space.  As a white dwarf’s mass approaches 1.4 MSun, its electrons must move at nearly the speed of light.  Because nothing can move faster than light, a white dwarf cannot be more massive than 1.4 MSun, the white dwarf limit. ...
ExTRaSOLaR pLaNeTS
ExTRaSOLaR pLaNeTS

Letter to the Editor The formation of bipolar planetary nebulae
Letter to the Editor The formation of bipolar planetary nebulae

... The results in this paper do not mean that more massive stars will necessarily have bipolar nebulae around them. Whether or not this happens still depends on the mass loss geometry of the AGB wind and hence on the mechanism which produces the aspherical mass loss. If the mass loss is not strongly co ...
No Slide Title
No Slide Title

- EPJ Web of Conferences
- EPJ Web of Conferences

... non-relativistic at early times, and weakly or un-coupled to the radiation which dominates the Universe at those early times. Thus the dominant matter cannot be baryonic, which couples efficiently to radiation through Thompson scattering. It is non-relativistic, does not couple to, or emit, radiatio ...
friction Pluto
friction Pluto

... Our solar system is extremely complex. There are more objects out there than the sun and nine planets. There are many questions scientists research about our solar system, in the past, present and future. One question that has been researched is how were planets and space objects formed? One thing i ...
10. The Lives of the Stars
10. The Lives of the Stars

... 1. Angular momentum conservation causes the cloud to spin faster as it contracts: ...
No Slide Title
No Slide Title

Stellar Evolution: Evolution: Birth, Life, and Death of Stars
Stellar Evolution: Evolution: Birth, Life, and Death of Stars

... bigger than water. They are made of neutrons and more exotic particles. Young neutron stars rotate rapidly and emit regular pulses of radiation in radio, and are known as pulsars. ...
Injection mechanisms of short-lived radionuclides and their
Injection mechanisms of short-lived radionuclides and their

... accretion of the angrite parent body is inconsistent with initial Solar System 60Fe estimates inferred from Bishunpur and Semarkona chondrules, suggesting decoupling in the presence of 26Al and 60Fe in some early formed planetesimals. This could reflect heterogeneous distribution of 60Fe in the proto ...
The Milky Way Galaxy
The Milky Way Galaxy

MilkyWay
MilkyWay

File
File

... 1. Small bodies that join to form protoplanets in the early stages of the development of the solar system are ...
< 1 ... 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 ... 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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