Origins of the Solar System

Beschreibung

Undergraduate Geology - Part 1 (Earth Structure) Notiz am Origins of the Solar System, erstellt von siobhan.quirk am 11/05/2013.
siobhan.quirk
Notiz von siobhan.quirk, aktualisiert more than 1 year ago
siobhan.quirk
Erstellt von siobhan.quirk vor mehr als 11 Jahre
187
1

Zusammenfassung der Ressource

Seite 1

The Solar System is believed to have formed according to the nebular hypothesis around 4500 million years ago. The Solar System formed when a giant molecular cloud of gas and dust, a nebula, collapsed - possibly when it was hit by a shockwave from a nearby exploding star, a supernova.During collapse the material formed a rotating disc and matter was drawn towards the centre where it became dense and immensly hot. In the very centre of the disc the heat triggered nuclear reactions in the form of fusion which resulted in the formation of the Sun.It would have taken as little as 50 million years for the Sun to form. Once it did so the solar wind (stream of charged particles being ejected by the violent nuclear reactions within the Sun) would have 'blown' the lighter gases further out to an area called the snow line.At the snow line collisions between the light non-metallic particles were more successful than those going on closer to the sun and so the Gas Giants formed rapidly by a process called accretion.The large, newly formed Gas Giants sweep the asteroid belt ejecting and consuming the football sized accretions, this reduced the friction and promoted the terrestrial planets to form.Once the new planets are large enough they begin to differentiate, a process where they divide into layers. The dense metallic elements, iron, nickle etc sinking to the core leaving the lighter silicon, oxygen, aluminium etc to form the crust and mantle.The Asteroid belt has been prevented from accreting effectively by the destabilising gravity of the Jovian planets, thus the size of these bodies is very limited and they will never form a planet.

New Page

Zusammenfassung anzeigen Zusammenfassung ausblenden

ähnlicher Inhalt

Earth Structure Definitions
siobhan.quirk
Planetary Geology
siobhan.quirk
Exploring Space
siobhan.quirk
Identifying Volcanism in the Solar System
siobhan.quirk
The Layers of the Earth
siobhan.quirk
Meteorites and Impact Craters
siobhan.quirk
Direct Evidence for the Structure of the Earth
siobhan.quirk
Indirect Evidence for the Structure of the Earth
siobhan.quirk
Magnetic Earth
siobhan.quirk
Reducing the Impact of Earthquakes
siobhan.quirk
Detecting Earthquakes
siobhan.quirk