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Published byDwight Holmes Modified over 8 years ago
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Parallels: Proto-Planetary Disks and rings 2 December 2015
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Origin of the Solar System It’s a fundamental problem in astronomy We must explain the characteristics of our own system, and of planets around other stars Elements were made inside stars Stars formed from giant molecular clouds Planets form in a disk around the protostar Giant planets form from accretion onto cores Terrestrial planets are only the cores
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Characteristics of our Solar System Regular planet orbits Planets are closely spaced Terrestrial and Jovian planets Asteroids and comets leftover Satellites and rings imitate a miniature Solar System
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Stages in planet formation Dust collects in the mid-plane of the protoplanetary disk Grows by mutual collisions: ‘accretion’ Planetesimals (about 1km across) grow and collide Giant collisions are the final stage Giant planet cores are bigger outside the frost-line: they attract gas to become gas giants like Jupiter Star ignites: the gas and dust blown away
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Leftovers Near the Sun (inside frost-line, also known as snow line or ice line) rocky objects become asteroids Far from the Sun (outside frost-line) icy objects form the comets and Kuiper Belt Objects
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Density waves and propellers in a forming disk
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Pan closeup
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Propeller, but moon causing it still unseen
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Planet Migration Density waves and gaps allow angular momentum transfers These move the planets (like moons within rings) around Some end up in the proto-star! This infant mortality removes planets, like musical chairs… What we see now are just the survivors
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