|
|
|
|
|
August 20th, 2003, 04:09 PM
|
|
Shrapnel Fanatic
|
|
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 11,451
Thanks: 1
Thanked 4 Times in 4 Posts
|
|
Re: Jokes and Riddles Centre
Because it is very unlikely that all the particles comprising the planet had velocities that would cancel each other out to zero when they came together.
__________________
Things you want:
|
August 21st, 2003, 12:41 AM
|
|
Shrapnel Fanatic
|
|
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: CHEESE!
Posts: 10,009
Thanks: 0
Thanked 7 Times in 1 Post
|
|
Re: Jokes and Riddles Centre
or, so we would have day and night.
__________________
If I only could remember half the things I'd forgot, that would be a lot of stuff, I think - I don't know; I forgot!
A* E* Se! Gd! $-- C-^- Ai** M-- S? Ss---- RA Pw? Fq Bb++@ Tcp? L++++
Some of my webcomics. I've got 400+ webcomics at Last count, some dead.
Sig updated to remove non-working links.
|
August 21st, 2003, 11:49 AM
|
|
Major General
|
|
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Linghem, �sterg�tland, Sweden
Posts: 2,255
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
|
|
Re: Jokes and Riddles Centre
Quote:
Originally posted by Suicide Junkie:
Because it is very unlikely that all the particles comprising the planet had velocities that would cancel each other out to zero when they came together.
|
But to have such a fast spin as most planets have most particles would hav eto have the same general direction, or? (Why do stars spin in the galaxy? I know what keeps them from flying away but why do they spin?)
(It doesn't seem to be any answer, most belive it's from the big bang but it seems there are no good theory as to why things spins (planets arund their axis, all stars in the same direction around the galaxy, etc))
|
August 21st, 2003, 05:21 PM
|
Colonel
|
|
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Colorado
Posts: 1,727
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
|
|
Re: Jokes and Riddles Centre
Actually the particles, orbiting a larger mass, would be traveling at different speeds based on how far away they were from the mass they were orbiting. As they clump up, they must travel at different speeds, and angles to each other. Then, once they are starting to form a body, there will be many bodies clumping together, pounding and knocking each other around. Since the bodies do not intersect through their collative centers of mass the impact would necessarily impart spin.
As for galaxies, they must spin or all matter in the galaxy would fall into the center. The orbital motion is all that keeps them apart from each other.
|
August 21st, 2003, 05:56 PM
|
|
Shrapnel Fanatic
|
|
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 11,451
Thanks: 1
Thanked 4 Times in 4 Posts
|
|
Re: Jokes and Riddles Centre
Take an overall cloud of particles that may form a planet.
That cloud has some angular momentum. For material orbiting a star, the stuff closer in will be moving faster relative to the stuff farther away. (Since it is orbiting the star)
As the planet forms, the huge starting volume compresses down to a relatively puny ball of rock/ice/gas giant.
Since angular momentum is conserved, and the body is now smaller, the planet will be spinning quite fast.
Think diving or figure skating or merry-go-rounds. When you move the mass towards the center the spin rate increases, conserving angular momentum.
Imagine a merry-go round with a radius of a few million kilometers, collecting 6x1024kg of rock and drawing it down into a ball only 6378 km in radius.
Even a small net spin will be magnified by a huge amount as the body collapses.
Bits spinning too fast may get thrown off, and slow bits will sap energy from the medium and fast bits.
[ August 21, 2003, 16:58: Message edited by: Suicide Junkie ]
__________________
Things you want:
|
August 21st, 2003, 05:57 PM
|
|
National Security Advisor
|
|
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Ohio
Posts: 8,450
Thanks: 0
Thanked 4 Times in 1 Post
|
|
Re: Jokes and Riddles Centre
Quote:
Originally posted by Ruatha:
But to have such a fast spin as most planets have most particles would hav eto have the same general direction, or? (Why do stars spin in the galaxy? I know what keeps them from flying away but why do they spin?)
(It doesn't seem to be any answer, most belive it's from the big bang but it seems there are no good theory as to why things spins (planets arund their axis, all stars in the same direction around the galaxy, etc))
|
The answer is if they didn't, they wouldn't.
That seems simplistic and counter intuitive, but to understand it you have to look at it backwards. If there were things in the solar system that didn't revolve around the sun in a particular way then over time they would fall into the sun or another planet, or be flung off out from the system entirely. Early on there were very likely many objects of varying size that were going all about in a chaotic manner. Over time all those were eliminated and what we are left with is only those things that follow a few stable orbits. Plus some small debris of course. The galaxy is the same principle as the solar system on a larger scale. It's not that something is making them revolve a certain way, it's that over time things that don't revolve a certain way get eliminated.
As far as why planets spin on their axis, I believe most of that comes not from the impact of the debris forming the planet, but from conservation of momentum of orbiting bodies. A body orbiting another will pick up a spin from this process. It's compicated orbital mechanic stuff that I don't fully understand, but I think that is the jist of it.
__________________
I used to be somebody but now I am somebody else
Who I'll be tomorrow is anybody's guess
|
August 21st, 2003, 06:41 PM
|
|
Shrapnel Fanatic
|
|
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 11,451
Thanks: 1
Thanked 4 Times in 4 Posts
|
|
Re: Jokes and Riddles Centre
Jupiter is likely responsible for cleaning up a lot of the garbage floating around in the system.
Things passing in front of the planet get their orbital momentum sapped and fall inwards, while things passing behind the planet (like the voyager probes) get whipped out of the system.
__________________
Things you want:
|
August 21st, 2003, 06:42 PM
|
Colonel
|
|
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Colorado
Posts: 1,727
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
|
|
Re: Jokes and Riddles Centre
I believe, Junkie, that you are right and I am not.
Impacts from lower orbits would be traveling at higher speeds, relative to the forming body, causing it to spin against it's orbit. Impacts from higher orbits would actually strike the leading face of the forming body, as the forming body has a faster orbit, again causing it to spin against its orbit. These examples assume all orbit are circular, but I'm thinking it will all average out that way, anyway.
If, however, the forming body is a cloud of sorts, it ought to be tide-locked to the star. In this case one face of the cloud will always be presented to the star, and thus the cloud will be spinning with its orbit. As the cloud collapses it will spin fast, with its orbit.
We'll just leave Venus and Uranus out of this, and say that all reasonable planets spin with their orbits. It's got to be the cloud thing.
[ August 21, 2003, 17:44: Message edited by: Loser ]
|
August 21st, 2003, 07:06 PM
|
|
Lieutenant Colonel
|
|
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Scottsdale AZ
Posts: 1,277
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
|
|
Re: Jokes and Riddles Centre
Sigh, I want the jokes and riddles back....
__________________
So many ugly women, so little beer.
|
August 21st, 2003, 07:38 PM
|
Colonel
|
|
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Colorado
Posts: 1,727
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
|
|
Re: Jokes and Riddles Centre
Quote:
Originally posted by Wardad:
Sigh, I want the jokes and riddles back....
|
Bring them. I like them. You seem to bring more than anyone else, although I could have been mistaken, and they were always funny.
[ August 21, 2003, 18:40: Message edited by: Loser ]
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is On
|
|
|
|
|