Posted on 11/10/2014 10:49:29 AM PST by Red Badger
We cant see the birth of our own solar system, but an incredible new telescopic image is giving us hints about how planets are born.
Humans are cosmic mayflies. Our lives come and go quickly, only offering us glimpses of the slow evolution of the Universe. Human history is measured in centuries, while the birth and death of stars and planets take place over millions and billions of years.
For that reason, we will never see the formation of another solar system unfold before our eyes. Instead, astronomers hope to observe planet formation in all its stages, each marking a phase in star and planet birth. That tells us not just the story of other star systems, but offers a glimpse into our own deep history, the one we can never see.
Think of that when you look at the beautiful image opening this piece. This image is so incredible it looks more like an artists impression than something from a telescope, but it shows the disk of gas and dust surrounding the newborn star HL Tauri. The star itself is just awakening; the fusion of hydrogen into helium that makes it shine has probably only been going on a million years or so, based on the amount and colors of light the star emits.
But the most breathtaking aspects of the image are the rings and gaps in the disk, never imaged before in this much detail. The largest gaps likely contain protoplanets, which form by collecting gas, dust, and small meteoroid fragments, gradually clearing their orbit of that debris. The combination of those gaps and the young age of HL Tauri suggest planets may form more quickly than astronomers think. A million years is long by human standardsour species has been around less than 200,000 years, after allbut its a tiny slice of Earths 4.5 billion-year history, and even tinier compared with the age of the Universe.
In visible light this star system is completely shrouded in dust, its details hidden. The image above was constructed with longer-wavelength light, using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). Millimeter and submillimeter light lies at the transition between infrared and microwaves, and its perfect for seeing into the clouds surrounding newborn star systems.
Additionally, ALMA consists of up to 66 telescopes acting together. (The information available doesnt tell how many of these were used to observe HL Tauri.) By arranging them at their largest separation, about 16 kilometers, astronomers obtain higher resolution than any single telescope can achieve. Its possible, in other words, that alien astronomers using a similar telescope array could have seen a disk like HL Tauris around our nascent Solar System, more than 4 billion years ago.
How many planets are forming? Its too soon to say, since they are too small to be seen even in this high-resolution image. The disk surrounding HL Tauri is much bigger than Neptunes orbit, so any planet in the gaps would at least begin at a larger orbit than the major planets in the Solar System. Additionally, other gaps could be resonances: orbits where the combined gravity of the star and protoplanets drive matter out, concentrating it in the rings. (The Asteroid Belt in the Solar System has many such gaps, created by the gravity of the Sun and Jupiter.)
The census of other star systems suggest planets migrate after they form, thanks to friction with remaining gas and the gravitational influence of other planets in the system. The HL Tauri system we see today may not resemble the final form it takes after a few more million years. Over the last 15 years, weve learned that planetary systems are a mashup of physical laws and historical circumstances. The types of planets that form, where they orbit relative to the star and each other, and other aspects fall into certain patterns, but we see a lot of variety rather than identical systems.
HL Tauri is about 450 light-years away in the constellation of Taurus. We see the protoplanetary disk around it at an angle, but nearly face-on. Which is lucky: we can see the gaps in the disk more clearly than if the disk were at a steeper angle. Its astounding to think that from 450 light-years distance, we can see distinct signs of newborn planets and its unlikely HL Tauri will be the last such system we can observe.
We cant see the birth of our own Solar System, though we can infer a lot about it from the debris it left behind: comets, meteoroids, and asteroids scattered around the major planets. But theres an earlier time, when a giant cloud of gas and dust slowly collapsed under its own gravity. HL Tauri provides a glimpse into that era for another star, a single moment of history in an alien system that might possibly someday have its own civilization of astronomers who wonder how their planet formed so long before.
National Science Foundation
ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO)
Space Ping!.......................
Silly me!
I’d expect that the RINGS form into planets, rather than the gaps...
“The largest gaps likely contain protoplanets, which form by collecting gas, dust, and small meteoroid fragments, gradually clearing their orbit of that debris.”
Is there an overlay image of our SS over this one?
The image detail blows away expectations. It’s like visiting.
If the the star was not shrouded would its brightness obscure away the image detail?
If the the star was not shrouded would its brightness obscure away the image detail?
It would probably be more detailed and even more stunning.................
The protoplanets gather dust as they orbit the star, creating the gaps. Some new math shows that they tend to sit just on the edge of a ring and actually act to compress the rings, which in turn may form additional planets.
The gaps are where ring matter used to be but got hoovered up to congeal into a planet.
Why do you suppose the rings are essentially in two dimensions (a disk) rather than spherical?
NOT my fault!
Or perhaps they are 3-d but the waves are diffracted, similar to light through a raindrop.
“For that reason, we will never see the formation of another solar system unfold before our eyes. “
Why? How come a new solar system cannot be formed next week? What if the millions and billions of years come due next Thusday?
Just asking.
Because they are revolving around the proto-sun. As the Brownian motion of the particles making up the interstellar cloud is organized, they begin to rotate. This is the same reason the water in a flushed toilet rotates.
By convention, solar systems and planets rotate counter-clockwise (there are exceptions). The galaxy rotates clockwise. This has to do with the conservation of angular momentum.
IIRC - The rings of Saturn are only about 30m thick. The thickness of the asteroid belt is harder to nail down as their orbits vary greatly. Asteroids are spread very thinly. Half the mass of the asteroid belt is contained in just four asteroids.
Hope this helps.
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Gravity well...........
Conservation of angular momentum
Either we’re witnessing the birth of a new star, or the Rebels done blowed up another Death Star!
But then we’d just be seeing the end. That’s what they were saying, the time span is such that we won’t see a whole one, but we can see various ones in various stages and work out the process. Like a cooking show.
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extra to APoD, related:
Astronomy Picture of the Day — The Protoplanetary Disk of HL Tauri from ALMA
NASA | November 10, 2014 | (see photo credit)
Posted on 11/13/2014, 5:34:43 PM by SunkenCiv
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3226713/posts
The image without the graphics, which I thought get in the way.
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