accretion disk
accretion disc
jupiter is the fastest spinning planet in our solar system.
If the solar nebula had no angular momentum initially, it would not have been able to form a spinning disk, which is necessary for the formation of a solar system. This spinning motion is what causes the material in the nebula to flatten into a disk shape, leading to the formation of planets and other celestial bodies. Without angular momentum, the material in the nebula would not have been able to come together to form a solar system as we know it.
They don't. Uranus spins on a "sideways" axis with retrograde spin. Venus also has a retrograde spin. Most spin in the same direction though. This is probably because of how the Solar System was formed, from a spinning disc of material.
The nebular model explains how our solar system formed from a rotating cloud of gas and dust called a solar nebula. Gravity caused the nebula to collapse, forming a central protostar surrounded by a spinning disk. Over time, the material in the disk clumped together to form planets and other solar system bodies.
The solar system formed from the gravitational collapse of a cloud of interstellar gas.
As the gases in a nebula condense, they form a spinning ball called a protostar. This protostar continues to accumulate material from the surrounding nebula, increasing in temperature and pressure until nuclear fusion begins in its core, marking the birth of a new star. The surrounding material may also coalesce to form planets, moons, and other celestial bodies within a solar system.
From spinning matter
Our Solar System is called the Solar System, Why?, what do you Aliens call it.
The solar system is believed to have formed about 5 billion years ago, and by the way, why do you call it YOUR solar system? Do you come from a different solar system? Because if not, then it's OUR solar system.
The spinning rotation of a planet from east to west is called retrograde rotation. This is the opposite direction to the majority of planets in our solar system, which rotate from west to east in a prograde rotation.
The nebular hypothesis is the most widely accepted model in the field of cosmogony to explain the formation and evolution of the Solar System (as well as other planetary systems). It suggests that the Solar System formed from nebulous material.