Uranus was formed from the light gases of the outer solar nebula.
No, the solar nebula was primarily composed of hydrogen and helium, with trace amounts of other elements like carbon and iron. The solar system formed from the gravitational collapse of this nebula, leading to the formation of the Sun and planets.
rotating clouds mademostly of helium & hydrogen
Roughly 1-2% of the solar nebula's mass consisted of rocky material. The majority of the nebula's mass was composed of hydrogen and helium, with smaller amounts of other elements like carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen. These rocky materials eventually accumulated to form the terrestrial planets in our solar system.
Hydrogen and Helium
Uranus was formed from the light gases of the outer solar nebula.
A nebula IS a cloud of dust and gas loosely held together by gravity.
It all depends on how close stars are to the cloud, and how intense those stars radiate energy. A nebula will glow with a blue colour if it simply reflects starlight (the blue is from the same mechanism our sky is blue, from the scattering of light). This occurs when a nebula is too far from stars, or the stars are too cool to generate enough radiation to ionize the hydrogen. Nebula will glow red if they are close enough to stars to absorb energy - that energy is re-emitted by the nebula as red (from the ionization of the hydrogen, which then glows red).
The term for swirling clouds of hydrogen gas out of which stars are born is "nebula."
Hugo is an asteroid, whilst a nebula is an interstellar cloud of dust, hydrogen gas and plasma
Nebula is an interstellar cloud of dust,hydrogen, helium and other ionized gases.
No, the solar nebula was primarily composed of hydrogen and helium, with trace amounts of other elements like carbon and iron. The solar system formed from the gravitational collapse of this nebula, leading to the formation of the Sun and planets.
No, The nebula is an interstellar cloud of dust, hydrogen gas, helium gas and plasma. Look on Wikipedia.
Vast interstellar clouds of hydrogen are known as "nebula."
rotating clouds mademostly of helium & hydrogen
Roughly 1-2% of the solar nebula's mass consisted of rocky material. The majority of the nebula's mass was composed of hydrogen and helium, with smaller amounts of other elements like carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen. These rocky materials eventually accumulated to form the terrestrial planets in our solar system.
Hydrogen is composed of hydrogen atoms.