Mostly gravity.
No, Earth did not come from the Sun. Both the Earth and the Sun formed from the same molecular cloud of gas and dust in space about 4.6 billion years ago. As this cloud collapsed under gravity, it spun and flattened into a disk, with the Sun forming at the center and planets, including Earth, forming from the remaining material in the disk. Thus, while they originated from the same cosmic material, Earth and the Sun are distinct entities.
Yes, a hypothesis for a solar system could be: "If a star has a rotating disk of gas and dust around it, then planets will form within this disk as the materials accrete and coalesce under the influence of gravity, eventually forming a stable system of orbiting bodies."
Before the Earth, the solar system was a swirling disk of gas and dust. This material eventually clumped together to form the planets, including Earth. Scientists believe that the Earth began to form about 4.5 billion years ago.
The conservation of angular momentum during the collapse of the primordial solar nebula is the aspect that accounts for the planets orbiting in the same direction and plane. As the nebula contracted and flattened into a spinning disk, this momentum caused the planets to form in a singular direction and plane, similar to the rotation of the original nebula.
There are three different theries of creation, but I can only remember two of them. 1> divine Creation- the theory that God created the planets and the life on them 2> The Big Bang Theory- the theory that all the matter in space hit together causing a big explosions which created the planets.
It appeared from flattened disk of gas and/or dust orbiting the sun.
it is dust and rocks/debris orbiting the planet, it is like how the moon orbits earth.
drops of dust see what i did there ;)
No, Earth did not come from the Sun. Both the Earth and the Sun formed from the same molecular cloud of gas and dust in space about 4.6 billion years ago. As this cloud collapsed under gravity, it spun and flattened into a disk, with the Sun forming at the center and planets, including Earth, forming from the remaining material in the disk. Thus, while they originated from the same cosmic material, Earth and the Sun are distinct entities.
by all he dust in the soler system
The conservation of angular momentum within the collapsing solar nebula is the aspect of the nebular hypothesis that accounts for the planets orbiting in the same direction and plane. As the nebula collapsed, it began rotating in a single direction, resulting in a protoplanetary disk that formed planets orbiting in the same direction and plane.
Yes, a hypothesis for a solar system could be: "If a star has a rotating disk of gas and dust around it, then planets will form within this disk as the materials accrete and coalesce under the influence of gravity, eventually forming a stable system of orbiting bodies."
Before the Earth, the solar system was a swirling disk of gas and dust. This material eventually clumped together to form the planets, including Earth. Scientists believe that the Earth began to form about 4.5 billion years ago.
Bad Sectors are permenent defects on a Hard Disk Drive (HDD). It maybe come from a factory defect, or an external problem. Keep the hard disk safe and away from any magnetic force or dirt and dust and you can prevent having Bad Sectors on your HDD.
The solar system is roughly a flat, disk-like shape, with most planets orbiting the Sun in relatively the same plane. This configuration is due to the way the solar system formed from a rotating cloud of gas and dust, which flattened out into a disk as the planets formed.
The conservation of angular momentum during the collapse of the primordial solar nebula is the aspect that accounts for the planets orbiting in the same direction and plane. As the nebula contracted and flattened into a spinning disk, this momentum caused the planets to form in a singular direction and plane, similar to the rotation of the original nebula.
The mass of ice and dust orbiting the sun.