If you seriously cannot look this up in the textbook you're using, then you do not deserve to have the answer posted here. If they're not listed explicitly in your textbook, then you should have a list of forces - figure it out. If you can't figure it out, then apply this helpful algorithm:
1. Read the problem.
2. Think about the answer.
3. Write it down.
The dust and gas of the solar system were pulled together primarily by gravity. Initially, a rotating cloud of gas and dust, known as the solar nebula, began to collapse under its own gravitational attraction. As it contracted, it spun faster and flattened into a disk, leading to the formation of the Sun at the center and planets from the remaining material. This process was influenced by various factors, including shock waves from nearby supernovae that may have triggered the collapse.
A solar nebula is related to the formation of our Solar System, any other nebula is just a nebula.
This is what scientists think happen: a previous large star exploded in a supernova. The outer layer of dust and gas is ejected into space. The gas eventually formed the sun. The dust pulled together to form everything else in the solar system.
In the formation of our solar system, nearly all the mass of the solar nebula became the Sun, which accounts for about 99.86% of the solar system's total mass. The remaining material formed the planets, moons, asteroids, and comets. This process involved the gravitational collapse of the nebula, leading to the Sun's formation at the center, while the residual matter coalesced into the various celestial bodies orbiting it.
A nebula
Gravitational force pulled the particles of gas and dust together, causing the solar nebula to shrink and eventually form the solar system.
A nebula develops into a solar system through the process of gravitational collapse. As the nebula contracts due to gravity, it starts to spin and flatten into a spinning disk. Within this disk, the material begins to clump together and form planetesimals, which eventually coalesce to form planets, moons, and other objects in the solar system.
The dust and gas of the solar system were pulled together primarily by gravity. Initially, a rotating cloud of gas and dust, known as the solar nebula, began to collapse under its own gravitational attraction. As it contracted, it spun faster and flattened into a disk, leading to the formation of the Sun at the center and planets from the remaining material. This process was influenced by various factors, including shock waves from nearby supernovae that may have triggered the collapse.
The hypothesis on how the solar system was formed is known as the solar nebula theory. This theory posits that the solar system formed from a massive, rotating cloud of gas and dust called the solar nebula. Over time, gravity caused the material in the nebula to clump together, eventually forming the sun and the planets.
There is no such thing as a nebula star.
A solar nebula is related to the formation of our Solar System, any other nebula is just a nebula.
NO.
The solar system was produced by solar nebula. The nebula was disrupted by an unknow substance in the air.
This is what scientists think happen: a previous large star exploded in a supernova. The outer layer of dust and gas is ejected into space. The gas eventually formed the sun. The dust pulled together to form everything else in the solar system.
The solar system did not form from a nebula at all. Our solar system formed from a rotating cloud of gas and dust, our sun formed at the center and planets formed from the surrounding matter. when our sun became large enough to support nuclear fusion, the solar wind created blew away most of the gases present. A planetary nebula is formed after a star runs out of fuel (Helium) and collapses inward on itself due to the massive amount of gravity and the now unstable balance of the star. the pressure then becomes so great that the gases that had been pulled inward explode outward at an incredible speed. The Cats Eye Nebula is a good exampleFile:NGC7293_(2004).jpg
I don't see why not. Suppose our solar system passed into a nebula. There you go. It could also form inside a nebula, though the matter near the primary (the sun) would have been blown back by the solar wind, leaving a void around the star and inner planet(s). An earth-like planet in a nebula would not have many stars to look at.
This describes a nebula, which is a vast cloud of gas and dust in space where stars are born. The gases and dust within a nebula are the raw materials that eventually come together under gravity to form new stars.