they are thought to not have merged to form planets due to Jupiters gravitational force preventing them from merging
Scientists believe that asteroids will never form into planets because the gravitational forces are not strong enough to bring them together to form a rounded shape like planets have. Additionally, asteroids' orbits often intersect with other celestial bodies, which prevents them from accumulating mass to form a planet.
It is believed that Jupiter's strong gravitational pull disrupted the formation of a planet in the asteroid belt region by preventing the material from accreting into a larger body. Instead, the material in this region remained scattered and smaller bodies like asteroids formed.
The asteroid belt is theorized to be pieces of what was supposed to be a planet located between Mars and Jupiter. These pieces, or planetesimals, were unable to come together to form a larger planet because they were pulled apart by gravity.
Gravitational forces from Jupiter's powerful gravity disrupted the process of planet formation in the asteroid belt. These forces prevented the asteroids from coalescing into a single planet, instead keeping them in their current dispersed state.
Planets evolve through a process called planetary accretion, where dust and gas in a protoplanetary disk come together to form planetesimals, which then collide and merge to form planets. Once a planet forms, it can undergo additional evolution through processes like differentiation into layers, volcanic activity, tectonic activity, and impacts from asteroids and comets. Over time, planets can change in composition, structure, and surface features due to these processes.
Scientists believe that asteroids will never form into planets because the gravitational forces are not strong enough to bring them together to form a rounded shape like planets have. Additionally, asteroids' orbits often intersect with other celestial bodies, which prevents them from accumulating mass to form a planet.
jupeters gravity disrupted their formation
any asteroids that collide with the planet containing ice deposit it on the surface
It is believed that Jupiter's strong gravitational pull disrupted the formation of a planet in the asteroid belt region by preventing the material from accreting into a larger body. Instead, the material in this region remained scattered and smaller bodies like asteroids formed.
A) Some scientists suppose that the asteroids represent pieces of a planet that once existed but was torn apart a long time ago. B) Other scientists believe that the asteroids are material that never came together to form a planet in the first place.
they would of found out about asteroids because when the dinosaurs were extinct a massive comet hit earth and it destroyed it and the reason planet earth was created again was because a large enough rock formed into a planet and if the rock is not large enough then it wont form into a planet
First, lets clean up the grammar and spelling of your question. "How were asteroids formed?" is correct form. Asteroids are broken up pieces of a hypothetical planet between Mars and Jupiter. Probably during the formation of the solar system a couple of potential planets, or a planet and a moon or a planet and a really big comet etc. smashed into each other.
No. The asteroid belt is an area where there are more asteroids than in other parts of the solar system It is not a planet, nor is there enough mass in the asteroid belt to form a whole planet.
The asteroid belt is theorized to be pieces of what was supposed to be a planet located between Mars and Jupiter. These pieces, or planetesimals, were unable to come together to form a larger planet because they were pulled apart by gravity.
Asteroids ("star like things") better name Planetoids ("planet like things"). Bits of the rocky parts of the early Solar System that didn't get to form into one planet, presumably due to the perturbations of Jupiter's gravity. They lie in a harmonic zone where a planet should be, but the largest of them, Ceres, is only about the size of Texas.
Planetesimal is the name some theorists give to the individual chunks of material (rocks or ice) that merge together over a period of time to form a planet.
Carl Sagan suggested striking Venus with large asteroids, in an attempt to expel the inhospitable atmosphere away from the planet.