Is our solar system weird (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Monday, May 18, 2015, 15:07 (3476 days ago)

The jury is still out but it is possible or probable from various viewpoints:-http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20150515-how-weird-is-our-solar-system-"The bigger question, though, is just how weird is the solar system. "Every indication right now looks like we might be rare," Walsh says. But at the same time, the planetary census is far from complete. "The jury is still out," he says.-"Astronomers simply haven't detected many planets like those in the solar system yet. "It's more difficult to see the systems like our own by any of the existing planet finding methods," says Jim Kasting, a planetary scientist at Penn State University in State College, US. "The fact that we haven't seen many systems like our own doesn't mean they're not common. It just means they're not that easy to see.'"

Is our solar system weird

by Balance_Maintained @, U.S.A., Monday, May 18, 2015, 16:26 (3476 days ago) @ David Turell

Is it just me, or are astronomers falling into the same trap as evolutionist? Because this sounds very similar to the statement: "Just because we haven't found any transitional fossils, doesn't mean they aren't there. They are just really hard to find."

--
What is the purpose of living? How about, 'to reduce needless suffering. It seems to me to be a worthy purpose.

Is our solar system weird

by David Turell @, Monday, May 18, 2015, 17:50 (3476 days ago) @ Balance_Maintained

Tony: Is it just me, or are astronomers falling into the same trap as evolutionist? Because this sounds very similar to the statement: "Just because we haven't found any transitional fossils, doesn't mean they aren't there. They are just really hard to find."-No, they are just atheists looking for a way out of the problem.

Is our solar system weird

by David Turell @, Tuesday, June 23, 2015, 15:36 (3440 days ago) @ David Turell

A computer simulation of the formation of our solar system tries to explain why ours is so different from the systems we are now discovering. Perhaps we have a rare type planet we call Earth and a rare solar system, implying a special creation:-
"There's something about our solar system that appears to be unusual. For some reason, most of our bigger planets are far away from our host star, while closer in are smaller, rocky worlds, including Earth itself.-"This is not the case for many extrasolar systems that have been discovered. So-called "hot Jupiters"—huge gas giant planets that nestle close to their star—have been found in a few examples. In other instances, planets slightly bigger than Earth are so close to their stars as to be uninhabitable. Did our solar system once look like this, or did it start out somewhat differently?-"As nobody was around to witness the forming of our solar system some 4.5 billion years ago, computer simulation is the next best means to unraveling this mystery. A new series of simulation scenarios suggests that Jupiter may have formed in a distant orbit, but temporarily invaded the orbital neighborhood of the present Earth before migrating back out."-
 Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2015-06-jupiter-movements-earth.html#jCp

Is our solar system weird; Planet 9?!

by David Turell @, Thursday, January 21, 2016, 01:35 (3229 days ago) @ David Turell

There is gravitational evidence for a huge planet 'nine' way out in the solar system, based on movements odd objects in the Kuiper belt:-http://www.nature.com/news/evidence-grows-for-giant-planet-on-fringes-of-solar-system-1.19182?WT.ec_id=NATURE-20160121&spMailingID=50507456&spUserID=MjA1NjE2NDU5MwS2&spJobID=842660933&spReportId=ODQyNjYwOTMzS0-A century after observatory founder Percival Lowell speculated that a ‘Planet X' lurks at the fringes of the Solar System, astronomers say that they have the best evidence yet for such a world. They call it Planet Nine.-Orbital calculations suggest that Planet Nine, if it exists, is about ten times the mass of Earth and swings an elliptical path around the Sun once every 10,000-20,000 years. It would never get closer than about 200 times the Earth-Sun distance, or 200 astronomical units (au). That range would put it far beyond Pluto, in the realm of icy bodies known as the Kuiper belt.-No one has seen Planet Nine, but researchers have inferred its existence from the way several other Kuiper belt objects (KBOs) move. And given the history of speculation about distant planets (see ‘Solving for X'), Planet Nine may end up in the dustbin of good ideas gone wrong.-Comment: Wait and see.

Planet 9?! More evidence

by David Turell @, Wednesday, March 30, 2016, 19:30 (3159 days ago) @ David Turell

Another object has been found oriented in such a way that the evidence for planet nine becomes stronger:-https://www.newscientist.com/article/2082650-more-evidence-for-planet-nine-as-odd-celestial-alignment-emerges/-"In January, Konstantin Batygin and Mike Brown at the California Institute of Technology inferred Planet Nine's existence after studying six objects in the Kuiper Belt, the region of icy bodies that circle the sun beyond Neptune's orbit.-"All of these objects' orbits take them slingshotting out to the most distant reaches of the solar system before swooping back in. What's odd is that their eccentric orbits all point in roughly the same direction, when they should be oriented randomly in space. Such an alignment suggests that some unseen planet - 10 times as massive as Earth and four times its size - is shepherding them.-"While the culprit has still not officially been discovered, Batygin and Brown argued that the chance this was a random occurrence was as low as 0.007 per cent. Although those seem like pretty good odds, the team suspected the number could be much lower and that there were more Kuiper Belt Objects with similar alignments out there. It was only a matter of time before they found another one.
 
"And last week they did. It was spotted in an outer solar system survey, and announced quietly, on a single slide in a talk at the SETI Institute given by Michele Bannister of the University of Victoria, Canada. The object is so new it doesn't have an official catalogue name yet, but it's easy to see that its orbit is exactly like the other ushered Kuiper Belt objects.-“'It's smack-exactly where we predicted it should be,” says Brown. -For Brown, that's a huge relief. He worried he was seeing patterns in the sky that weren't really there, but the latest object strengthens his case for Planet Nine. “At least in my mind, it removes all doubts that the pattern that we're seeing is real,” he says.-"Although he has yet to run in-depth statistics on this latest object, Brown argues that it is likely to reduce the odds of the alignment occurring by chance to about 0.001 per cent.-"But Greg Laughlin at the Lick Observatory in California isn't convinced yet. “In addition to being clustered in their angle, they also should be pointing the same direction in three-dimensional space,” he says. In other words, they should all have the same tilt above or below the plane of the solar system. “And what this image doesn't show is whether this new Kuiper Belt Object is doing that or not. It's just impossible to tell.”-"Still, if the object has that orbital inclination, which Laughlin and Brown expect it will, then “that makes it more likely that there's some kind of dynamical explanation,” Laughlin says. “And among the dynamical explanations that have been offered, the Planet Nine hypothesis seems to make the most sense.”-"Brown, whose discovery of the dwarf planet Eris earned him the nickname “Pluto Killer”, couldn't be more excited. “It's fun to see that first one,” he says. “We were pretty sure that it was going to be true, but you still keep your fingers crossed.'”-Comment: Still a wait and see game, but a fascinating study of gravitational force at work.

Planet 9?! More evidence

by David Turell @, Thursday, March 31, 2016, 01:43 (3159 days ago) @ David Turell

This method of looking at orbits and planetary body movements found Neptune after Uranus was discovered:-http://io9.gizmodo.com/5987515/how-astronomers-discovered-planets-hundreds-of-years-ago -Neptune-The last ‘official' planet in our solar system is Neptune. Orbiting 30 AU from the Sun, it's the first planet to have been discovered through mathematics, rather than direct observation. Astronomers studying Uranus found that the planet was deviating from their predictions, and attempted to uncover the problem. The planet's orbit was already known to have been influenced by the other major bodies in the Solar System, but even with the calculations at hand, Uranus was defying expectations. In 1835, Halley's Comet reached its perihelion slightly later than predicted, leading astronomers to believe that there was an additional body in the system that was influencing Uranus.-Astronomers began to look further out for something that would explain the planet's movements. Astronomers in both England and France began to crunch the numbers: John Couch Adams and Urbain Le Verrier. Between 1843 and 1845, Adams worked out the calculations, but was rebuffed by the Royal Astronomical Society. Le Verrier found a similar reception, and turned to Johann Gottfried Galle, who, following Le Verrier's instructions, discovered the new planet exactly where it was predicted to be on September 23rd, 1846. The next month, an English astronomer discovered Neptune's moon Triton. The solar system instantly doubled in size with the discovery. -Comment: Planet 9 seems very possible. The use of planetary geometry is amazing.

Planet 9?! Even more evidence

by David Turell @, Tuesday, April 05, 2016, 20:06 (3153 days ago) @ David Turell

Now the Saturn orbiter Cassini is picking a pull:-http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/mysterious-gravitational-tug-on-orbiter-may-help-find-planet-nine/?WT.mc_id=SA_DD_20160405-"Just this month, evidence from the Cassini spacecraft orbiting Saturn helped close in on the missing planet. Many experts suspect that within as little as a year someone will spot the unseen world, which would be a monumental discovery that changes the way we view our solar system and our place in the cosmos. “Evidence is mounting that something unusual is out there—there's a story that's hard to explain with just the standard picture,” says David Gerdes, a cosmologist.-***- "So Fienga and her colleagues compared the updated model, which placed Planet Nine at various points in its hypothetical orbit, with the data. They found a sweet spot—with Planet Nine 600 astronomical units (about 90 billion kilometers) away toward the constellation Cetus—that can explain Cassini's orbit quite well. Although Fienga is not yet convinced that she has found the culprit for the probe's odd movements, most outside experts are blown away. “It's a brilliant analysis,” says Greg Laughlin, an astronomer at Lick Observatory, who was not involved in the study. “It's completely amazing that they were able to do that so quickly.” Gerdes agrees: “That's a beautiful paper.”-"The good news does not end there. If Planet Nine is located toward the constellation Cetus, then it could be picked up by the Dark Energy Survey, a Southern Hemisphere observation project designed to probe the acceleration of the universe. “It turns out fortuitously that the favored region from Cassini is smack dab in the middle of our survey footprint,” says Gerdes, who is working on the cosmology survey. “We could not have designed our survey any better.” Although the survey was not planned to search for solar system objects, Gerdes has discovered some (including one of the icy objects that led Batygin and Brown to conclude Planet Nine exists in the first place).-***-“'I really want to see what it looks like,” says Batygin, who adds that his aspiration drives him to search for the unseen world. But Laughlin takes it a step further: “I think [the discovery] would provide amazing inspiration for the next stage of planetary exploration,” he says. We now have another opportunity to see one of the worlds of our own solar system for the first time. “If Planet Nine isn't out there, we won't have that experience again.'”-Comment: Wow! Exciting.

Planet 9?! Even more evidence

by David Turell @, Saturday, April 23, 2016, 02:12 (3136 days ago) @ David Turell

The hints keep piling up:-https://www.newscientist.com/article/2084924-we-are-closing-in-on-possible-whereabouts-of-planet-nine/-"In January, Konstantin Batygin and Mike Brown, two planetary scientists at the California Institute of Technology, speculated on the existence of a ninth planet based on an odd alignment of six distant icy bodies. Excitement rippled through the world of astronomers and many immediately joined the hunt.-"A month later, Agnès Fienga at the Côte d'Azur Observatory in France and her colleagues found evidence that slight perturbations in Saturn's orbit as observed by the Cassini spacecraft could be better explained by the missing planet. They were even able to suggest where Planet Nine might be along the most likely orbit proposed by Batygin and Brown.-"Now Matthew Holman and Matthew Payne, two astronomers from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, have taken the idea a step further by analysing the Cassini data for multiple possible orbits instead of just one.-“'We put Planet Nine at a whole different slew of locations - all different possibilities on the sky, different distances, different masses - and tried to find out whether that constrains things even more,” says Payne. They were able to confine Planet Nine's location to two stripes in the sky, which they then overlapped with Batygin and Brown's favoured orbit to narrow the search further.-“'When you put those together it's kind of like X marks the spot,” says Payne. The latest data suggest that Planet Nine could be found towards the constellation Cetus, which is next door to Aries and Pisces, in a patch of sky that's just 20 degrees in radius. That's a region thousands of times larger than the full moon, but still much smaller than the one given by Fienga.-"By coincidence, this small zone is already being scoured by the Dark Energy Survey, a southern hemisphere project designed to probe the acceleration of the universe. “This certainly gives us more motivation to expedite the search,” says David Gerdes, a cosmologist at the University of Michigan who is working on the survey."-Comment: Amazing what can be deduced from perturbations in known orbits.

Planet 9?! Even much more evidence

by David Turell @, Thursday, October 20, 2016, 04:17 (2956 days ago) @ David Turell

The suns tilt gives more evidence for planet nine:

http://phys.org/news/2016-10-curious-tilt-sun-undiscovered-planet.html

"Planet Nine—the undiscovered planet at the edge of the Solar System that was predicted by the work of Caltech's Konstantin Batygin and Mike Brown in January 2016—appears to be responsible for the unusual tilt of the sun, according to a new study.

"The large and distant planet may be adding a wobble to the solar system, giving the appearance that the sun is tilted slightly.

"'Because Planet Nine is so massive and has an orbit tilted compared to the other planets, the solar system has no choice but to slowly twist out of alignment," says Elizabeth Bailey, a graduate student at Caltech and lead author of a study announcing the discovery.

"All of the planets orbit in a flat plane with respect to the sun, roughly within a couple degrees of each other. That plane, however, rotates at a six-degree tilt with respect to the sun—giving the appearance that the sun itself is cocked off at an angle. Until now, no one had found a compelling explanation to produce such an effect. "

"The tilt of the solar system's orbital plane has long befuddled astronomers because of the way the planets formed: as a spinning cloud slowly collapsing first into a disk and then into objects orbiting a central star.

"Planet Nine's angular momentum is having an outsized impact on the solar system based on its location and size. A planet's angular momentum equals the mass of an object multiplied by its distance from the sun, and corresponds with the force that the planet exerts on the overall system's spin. Because the other planets in the solar system all exist along a flat plane, their angular momentum works to keep the whole disk spinning smoothly.

"Planet Nine's unusual orbit, however, adds a multi-billion-year wobble to that system. Mathematically, given the hypothesized size and distance of Planet Nine, a six-degree tilt fits perfectly, Brown says.

Comment: Planet nine evidence becomes stronger and stronger.

Planet 9?! Even much more evidence

by David Turell @, Thursday, October 05, 2017, 00:26 (2606 days ago) @ David Turell

And even more evidence:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/10/171004144511.htm

"'There are now five different lines of observational evidence pointing to the existence of Planet Nine," said Konstantin Batygin, a planetary astrophysicist at Caltech in Pasadena, California, whose team may be closing in. "If you were to remove this explanation and imagine Planet Nine does not exist, then you generate more problems than you solve. All of a sudden, you have five different puzzles, and you must come up with five different theories to explain them."

***

"Six known objects in the distant Kuiper Belt, a region of icy bodies stretching from Neptune outward toward interstellar space, all have elliptical orbits pointing in the same direction. That would be unlikely -- and suspicious -- enough. But these orbits also are tilted the same way, about 30 degrees "downward" compared to the pancake-like plane within which the planets orbit the sun.

"Breadcrumb number three: Computer simulations of the solar system with Planet Nine included show there should be more objects tilted with respect to the solar plane. In fact, the tilt would be on the order of 90 degrees, as if the plane of the solar system and these objects formed an "X" when viewed edge-on. Sure enough, Brown realized that five such objects already known to astronomers fill the bill.

"Two more clues emerged after the original paper. A second article from the team, this time led by Batygin's graduate student, Elizabeth Bailey, showed that Planet Nine could have tilted the planets of our solar system during the last 4.5 billion years. This could explain a longstanding mystery: Why is the plane in which the planets orbit tilted about 6 degrees compared to the sun's equator?

"'Over long periods of time, Planet Nine will make the entire solar-system plane precess or wobble, just like a top on a table," Batygin said.

"The last telltale sign of Planet Nine's presence involves the solar system's contrarians: objects from the Kuiper Belt that orbit in the opposite direction from everything else in the solar system. Planet Nine's orbital influence would explain why these bodies from the distant Kuiper Belt end up "polluting" the inner Kuiper Belt.

"'No other model can explain the weirdness of these high-inclination orbits," Batygin said. "It turns out that Planet Nine provides a natural avenue for their generation. These things have been twisted out of the solar system plane with help from Planet Nine and then scattered inward by Neptune."

***

"Other scientists offer a different possible explanation for the Planet Nine evidence cited by Batygin. A recent analysis based on a sky mapping project called the Outer Solar System Origins Survey, which discovered more than 800 new "trans-Neptunian objects," suggests that the evidence also could be consistent with a random distribution of such objects. Still, the analysis, from a team led by Cory Shankman of the University of Victoria, could not rule out Planet Nine."

Comment: Neptune was found by analyzing gravitational influences. This is the same method.

Planet 9?! Even much more evidence

by David Turell @, Thursday, October 19, 2017, 17:34 (2591 days ago) @ David Turell

Another article on the findings that suggest a planet nine:

https://cosmosmagazine.com/space/new-evidence-for-the-mysterious-planet-nine

"The existence of this planet, colloquially known as Planet Nine, has been suspected for several years due to the tilted orbits of these objects, which suggests that they have gravitationally interacted with a planet the size of Neptune several hundred times further out from the Sun than the Earth.

"The bodies in these tilted orbits are a population of large Trans-Neptunian Objects (TNOs), which lie on extremely elliptical orbits out beyond Neptune and Pluto. One of the best known is Sedna, a 1000-kilometre world discovered in 2003.

"But the new work suggests that Planet Nine may also exert a stabilising influence on these bodies, keeping them from being ejected from the solar system by interactions with Neptune, whose orbit they sometimes approach.

"Sedna itself is in a stable orbit, says Juliette Becker, a doctoral student at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, but others are on orbits so easily affected by Neptune that they should have been knocked out of orbit (and potentially been thrown into the Sun, collided with another planet, or been kicked entirely out of the Solar System) in as little as 10 million years. And yet, 4.5 billion years after the birth of the Solar System, they are still here for us to see.

"It’s a mystery, she says, until you add Planet Nine into the equation. Then, interactions with Planet Nine dampen the effect of Neptune’s occasional gravitational kicks. “Instead of getting kicked out of the Solar System it hops to a new orbit,” she said at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society’s Division for Planetary Sciences in Provo, Utah, on 7 October. “Planet Nine enhances the dynamic stability of these objects.”

"Furthermore, she says, not all orbits for Planet Nine will have this stabilising effect.
And since it is also known that Planet Nine must be in an orbit that tilts these same TNO orbits, the two effects – tilting orbits and stabilising them – can be used to further narrow the parts of the sky astronomers need to search for the elusive planet.

"Further assisting the quest, Becker announced that astronomers reviewing images from a sky-watch known as the Dark Energy Survey have found a ninth TNO similar to the eight others. Nicknamed Caju (the Portuguese word for “cashew”) it lies in a highly eccentric orbit that averages about 450 times farther out than the Earth. Based on its brightness, it is probably on the order of 480 kilometres across, Becker added – though she noted that this is just an estimate.

"The new finds are exciting because they will help astronomers find Planet Nine, if indeed it exists, adds Mike Brown, a planetary scientist from California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, California, who was not part of the study team."

Comment: The evidence piles up.

Planet 9?! Even much more evidence

by David Turell @, Friday, May 18, 2018, 22:27 (2380 days ago) @ David Turell

Another orbiting body has been found that fits the planet nine theory:

https://www.quantamagazine.org/a-new-worlds-extraordinary-orbit-points-to-planet-nine-2...

"Now, astronomers are reporting that they have spotted another distant world — perhaps as large as a dwarf planet — whose orbit is so odd that it is likely to have been shepherded by Planet Nine. The object confirms a specific prediction made by Konstantin Batygin and Michael Brown, the astronomers at the California Institute of Technology who first argued for Planet Nine’s existence. “It’s not proof that Planet Nine exists,” said David Gerdes, an astronomer at the University of Michigan and a co-author on the new paper. “But I would say the presence of an object like this in our solar system bolsters the case for Planet Nine.”

***

"The Dark Energy Survey first detected evidence for the new object in late 2014. Gerdes and his colleagues have spent the years since then tracking its orbit and trying to understand its origins. In the new paper, they describe how they ran many simulations of the object within the known solar system, letting the clock run forward and backward 4.5 billion years at a time. Nothing could explain how the object landed in such a tilted orbit. It wasn’t until they added in a ninth planet — a planet with characteristics that perfectly match Batygin and Brown’s predictions — that the wacky orbit finally made sense. “The second you put Planet Nine in the simulations, not only can you form objects like this object, but you absolutely do,” said Juliette Becker, a graduate student at Michigan and the lead author on the new paper. A strong and sustained interaction with Planet Nine appears to be the only way to pump up the object’s inclination, pushing it away from the plane of the solar system. “There is no other reasonable way to populate the Kuiper belt with such highly inclined bodies,” Batygin said. “I think the case for the existence of Planet Nine is now genuinely excellent.”

"Other astronomers aren’t so certain — in part because the early solar system remains a mystery. Scientists suspect that the sun was born within a cluster of stars, meaning that the early planets might have had many close encounters with other stars that sent them on paths that seem impossible today. And even once the stars dispersed, the early solar system likely contained tens of thousands of dwarf planets that could have provided the gravitational nudges needed to push 2015 BP519, as the new object is called, into such an odd orbit. “To me, Planet Nine is one of a number of ways that the solar system could have unfolded,” said Michele Bannister, an astronomer at Queen’s University Belfast who was not involved in the study. “It’s a potential idea.” But at the moment it is just that — an idea.

"Yet when astronomers examine the larger universe, the idea doesn’t seem all that surprising. Planets between two and 10 times the mass of Earth are incredibly common throughout the galaxy, which makes it odd that our solar system doesn’t harbor one. “If it wasn’t in our own solar system — if the stakes weren’t so high — I think that the hypothesis would almost certainly be correct,” Laughlin said. “It’s only the fact that it’s so amazing that tends to give me pause.'”

Comment: This increases the possibility for planet nine. Good theories are predictive of confirmatory results.

Planet 9?! may be due to small body gravity, not 9

by David Turell @, Monday, June 04, 2018, 23:54 (2363 days ago) @ David Turell

As a cumulative effect of many small outer bodies:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/06/180604131719.htm

"Bumper car-like interactions at the edges of our solar system -- and not a mysterious ninth planet -- may explain the dynamics of strange bodies called "detached objects," according to a new study.

***

"One theory for its unusual dynamics is that an as-of-yet-unseen ninth planet beyond Neptune may have disturbed the orbits of Sedna and other detached objects. But Madigan and her colleagues calculated that the orbits of Sedna and its ilk may result from these bodies jostling against each other and space debris in the outer solar system.

"'There are so many of these bodies out there. What does their collective gravity do?" said Madigan of the Department of Astrophysical and Planetary Sciences (APS) and JILA. "We can solve a lot of these problems by just taking into account that question."

***

"Detached objects like Sedna get their name because they complete humongous, circular orbits that bring them nowhere close to big planets like Jupiter or Neptune. How they got to the outer solar system on their own is an ongoing mystery.

"Using computer simulations, Madigan's team came up with one possible answer. Jacob Fleisig, an undergraduate studying astrophysics at CU Boulder, calculated that these icy objects orbit the sun like the hands of a clock. The orbits of smaller objects, such as asteroids, however, move faster than the larger ones, such as Sedna.

"'You see a pileup of the orbits of smaller objects to one side of the sun," said Fleisig, who is the lead author of the new research. "These orbits crash into the bigger body, and what happens is those interactions will change its orbit from an oval shape to a more circular shape."

"In other words, Sedna's orbit goes from normal to detached entirely because of those small-scale interactions. The team's observations also fall in line with research from 2012, which observed that the bigger a detached object gets, the farther away its orbit becomes from the sun.

***

"The findings may also provide clues around another phenomenon: the extinction of the dinosaurs. As space debris interacts in the outer solar system, the orbits of these objects tighten and widen in a repeating cycle. This cycle could wind up shooting comets toward the inner solar system -- including in the direction of Earth -- on a predictable timescale."

Comment: Either planet 9 will be seen or this alternative theory will be accepted. Just takes time and observations. We need to learn about solar debris, so we don't end up like he dinos.

Planet 9?! Even much more evidence

by David Turell @, Wednesday, October 03, 2018, 00:30 (2243 days ago) @ David Turell

The orbit of another small body supports the presence of planet nine:

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2181371-distant-dwarf-planet-called-the-goblin-cou...

"Our solar system just got a little spookier. A new dwarf planet called The Goblin has been discovered orbiting the sun in the hinterland beyond Pluto, and its elongated path hints that the long-sought Planet X may be travelling through the outer reaches of the solar system as well.

"This new dwarf planet, officially called 2015 TG387, is likely a ball of ice and is about 300 kilometres in diameter. It was first spotted by a team of astronomers using the Subaru telescope in Hawaii in October 2015, hence its Halloween-themed name. The International Astronomical Union’s Minor Planet Center announced the discovery on 1 October 2018.

"Its extremely elongated orbit means that at times it is 2300 times as far from the sun as Earth is, and it never gets closer to the sun than about twice as far out as Pluto. The dwarf planet moves so slowly that it took years to confirm its orbit with multiple observations.

“'Currently we would only detect 2015 TG387 when it is near its closest approach to the sun. For some 99 per cent of its 40,000-year orbit, it would be too faint to see,” said David Tholen at the University of Hawaii in a statement.

"He and his colleagues found The Goblin during their hunt for the hypothetical Planet X, a large planet believed to be lurking at the edge of the solar system that may account for disturbances in the orbits of smaller objects like The Goblin. The gravity of such a large planet would tug on smaller objects as they pass by, potentially herding them into a cluster of objects orbiting together – like the one The Goblin is part of.

"The most distant objects in our solar system tend to have similar elongated orbits. The team ran simulations that included a Super-Earth-like planet in the distant solar system, and found that such a planet would stabilise The Goblin’s orbit.

"'These simulations do not prove that there’s another massive planet in our solar system, but they are further evidence that something big could be out there,” said Chad Trujillo at North Arizona University in a statement."

Comment: The search goes on as more evidence is found. It will be fun naming it if confirmed.

Planet 9?! alternate hypothesis negates

by David Turell @, Monday, January 21, 2019, 18:01 (2132 days ago) @ David Turell

Calculations indicate a more massive Kuiper belt would explain the strange orbits that have caused the speculation:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/01/190121103346.htm

"The strange orbits of some objects in the farthest reaches of our solar system, hypothesised by some astronomers to be shaped by an unknown ninth planet, can instead be explained by the combined gravitational force of small objects orbiting the Sun beyond Neptune, say researchers.

"The alternative explanation to the so-called 'Planet Nine' hypothesis, put forward by researchers at the University of Cambridge and the American University of Beirut, proposes a disc made up of small icy bodies with a combined mass as much as ten times that of Earth. When combined with a simplified model of the solar system, the gravitational forces of the hypothesised disc can account for the unusual orbital architecture exhibited by some objects at the outer reaches of the solar system.

***

"'If you remove planet nine from the model and instead allow for lots of small objects scattered across a wide area, collective attractions between those objects could just as easily account for the eccentric orbits we see in some TNOs," said Sefilian, who is a Gates Cambridge Scholar and a member of Darwin College.

"Earlier attempts to estimate the total mass of objects beyond Neptune have only added up to around one-tenth the mass of Earth. However, in order for the TNOs to have the observed orbits and for there to be no Planet Nine, the model put forward by Sefilian and Touma requires the combined mass of the Kuiper Belt to be between a few to ten times the mass of Earth.

"'When observing other systems, we often study the disc surrounding the host star to infer the properties of any planets in orbit around it," said Sefilian. "The problem is when you're observing the disc from inside the system, it's almost impossible to see the whole thing at once. While we don't have direct observational evidence for the disc, neither do we have it for Planet Nine, which is why we're investigating other possibilities. Nevertheless, it is interesting to note that observations of Kuiper belt analogues around other stars, as well as planet formation models, reveal massive remnant populations of debris.

"'It's also possible that both things could be true -- there could be a massive disc and a ninth planet. With the discovery of each new TNO, we gather more evidence that might help explain their behaviour.'"

Comment: It is hard to prove a negative. Proof will require seeing Planet Nine

Planet 9?! even more evidence

by David Turell @, Wednesday, February 27, 2019, 23:28 (2095 days ago) @ David Turell

The original authors review old and current findings. More convinced than ever that is likely to be found:

https://phys.org/news/2019-02-planet.html


"The papers offer new details about the suspected nature and location of the planet, which has been the subject of an intense international search ever since Batygin and Brown's 2016 announcement.

***

"The Planet Nine hypothesis is founded on evidence suggesting that the clustering of objects in the Kuiper Belt, a field of icy bodies that lies beyond Neptune, is influenced by the gravitational tugs of an unseen planet. It has been an open question as to whether that clustering is indeed occurring, or whether it is an artifact resulting from bias in how and where Kuiper Belt objects are observed.

"To assess whether observational bias is behind the apparent clustering, Brown and Batygin developed a method to quantify the amount of bias in each individual observation, then calculated the probability that the clustering is spurious. That probability, they found, is around one in 500.

"'Though this analysis does not say anything directly about whether Planet Nine is there, it does indicate that the hypothesis rests upon a solid foundation," says Brown, the Richard and Barbara Rosenberg Professor of Planetary Astronomy.

"The second paper is titled "The Planet Nine Hypothesis," and is an invited review that will be published in the next issue of Physics Reports. The paper provides thousands of new computer models of the dynamical evolution of the distant solar system and offers updated insight into the nature of Planet Nine, including an estimate that it is smaller and closer to the sun than previously suspected. Based on the new models, Batygin and Brown—together with Fred Adams and Juliette Becker (BS '14) of the University of Michigan—concluded that Planet Nine has a mass of about five times that of the earth and has an orbital semimajor axis in the neighborhood of 400 astronomical units (AU), making it smaller and closer to the sun than previously suspected—and potentially brighter. Each astronomical unit is equivalent to the distance between the center of Earth and the center of the sun, or about 149.6 million kilometers.

"'At five Earth masses, Planet Nine is likely to be very reminiscent of a typical extrasolar super-Earth," says Batygin, an assistant professor of planetary science and Van Nuys Page Scholar. Super-Earths are planets with a mass greater than Earth's, but substantially less than that of a gas giant. "It is the solar system's missing link of planet formation. Over the last decade, surveys of extrasolar planets have revealed that similar-sized planets are very common around other sun-like stars. Planet Nine is going to be the closest thing we will find to a window into the properties of a typical planet of our galaxy.'"

Comment: The saga goes on, with no solid answer so far.

***

"My favorite characteristic of the Planet Nine hypothesis is that it is observationally testable," Batygin says. "The prospect of one day seeing real images of Planet Nine is absolutely electrifying. Although finding Planet Nine astronomically is a great challenge, I'm very optimistic that we will image it within the next decade."

Comment:

Planet 9?! even less evidence

by David Turell @, Friday, April 24, 2020, 15:24 (1673 days ago) @ David Turell

With new data, may not exist at all:

https://mail.yahoo.com/d/folders/1/messages/ADaw2p8HPAMoXqLyhQZsiE95GEs

"Existing hypotheses claim a mysterious ninth planet is hiding past Neptune, in the outskirts of our solar system. However, new research from astronomers at the University of Pennsylvania challenges any clustering trans-Neptunian rocks. Their data supporting this comes from the Dark Energy Survey, carried out at a Chilean observatory.

"’'We would not have formulated the Planet Nine idea if our data was the only data that existed,’ said (Pedro) Bernardinelli to New Scientist. The scientist's previous 2020 study, also using data from the Dark Energy Survey, found 316 trans-Neptunian objects, including 139 minor planets in the space past Neptune. The researcher's works ultimately seems to show that the faraway region is inhabited by numerous small objects which are uniformly distributed rather than grouped.'"

Comment: this is how science works. New data, changed result.

Planet 9?! even less evidence

by David Turell @, Tuesday, February 16, 2021, 14:40 (1375 days ago) @ David Turell

A new paper saying it is all a misinterpretation:

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2021/02/claim-giant-planet-nine-solar-systems-edge-take...

"For planetary scientists, it was the boldest claim in a generation: an unseen extra planet, as much as 10 times the mass of Earth, lurking on the Solar System’s frontier, beyond Neptune. But the claim looks increasingly shaky, after a team of astronomers reported last week that the orbits of a handful of distant lumps of rock are not bunched together by the gravity of “Planet Nine,” as its proponents believe, but only seem clustered because that’s where telescopes happened to be looking.

"Planet Nine supporters aren’t backing down yet but one skeptic not involved with the new work says she is “very happy” to see it. The study has carried out “a more uniform analysis” than done previously of the far-off rocky bodies known as known as Trans-Neptunian Objects (TNOs), says astronomer Samantha Lawler of the University of Regina, who has tried and failed to simulate the clustered orbits in computer models with an extra planet.

***

"Napier says the team took account of when and where the telescopes pointed, and how sensitive they were to faint objects. With that data, the team calculated a “selection function” that varies across the sky. And sure enough, the extreme TNOs found by all three surveys were in or near areas where selection function was highest, the team reported on 11 February in a paper posted to the arXiv and accepted by Planetary Science Journal. As a result, Napier says, the team could not reject the null hypothesis that the extreme TNOs are uniformly distributed around the Solar System, which would rob Planet Nine of its foundational evidence. The clustering “is a consequence of where we look and when we look,” he says. “There’s no need for another model to fit the data.”

"Batygin doesn’t accept that conclusion. He points out that the DES survey looked largely in the area of the sky where the TNO cluster he and Brown identified resides and found more extreme TNOs. So ruling out clustering is “not logical,” he says. “The more relevant question to ask is: can their analysis distinguish between a clustered and uniform distribution, and the answer appears to be ‘no',” he says.

"Napier acknowledges that trying to draw conclusions from a sample of 14 TNOs is tricky. “There’s only so much statistical power you can draw with so few objects,” he says. The matter is unlikely to be settled, he adds, until the Vera Rubin Observatory—a powerful new survey telescope being built in Chile—starts observing in 2023. Its survey will have well defined selection biases and is likely to detect hundreds of new extreme TNOs. That, says Napier, “will be like Christmas morning.'”

Comment: Science marches forward with new telescopes and new discoveries. P lanet nine is still a maybe.

Planet 9?! even less evidence

by David Turell @, Monday, February 22, 2021, 19:26 (1369 days ago) @ David Turell

Another article:

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-00456-7?utm_source=Nature+Briefing&utm_c...


"The presence of Planet Nine was proposed1 in 2016, when astronomers Mike Brown and Konstantin Batygin at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena observed that the orbits of six trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) — part of the Kuiper belt, a collection of small bodies orbiting the Sun beyond Neptune — seemed to be clustered together.

***

"To investigate whether the objects were truly clustered, Napier’s team built a computer model simulating ten billion evenly distributed ETNOs in the outer Solar System, and then calculated the chances that observing a small sample of these would produce results matching existing observations. The team concluded that there is no reason to think that ETNOs are not uniformly distributed, and that it’s possible that observed objects only seem to be clustered because of selection bias. “That doesn’t mean that Planet Nine isn’t there, but it’s not necessary to explain the data,” says Napier. “You could fit this data with clustered ETNOs as well — but if you hear hoofbeats, you should think horses, not zebras.”

"Brown, however, disagrees. “I plotted all their data on top of our old paper, and you just simply look at it, and it’s very clustered,” he says. “There’s actually strong evidence for Planet Nine in their data.” He points out that the paper does not include the six TNOs that he and Batygin used in their original research. He also argues that the researchers are “mixing dirt in with their ice cream”, because their analysis considers objects whose orbits might be affected by their proximity to Neptune.

***

"Lawler says new surveys of the outer Solar System are needed to look for any other evidence of clustering. One of the best chances will come from the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile, which will begin a ten-year survey of the sky in 2022.

“'They’re going to detect thousands more Kuiper belt objects,” says Lawler. “I think we’ve really done all that we can with the data we currently have.”

"Even if it turns out Planet Nine isn’t there, Lawler says, it has sparked a lot of useful interest in the outer Solar System from astronomers. “The theory of Planet Nine has been fantastic for the study of the Kuiper belt,” she says."

Comment: Debates like this advance our general knowledge. More research is awaited.

Is our solar system weird

by David Turell @, Monday, May 02, 2016, 18:11 (3126 days ago) @ David Turell
edited by David Turell, Monday, May 02, 2016, 18:35

A new article in the Sci. Am. magazine is not available on line, but its summary is simple. Our solar system is very unusual ("relatively rare") to what is seen elsewhere. It's evolution caused it to be hollowed out near the sun to allow rocky metal containing planets to orbit in close while the gas giants are outside. A possible discovery of planet nine fits the current theories and findings which suggest that larger bodies are pushed outward. The final configuration arrived about 3.8 billion years ago, which is the same time life may have started on Earth. Since life is here, this is either a simple requirement of what had to happen or good planning for a purposeful event. Take your choice. Much of this is based on computer simulations. I will present more material if I can find it on line.-Note the entry of Tuesday, February 02, 2016, 05:40 where it is shown only 6% of solar systems have some resemblance to ours.

Is our solar system weird

by dhw, Tuesday, May 03, 2016, 16:48 (3125 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: A new article in the Sci. Am. magazine is not available on line, but its summary is simple. Our solar system is very unusual ("relatively rare") to what is seen elsewhere. […] The final configuration arrived about 3.8 billion years ago, which is the same time life may have started on Earth. Since life is here, this is either a simple requirement of what had to happen or good planning for a purposeful event. Take your choice. - I presented the same choice in my sensational volume on Extraterrestrial Life and Its Relevance to God, but because you personally reject the first option as “wishful thinking” (my Chapters 1b and 2b), you refused to nominate me for the Nobel Prize. Why is it OK for you to offer the choice but not for me? I shall write a letter of complaint to the Nobel Executive Rejectors of Double Standards (NERDS). - As regards this new article, “relatively rare” is a nicely relative expression, as indeed is “very unusual”. You wrote: “Note the entry of Tuesday, February 02, 2016, 05:40 where it is shown only 6% of solar systems have some resemblance to ours.” Some scientists reckon there could be as many as 100 billion solar systems in our galaxy alone. My highly sophisticated abacus suggests that 6% of 100 billion is 6 thousand million. Messrs Frank and Sullivan estimate ten billion trillion in the universe. (My researchers can't confirm that, I'm afraid. Lost count somewhere between 12 and 20.) 6% of that would give us…six multiplied by a thousand million divided by...multiplied by…enough potentially life-supporting solar systems to make the expression “very unusual” well worth a giggle.

Is our solar system weird

by David Turell @, Tuesday, May 03, 2016, 23:41 (3125 days ago) @ dhw

DAVID: A new article in the Sci. Am. magazine is not available on line, but its summary is simple. Our solar system is very unusual ("relatively rare") to what is seen elsewhere. […] The final configuration arrived about 3.8 billion years ago, which is the same time life may have started on Earth. Since life is here, this is either a simple requirement of what had to happen or good planning for a purposeful event. Take your choice. 
> 
> I presented the same choice in my sensational volume on Extraterrestrial Life and Its Relevance to God, but because you personally reject the first option as “wishful thinking” (my Chapters 1b and 2b), you refused to nominate me for the Nobel Prize. Why is it OK for you to offer the choice but not for me? I shall write a letter of complaint to the Nobel Executive Rejectors of Double Standards (NERDS). 
> 
> As regards this new article, “relatively rare” is a nicely relative expression, as indeed is “very unusual”. You wrote: “Note the entry of Tuesday, February 02, 2016, 05:40 where it is shown only 6% of solar systems have some resemblance to ours.” Some scientists reckon there could be as many as 100 billion solar systems in our galaxy alone. My highly sophisticated abacus suggests that 6% of 100 billion is 6 thousand million. Messrs Frank and Sullivan estimate ten billion trillion in the universe. (My researchers can't confirm that, I'm afraid. Lost count somewhere between 12 and 20.) 6% of that would give us…six multiplied by a thousand million divided by...multiplied by…enough potentially life-supporting solar systems to make the expression “very unusual” well worth a giggle.

Is our solar system weird

by David Turell @, Tuesday, May 03, 2016, 23:48 (3125 days ago) @ David Turell


> > dhw: As regards this new article, “relatively rare” is a nicely relative expression, as indeed is “very unusual”. You wrote: “Note the entry of Tuesday, February 02, 2016, 05:40 where it is shown only 6% of solar systems have some resemblance to ours.” Some scientists reckon there could be as many as 100 billion solar systems in our galaxy alone. My highly sophisticated abacus suggests that 6% of 100 billion is 6 thousand million. Messrs Frank and Sullivan estimate ten billion trillion in the universe. (My researchers can't confirm that, I'm afraid. Lost count somewhere between 12 and 20.) 6% of that would give us…six multiplied by a thousand million divided by...multiplied by…enough potentially life-supporting solar systems to make the expression “very unusual” well worth a giggle. - The relatively rare comment is directed at what we see in this galaxy. You assume that all galaxies are similar. But we see spiral (ours), elliptical, and irregular: ragged and clumped types. Do they each have solar systems like ours? We cannot know. All we do know is that life is allowed.

Is our solar system weird

by dhw, Wednesday, May 04, 2016, 12:33 (3125 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: As regards this new article, “relatively rare” is a nicely relative expression, as indeed is “very unusual”. You wrote: “Note the entry of Tuesday, February 02, 2016, 05:40 where it is shown only 6% of solar systems have some resemblance to ours.” Some scientists reckon there could be as many as 100 billion solar systems in our galaxy alone. My highly sophisticated abacus suggests that 6% of 100 billion is 6 thousand million. Messrs Frank and Sullivan estimate ten billion trillion in the universe. (My researchers can't confirm that, I'm afraid. Lost count somewhere between 12 and 20.) 6% of that would give us…six multiplied by a thousand million divided by...multiplied by…enough potentially life-supporting solar systems to make the expression “very unusual” well worth a giggle. - DAVID: The relatively rare comment is directed at what we see in this galaxy. You assume that all galaxies are similar. But we see spiral (ours), elliptical, and irregular: ragged and clumped types. Do they each have solar systems like ours? We cannot know. All we do know is that life is allowed. - I assume nothing. I can only think about what the "experts" tell us. I have pointed out that what we see in our galaxy apparently allows for some six thousand million solar systems similar to ours, and we're told there may be billions more elsewhere. Of course we don't know, so why "assume" that ours is “very unusual”?

Is our solar system weird

by David Turell @, Wednesday, May 04, 2016, 16:04 (3124 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: I assume nothing. I can only think about what the "experts" tell us. I have pointed out that what we see in our galaxy apparently allows for some six thousand million solar systems similar to ours, and we're told there may be billions more elsewhere. Of course we don't know, so why "assume" that ours is “very unusual”? - Unusual? Because what is seen so far in the nearby solar systems discovered, none looks like ours. We are the oddball, the rest is supposition.

Is our solar system weird; not all stars the same

by David Turell @, Wednesday, May 04, 2016, 19:58 (3124 days ago) @ David Turell

The finding that our sun has a different sun spot pattern than another star creates another issue about our solar system. Our solar system probably needs our type of star which contains metals and the proper magnetic field:-https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/05/160504141125.htm-"A star like the Sun has an internal driving in the form of a magnetic field that can be seen on the surface as sunspots. Now astrophysicists from the Niels Bohr Institute have observed a distant star in the constellation Andromeda with a different positioning of sunspots and this indicates a magnetic field that is driven by completely different internal dynamics.-"What we can observe on the star is that it has a large sunspot at its north pole. We cannot see the south pole, but we can see sunspots at latitudes near the poles and these sunspots are not there at the same time, they are seen alternately on the northern and southern hemispheres. This asymmetry of sunspots indicates that the star's magnetic field is formed in a different way than the way it happens in the Sun," explains astrophysicist Heidi Korhonen.-***-"On the Sun, the sunspots appear and disappear on a regular basis and the number increases periodically approximately every 11 years. The magnetic field that creates the sunspots can also trigger large, explosive discharges of plasma, causing solar storms to hit the Earth. These storms result in very strong northern lights and can also cause problems for orbiting satellites and the power grid on Earth."-Comment: How special is our sun? I suspect we will find out.

Is our solar system weird?

by dhw, Thursday, May 05, 2016, 12:13 (3124 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: I assume nothing. I can only think about what the "experts" tell us. I have pointed out that what we see in our galaxy apparently allows for some six thousand million solar systems similar to ours, and we're told there may be billions more elsewhere. Of course we don't know, so why "assume" that ours is “very unusual”?-DAVID: Unusual? Because what is seen so far in the nearby solar systems discovered, none looks like ours. We are the oddball, the rest is supposition.-You asked us to “note the entry of Tuesday, February 02, 2016, 05:40 where it is shown only 6% of solar systems have some resemblance to ours.”-I'm just pointing out that “only” 6% gives us up to six thousand million in our own galaxy. I don't know why you drew our attention to this if you wanted us to ignore it. Here is another website:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/01/100105161540.htm-QUOTE: "In their quest to find solar systems analogous to ours, astronomers have determined how common our solar system is. They've concluded that about 10 percent of stars in the universe host systems of planets like our own, with several gas giant planets in the outer part of the solar system." -Mysteriously this has changed to 15% in the headline and in the following text. I agree with you that it's all supposition, but so is your claim that we are the “oddball”. If we don't know, we don't know. It won't make any difference anyway to you or to your atheist counterparts, as you will all stick to your respective suppositions, which have been set out so lucidly in my ought-to-be-Nobel-Prizewinning Extraterrestrial Life and Its Relevance to God.

Is our solar system weird?

by David Turell @, Thursday, May 05, 2016, 15:35 (3123 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: Mysteriously this has changed to 15% in the headline and in the following text. I agree with you that it's all supposition, but so is your claim that we are the “oddball”. If we don't know, we don't know.-Since it is obvious stars have planets, and there are trillions of stars, we won't know how 'oddball' we are until the survey is much, much larger.

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by David Turell @, Sunday, July 10, 2016, 15:57 (3057 days ago) @ David Turell

It looks so far, based on planet discoveries, that our solar system is a rare bird:-http://nautil.us/blog/our-solar-system-would-be-weird-even-if-it-didnt-harbor-life-"Let's start with the sun. It turns out that our home star is a little bit unusual, but not a lot. This image shows a census of all the stars within 30 light-years of the sun:-"Our sun is a G star—normally white to yellow in color with a surface temperature around 5,000 to 6,000 Kelvin. There are 20 G stars within 30 light-years out of almost 400 total stars. The majority of stars are M stars, also known as “red dwarfs”. These small red stars have much longer lifetimes than G stars but shine much fainter. Among nearby stars, the sun is modestly weird. If you give our definition of a “sun-like” star some latitude, our star ends up being rare—10 percent of the nearby stars are like it, about the fraction of American adults who are vegetarian.-"Now let's turn our attention to Jupiter. First, take a look at our current census of extra-solar planets. Here is a plot of the almost 3,000 planets that have been discovered in the past two decades; the x-axis represents the planets' distance from their home stars, the y-axis their mass:-"Like the sun, Jupiters are just a little out of the ordinary. (As are our rocky planets: None of the known extra-solar planets line up with them, or with Saturn, Uranus, or Neptune. But we already knew this; it's why we are searching for sun-Jupiter systems and not complete solar systems.) Only 10-15 percent of sun-like stars have a gas giant planet like Jupiter, with a mass larger than 50 Earths. -"Another factor that makes our Jupiter more unusual is its orbit: It's nearly circular (an ellipse with an eccentricity of just 5 percent) and it's more than five times larger than Earth's orbit. Among the other known gas giants, on the other hand, only about 10 percent have orbits wider than Mars' (which is only 1.5 times larger than Earth's) that are nearly circular (with eccentricities less than 10 percent). Putting those together, only about 1 percent of stars like the sun has a Jupiter like ours—a little less likely than being dealt 3-of-a-kind in a 5-card poker hand.-"There is one more aspect of the solar system that is unusual. It's not something about the planets that we have; it's something that is missing. About half of all stars like the sun are orbited by at least one “hot super-Earth” planet. These planets are generally Earth-sized or larger, with orbits around the sun smaller than Mercury's. We don't know why the solar system is deficient in super-Earths, although one idea suggests that Jupiter may be the reason. -"Let's put the pieces together to calculate how unusual our solar system is: The fraction of stars that are like the sun (10 percent), multiplied by the fraction of sun-like stars with Jupiters (10 percent), multiplied by the fraction of Jupiter-like planets with Jupiter-like orbits (10 percent), multiplied by the fraction of sun-like stars with no hot super-Earths (50 percent), gets us 0.05 percent.-"This tells us that about one in every 2000 stars in our galactic neighborhood is a sun-Jupiter system. (my bold)-***-"But we don't know how many sun-Jupiter systems also have Venuses, Earths, Saturns or Marses. And we don't know how common Earths and Saturns are in systems without Jupiters or systems that orbit red dwarfs. We really want to know whether there is a reason for life-bearing planets to prefer sun-Jupiter systems, like ours. How exactly does the structure of a planetary system affect its ability to host life, if at all?"-Comment: I've not copied the illustrations. Take a look. We know the Earth has many special attributes that support conditions for life. We know Jupiter in its position sweeps up lots of asteroids and other objects that could strike the Earth if loose. So far the evidence is our solar system is rare but not an impossibly rare outliner. Turned around, it appears the presence of life does obviously require some very special conditions.-From the article: " astrobiologist Caleb Scharf in his 2014 book The Copernicus Complex. “But a big piece of the puzzle, a very big piece, seems to come from sheer, blind, unadulterated chance.'” -Or God is the engineer. Take your pick.

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by dhw, Monday, July 11, 2016, 12:58 (3057 days ago) @ David Turell

David's comment: I've not copied the illustrations. Take a look. We know the Earth has many special attributes that support conditions for life. We know Jupiter in its position sweeps up lots of asteroids and other objects that could strike the Earth if loose. So far the evidence is our solar system is rare but not an impossibly rare outliner. Turned around, it appears the presence of life does obviously require some very special conditions.
From the article: " astrobiologist Caleb Scharf in his 2014 book The Copernicus Complex. “But a big piece of the puzzle, a very big piece, seems to come from sheer, blind, unadulterated chance.'” 
Or God is the engineer. Take your pick.-I don't think even the most vehement of atheists would deny that life requires very special conditions. But since the universe contains billions of solar systems, and since for all we know there may have been comings and goings of solar systems for ever and ever (even if the Big Bang happened, we do not know what preceded it), one could argue that eventually sheer, blind, unadulterated chance was bound to come up with at least one solar system conducive to life. You have summarized the dilemma perfectly: the choice lies between chance and God, and there are arguments for both hypotheses. And you and I have spent eight and a half years discussing them!

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by David Turell @, Monday, July 11, 2016, 14:26 (3056 days ago) @ dhw

dhw:You have summarized the dilemma perfectly: the choice lies between chance and God, and there are arguments for both hypotheses. And you and I have spent eight and a half years discussing them! - Is it time to stop? Does our debate continue to be educational for those who follow?

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by dhw, Tuesday, July 12, 2016, 10:42 (3056 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: You have summarized the dilemma perfectly: the choice lies between chance and God, and there are arguments for both hypotheses. And you and I have spent eight and a half years discussing them! - David: Is it time to stop? Does our debate continue to be educational for those who follow? - Many of the articles you post are highly educational, and of course it is only right that you should append your interpretation of what is described, which not unnaturally leads me to discuss your interpretation. Viewings of these articles run into hundreds, and sometimes even thousands, and so long as you are willing to devote your time to educating us, I hope you will go on doing so. As for the debates, I don't know. I've looked at viewings for discussions that began at the start of the year, and they are all in the hundreds, so perhaps for now we should monitor the figures as we go along.

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by David Turell @, Tuesday, July 12, 2016, 15:19 (3055 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: Viewings of these articles run into hundreds, and sometimes even thousands, and so long as you are willing to devote your time to educating us, I hope you will go on doing so. As for the debates, I don't know. I've looked at viewings for discussions that began at the start of the year, and they are all in the hundreds, so perhaps for now we should monitor the figures as we go along.-I've enjoyed it. Natures wonders reaches thousands. We shall monitor.

Is our solar system weird? New dwarf planet

by David Turell @, Tuesday, July 12, 2016, 23:40 (3055 days ago) @ David Turell

Found in photos of the Kuiper belt beyond Neptune and further out than Pluto:-http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/new-dwarf-planet-found-far-beyond-pluto/?WT.mc_id=SA_DD_20160712-"Astronomers have discovered another dwarf planet in the Kuiper Belt, the ring of icy objects beyond Neptune. But this newfound world, dubbed 2015 RR245, is much more distant than Pluto, orbiting the sun once every 700 Earth years, scientists said. (Pluto completes one lap around the sun every 248 Earth years.) You can see an animation of the new dwarf planet's orbit here.-"'The icy worlds beyond Neptune trace how the giant planets formed and then moved out from the sun," discovery team member Michele Bannister, of the University of Victoria in British Columbia, said in a statement. "They let us piece together the history of our solar system."-"The exact size of 2015 RR245 is not yet known, but the researchers think it's about 435 miles (700 kilometers) wide. Pluto is the largest resident of the Kuiper Belt, with a diameter of 1,474 miles (2,371 km).-"The research team first spotted 2015 RR245 in February of this year, while poring over images that the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope in Hawaii took in September 2015 as part of the ongoing Outer Solar System Origins Survey (OSSOS).-"'There it was on the screen—this dot of light moving so slowly that it had to be at least twice as far as Neptune from the sun," Bannister said.-"OSSOS has discovered more than 500 objects beyond Neptune's orbit, but 2015 RR245 is the first dwarf planet that the survey has found, the scientists said.-"Dwarf planets are massive enough to be crushed into spheres by their own gravity, but they have not "cleared their neighborhood" of other objects, which differentiates them from "normal" planets such as Earth and Saturn. This definition, which was devised by the International Astronomical Union in 2006, led to Pluto's controversial reclassification as a dwarf planet.-"Astronomers are still working out the details of 2015 RR245's highly elliptical orbit, but the object appears to come as close to the sun as 34 astronomical units (AU), and farther away than 120 AU. (One AU is the average Earth-sun distance—about 93 million miles, or 150 million km.)-"2015 RR245—which will get a catchier, official name at some point—will make its closest approach to the sun in 2096, the researchers said.-"Other confirmed dwarf planets in the Kuiper Belt region include Pluto, Eris, Haumea and Makemake. Several other objects in this distant realm, including Sedna, Quaoar and 2007 OR10, probably meet the dwarf-planet criteria as well, scientists have said."-Comment: No mention of possibility huge Planet Nine in this discovery.

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by dhw, Wednesday, July 13, 2016, 11:57 (3055 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: Viewings of these articles run into hundreds, and sometimes even thousands, and so long as you are willing to devote your time to educating us, I hope you will go on doing so. As for the debates, I don't know. I've looked at viewings for discussions that began at the start of the year, and they are all in the hundreds, so perhaps for now we should monitor the figures as we go along.-DAVID: I've enjoyed it. Natures wonders reaches thousands. We shall monitor.-It will probably save us both a lot of time and repetition if I refrain from commenting on these articles, and just say a huge THANK YOU for all of them. But I will make just one final, general comment: you frequently end by pointing out that the different phenomena defy the odds of chance, and represent saltations. There is no disagreement between us on this. My argument is that the huge variety of life forms and wonders (e.g. the weird creatures in the Mariana Trench) suggests to me that there is no overall, controlled plan - as would be implied by God's specially designing every single one of them - but a free-for-all resulting from the autonomous ability (perhaps God-given) of organisms to adapt to and/or exploit (through innovation) all the different environments. I hope your thousands of fans will keep this in mind for all future articles!

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by David Turell @, Wednesday, July 13, 2016, 15:16 (3054 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: My argument is that the huge variety of life forms and wonders (e.g. the weird creatures in the Mariana Trench) suggests to me that there is no overall, controlled plan - as would be implied by God's specially designing every single one of them - but a free-for-all resulting from the autonomous ability (perhaps God-given) of organisms to adapt to and/or exploit (through innovation) all the different environments. I hope your thousands of fans will keep this in mind for all future articles!-You have a major point here. We certainly have not explained the free-for-all development of living forms and lifestyles. Speciation is certainly innovation, and we don't know how it works or why it is so wildly proliferative of form and complexity. We always come back to God did it, or helped organisms do it, or without God life started and exhibits extreme inventiveness without help. The latter choice makes no sense to me.

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by dhw, Thursday, July 14, 2016, 12:08 (3054 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: My argument is that the huge variety of life forms and wonders (e.g. the weird creatures in the Mariana Trench) suggests to me that there is no overall, controlled plan - as would be implied by God's specially designing every single one of them - but a free-for-all resulting from the autonomous ability (perhaps God-given) of organisms to adapt to and/or exploit (through innovation) all the different environments. I hope your thousands of fans will keep this in mind for all future articles!-DAVID: You have a major point here. We certainly have not explained the free-for-all development of living forms and lifestyles. Speciation is certainly innovation, and we don't know how it works or why it is so wildly proliferative of form and complexity. We always come back to God did it, or helped organisms do it, or without God life started and exhibits extreme inventiveness without help. The latter choice makes no sense to me.-As always, we have the two separate issues: 1) how does evolution work? 2) How did life and the evolutionary mechanism, whatever it may be, come into being? As regards 1), the wild proliferation is logically explained by an autonomous inventive mechanism that enables creatures to adapt to and exploit the vast range of environmental conditions. You prefer a 3.8-billion-year computer programme plus dabbling. As regards 2) it requires a colossal leap of faith to believe that chance could create life and the evolutionary mechanism - just as it requires a colossal leap of faith to believe that an almighty, universe-creating, universe-encompassing mind could simply exist without a source.

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by David Turell @, Thursday, July 14, 2016, 19:01 (3053 days ago) @ dhw


> dhw: As always, we have the two separate issues: 1) how does evolution work? 2) How did life and the evolutionary mechanism, whatever it may be, come into being? As regards 1), the wild proliferation is logically explained by an autonomous inventive mechanism that enables creatures to adapt to and exploit the vast range of environmental conditions. You prefer a 3.8-billion-year computer programme plus dabbling. As regards 2) it requires a colossal leap of faith to believe that chance could create life and the evolutionary mechanism - just as it requires a colossal leap of faith to believe that an almighty, universe-creating, universe-encompassing mind could simply exist without a source. - I would remind you the start of life and evolution are an inseparable continuum, so you are raising two questions in one continuous process. The ability to evolve must be coded into the beginning. I would also remind there must be a first cause. There has never been a true nothing.

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by dhw, Friday, July 15, 2016, 12:25 (3053 days ago) @ David Turell

dhw: As always, we have the two separate issues: 1) how does evolution work? 2) How did life and the evolutionary mechanism, whatever it may be, come into being? As regards 1), the wild proliferation is logically explained by an autonomous inventive mechanism that enables creatures to adapt to and exploit the vast range of environmental conditions. You prefer a 3.8-billion-year computer programme plus dabbling. As regards 2) it requires a colossal leap of faith to believe that chance could create life and the evolutionary mechanism - just as it requires a colossal leap of faith to believe that an almighty, universe-creating, universe-encompassing mind could simply exist without a source. - DAVID: I would remind you the start of life and evolution are an inseparable continuum, so you are raising two questions in one continuous process. The ability to evolve must be coded into the beginning. I would also remind there must be a first cause. There has never been a true nothing. - When I asked how life and the evolutionary mechanism, whatever it may be, came into being, I did not separate them. When I asked what that evolutionary mechanism was (= how does evolution work), I went on to list three possibles: my autonomous inventive mechanism, your 3.8 billion-year-old computer programme, and your divine dabbling. How the mechanism came into being and what the mechanism consists of are two separate questions. I would also remind you that we have agreed a thousand times that there must be a first cause, and I have never proposed “nothing”. Your first cause is conscious “pure” energy, and my equally unlikely alternative is unconscious energy and matter eternally transforming themselves.

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by David Turell @, Friday, July 15, 2016, 23:05 (3052 days ago) @ dhw

dhw: As always, we have the two separate issues: 1) how does evolution work? 2) How did life and the evolutionary mechanism, whatever it may be, come into being? As regards 1), the wild proliferation is logically explained by an autonomous inventive mechanism that enables creatures to adapt to and exploit the vast range of environmental conditions. You prefer a 3.8-billion-year computer programme plus dabbling. As regards 2) it requires a colossal leap of faith to believe that chance could create life and the evolutionary mechanism - just as it requires a colossal leap of faith to believe that an almighty, universe-creating, universe-encompassing mind could simply exist without a source.
> 
> DAVID: I would remind you the start of life and evolution are an inseparable continuum, so you are raising two questions in one continuous process. The ability to evolve must be coded into the beginning. I would also remind there must be a first cause. There has never been a true nothing.
> 
> When I asked how life and the evolutionary mechanism, whatever it may be, came into being, I did not separate them. When I asked what that evolutionary mechanism was (= how does evolution work), I went on to list three possibles: my autonomous inventive mechanism, your 3.8 billion-year-old computer programme, and your divine dabbling. How the mechanism came into being and what the mechanism consists of are two separate questions. I would also remind you that we have agreed a thousand times that there must be a first cause, and I have never proposed “nothing”. Your first cause is conscious “pure” energy, and my equally unlikely alternative is unconscious energy and matter eternally transforming themselves.

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by David Turell @, Friday, July 15, 2016, 23:13 (3052 days ago) @ David Turell


> > DAVID: I would remind you the start of life and evolution are an inseparable continuum, so you are raising two questions in one continuous process. The ability to evolve must be coded into the beginning. I would also remind there must be a first cause. There has never been a true nothing.
> > 
> > dhw: When I asked how life and the evolutionary mechanism, whatever it may be, came into being, I did not separate them. When I asked what that evolutionary mechanism was (= how does evolution work), I went on to list three possibles: my autonomous inventive mechanism, your 3.8 billion-year-old computer programme, and your divine dabbling. How the mechanism came into being and what the mechanism consists of are two separate questions.-Not really, if start of life and the mechanism of evolution all originated together in a 'first code' they are joined together. And this would include your AIM.-> dhw; I would also remind you that we have agreed a thousand times that there must be a first cause, and I have never proposed “nothing”. Your first cause is conscious “pure” energy, and my equally unlikely alternative is unconscious energy and matter eternally transforming themselves.-In your energy proposal where does the impetus for transformation come from? Why should unconscious energy/matter do that? Does it have purpose?

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by dhw, Saturday, July 16, 2016, 10:05 (3052 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: I would remind you the start of life and evolution are an inseparable continuum, so you are raising two questions in one continuous process. The ability to evolve must be coded into the beginning. I would also remind there must be a first cause. There has never been a true nothing.-dhw: When I asked how life and the evolutionary mechanism, whatever it may be, came into being, I did not separate them. When I asked what that evolutionary mechanism was (= how does evolution work), I went on to list three possibles: my autonomous inventive mechanism, your 3.8 billion-year-old computer programme, and your divine dabbling. How the mechanism came into being and what the mechanism consists of are two separate questions.-DAVID: Not really, if start of life and the mechanism of evolution all originated together in a 'first code' they are joined together. And this would include your AIM.-I joined them together myself! In my hypothesis the autonomous inventive mechanism IS the mechanism of evolution. In your hypothesis the mechanism is a 3.8-billion-year-old computer programme for every innovation and natural wonder in the history of life apart from those that God has personally dabbled. The NATURE of the evolutionary mechanism is a separate issue from how the mechanism - whatever it is - came into being.-dhw; I would also remind you that we have agreed a thousand times that there must be a first cause, and I have never proposed “nothing”. Your first cause is conscious “pure” energy, and my equally unlikely alternative is unconscious energy and matter eternally transforming themselves.
DAVID: In your energy proposal where does the impetus for transformation come from? Why should unconscious energy/matter do that? Does it have purpose? -In your energy proposal where does the consciousness come from? According to you it is already there as part of the first cause. According to me, the impetus for transformation is already there as part of the first cause. No, it does not have purpose. And I find the one hypothesis as unlikely as the other.

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by David Turell @, Saturday, July 16, 2016, 15:39 (3051 days ago) @ dhw


> DAVID: Not really, if start of life and the mechanism of evolution all originated together in a 'first code' they are joined together. And this would include your AIM.
> 
> dhw: I joined them together myself! ... The NATURE of the evolutionary mechanism is a separate issue from how the mechanism - whatever it is - came into being.-I think we may be together. My point is the start of life and its code and the evolutionary mechanism all began together, but we still don't understand how the evolutionary mechanism works.-> DAVID: In your energy proposal where does the impetus for transformation come from? Why should unconscious energy/matter do that? Does it have purpose? 
> 
> dhw: In your energy proposal where does the consciousness come from? According to you it is already there as part of the first cause. According to me, the impetus for transformation is already there as part of the first cause. No, it does not have purpose. And I find the one hypothesis as unlikely as the other.-Since I see purpose and there must be a first cause, we will remain apart in our theories.

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by dhw, Sunday, July 17, 2016, 10:53 (3051 days ago) @ David Turell

DAVID: Not really, if start of life and the mechanism of evolution all originated together in a 'first code' they are joined together. And this would include your AIM.-dhw: I joined them together myself! ... The NATURE of the evolutionary mechanism is a separate issue from how the mechanism - whatever it is - came into being.-DAVID: I think we may be together. My point is the start of life and its code and the evolutionary mechanism all began together, but we still don't understand how the evolutionary mechanism works.-Agreed.-DAVID: In your energy proposal where does the impetus for transformation come from? Why should unconscious energy/matter do that? Does it have purpose? 
dhw: In your energy proposal where does the consciousness come from? According to you it is already there as part of the first cause. According to me, the impetus for transformation is already there as part of the first cause. No, it does not have purpose. And I find the one hypothesis as unlikely as the other.-DAVID: Since I see purpose and there must be a first cause, we will remain apart in our theories.-I acknowledge that your theory may be right, but the alternative may also be right. I am an agnostic.

Is our solar system weird? The current odds

by David Turell @, Tuesday, July 26, 2016, 18:25 (3041 days ago) @ David Turell

Another view of how weird our system seems to be:-http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/life-unbounded/3-cosmic-mysteries-no-1/?WT.mc_id=SA_DD_20160726-"Yet within all that variation - confirming the highly stochastic nature of planet formation, from the non-linearity of orbital dynamics to planet's unpredictable collisional histories - the majority of planetary systems simply do not look like ours. Even accounting for the biases of our detection methods, systems with gas giants configured like Jupiter and Saturn together with inner worlds of the size and spacing of ours, are not common.-"Most stars in our galaxy appear to harbor planets. But most also harbor plenty of small and moderately large planets on orbits that would all fit neatly inside the orbit of Mercury - with periods of less than 100 Earth days. In fact about 50% of Sun-like stars harbor worlds between the mass of Earth and 50 times the Earth's mass on orbits no longer than a few months.-"Furthermore, cosmochemical evidence (from meteorites and planets) in our solar system suggests that primitive solid bodies formed very early - close to 4.6 billion years ago. By contrast the terrestrial worlds weren't finished until some 100 to 200 million years later. That wouldn't be too puzzling, except for the fact that current data on super Earth exoplanets suggests that many harbor big atmospheres of gas (mostly hydrogen and helium). Those atmospheres must have been captured by well-formed rocky worlds very early in their system's formation - before the gas dissipated, as it must have in our solar system by 100 million years into its history.-"In other words, it seems that our terrestrial-analog exoplanetary cousins probably formed rather earlier in their system's timeline than Earth, Mars, Venus, or Mercury. Something must have taken place in our baby solar system to prevent or eliminate a clutch of close orbiting, but substantial, planets.-"Among the ideas posited to help explain this picture is the so-called Jupiter Grand Tack. In this scenario a young Jupiter migrated inwards to about 1.5 astronomical units from the Sun, and then outwards ('tacking') after catching an orbital mean-motion resonance with Saturn. Jupiter's inwards swoop could have disrupted an earlier batch of close-orbiting planets, leaving things to sort themselves out in collisions and mergers that would take at least another 100 million years to complete. -"The bottom line is that the solar system does not seem to be typical, and may even be quite unusual. Not only does that challenge our current models of planetary formation (which have relied heavily on local evidence from our planets, moons, asteroids and other primitive bodies), but it also raises the tricky question of whether the existence of life here is directly related to the peculiarity of our entire solar system." -Comment: Our solar system and our Earth may be one of a kind. God at work.

Is our solar system weird? Jupiter first planet?

by David Turell @, Saturday, June 17, 2017, 19:21 (2715 days ago) @ David Turell

New research suggests Jupiter formed first. It acts as an organizer of the planets and protector of the smaller inner planets from asteroids. if this is true it is another example of fine tuning to provide the right planet. Earth, for life to start:

https://cosmosmagazine.com/space/jupiter-is-the-most-ancient-planet-in-the-solar-system

"Jupiter is the oldest planet in the solar system, according to research published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

"Scientists led by Thomas S. Kruijer of the University of Münster, in Germany, measured concentrations of molybdenum and tungsten isotopes derived from iron meteorites to model the age of the system’s largest planet.

"There are two distinct groups of iron meteorites, the researchers suggest, which arose separately within the nebula cloud from which the solar system eventually coalesced. They represent, they write, “two genetically distinct nebular reservoirs that coexisted and remained spatially separated” during the first few million years of the solar system’s formation.

"The most plausible explanation for their separation, Kruijer and colleagues suggest, is the formation of Jupiter in between them.

"Jupiter is a type of planet known as a gas giant. Its likely formation involved first the accretion of a solid core, followed by the accumulation of thick layers of gases surrounding it.

"Kruijer’s team calculates that the process began very soon after the birth of the solar system, which occurred when part of a giant molecular cloud condensed under the force of its own gravity around 4.6 billion years ago.

"According to the modeling, Jupiter’s inner core grew to the equivalent of about 20 times the mass of the Earth within the first million years. The Sun was still a protostar at this stage, not having become dense enough for hydrogen fusion to begin.

"The growth rate then slowed down, but continued, reaching about 50 times the mass of earth three million years later.

"Thus, Jupiter is the oldest planet of the solar system, and its solid core formed well before the solar nebula gas dissipated,” the team writes.

"Fixing a date for the formation of the largest planet, the scientists conclude, will allow for better analysis of how its presence affected the dynamics of the young solar system.

"Its early development, they suggest, would have heavily influenced the movement of matter, “potentially explaining why our Solar System lacks any super-Earths”."

Comment: Our solar system is most unusual compared to the ones found so far. I feel God evolved it to provide a safe place for life to start. Our galaxy sits in a big void in the universe, which partly protects us from all the dangers the universe presents. Fine tuning.

https://thespacereporter.com/2017/06/scientists-say-milky-way-lives-huge-void/

Is our solar system weird? Most others are different

by David Turell @, Wednesday, July 05, 2017, 00:09 (2698 days ago) @ David Turell

The Kepler studies so far find other solar systems are not like ours:

https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg23531324-100-planets-in-other-star-systems-fit-a...

"EXOPLANETARY systems are like peas in a pod, whatever type of star the planets orbit. This challenges our ideas about how such systems form.

"A team led by Lauren Weiss at the University of Montreal in Canada has looked at 909 planets discovered by the Kepler space telescope in 355 systems. All planets in a given system seem to be close in size and similarly spaced in their orbits when compared with planets in other systems. “We see this pattern happening again and again,” says Weiss – regardless of what kind of star these planets are orbiting.

"That’s not what we’d expect, given how we think star systems are born: that stars form from a cloud of gas and dust, pulling it into a thick disc as they rotate. Denser clusters of gas and dust within the disc condense into planets, suggesting there should be a link between planets and their star.

"The team thinks something other than stellar mass must influence how protoplanetary discs give rise to planets, such as the total mass of the disc, the solid mass within the disc or what happens to the disc after a planet’s initial formation.

“'There’s probably something related to the physics of the disc that the planets are forming in that is determining how big the planets grow and how far apart from each other they end up,” says Weiss. “But this idea has yet to be tested.”

"It’s also possible that these patterns are just a fluke created by our limited data. Kepler can only find planets with short orbital periods – those that crossed in front of their star during the four years of the spacecraft’s mission. That’s like only looking at Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars in our own system.

"So can we really build theories on Kepler’s limited observations? “That’s the question that keeps me and many other people up at night!” says Weiss."

Comment: It is possible our system is unique in order to have life on Earth, but the thought that the Keppler system cannot see systems like ours must be considered.

Is our solar system weird? Most others are different

by David Turell @, Wednesday, January 10, 2018, 18:51 (2508 days ago) @ David Turell

More evidence our solar system is not like the others we can study:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/01/180109141918.htm

"An international research team led by Université de Montréal astrophysicist Lauren Weiss has discovered that exoplanets orbiting the same star tend to have similar sizes and a regular orbital spacing. This pattern, revealed by new W. M. Keck Observatory observations of planetary systems discovered by the Kepler Telescope, could suggest that most planetary systems have a different formation history than the solar system.

***

"In this new analysis led by Weiss and published in The Astronomical Journal, the team focused on 909 planets belonging to 355 multi-planet systems. These planets are mostly located between 1,000 and 4,000 light-years away from Earth. Using a statistical analysis, the team found two surprising patterns. They found that exoplanets tend to be the same sizes as their neighbors. If one planet is small, the next planet around that same star is very likely to be small as well, and if one planet is big, the next is likely to be big. They also found that planets orbiting the same star tend to have a regular orbital spacing.

"'The planets in a system tend to be the same size and regularly spaced, like peas in a pod. These patterns would not occur if the planet sizes or spacings were drawn at random." explains Weiss.

"The similar sizes and orbital spacing of planets have implications for how most planetary systems form. In classic planet formation theory, planets form in the protoplanetary disk that surrounds a newly formed star. The planets might form in compact configurations with similar sizes and a regular orbital spacing, in a manner similar to the newly observed pattern in exoplanetary systems. However, in our solar system, the inner planets have surprisingly large spacing and diverse sizes. Abundant evidence in the solar system suggests that Jupiter and Saturn disrupted our system's early structure, resulting in the four widely-spaced terrestrial planets we have today. That planets in most systems are still similarly sized and regularly spaced suggests that perhaps they have been mostly undisturbed since their formation.

"To test that hypothesis, Weiss is conducting a new study at the Keck Observatory to search for Jupiter analogs around Kepler's multi-planet systems. The planetary systems studied by Weiss and her team have multiple planets quite close to their star. Because of the limited duration of the Kepler Mission, little is known about what kind of planets, if any, exist at larger orbital distances around these systems. They hope to test how the presence or absence of Jupiter-like planets at large orbital distances relate to patterns in the inner planetary systems.

"Regardless of their outer populations, the similarity of planets in the inner regions of extrasolar systems requires an explanation. If the deciding factor for planet sizes can be identified, it might help determine which stars are likely to have terrestrial planets that are suitable for life."

Comment: My explanation of our different solar system is it was purposely designed for life, just as the universe is designed to allow life.

Is our solar system weird? Most others are different

by David Turell @, Saturday, January 20, 2018, 00:29 (2499 days ago) @ David Turell

Another article on how different is our solar system from the ones observed:

https://www.space.com/39390-alien-planets-reveal-our-strange-solar-system.html

"Our solar system may be an oddball in the universe. A new study using data from NASA's Kepler Space Telescope shows that in most cases, exoplanets orbiting the same star have similar sizes and regular spacing between their orbits.

"By contrast, our own solar system has a range of planetary sizes and distances between neighbors. The smallest planet, Mercury, is about one-third the size of Earth — and the biggest planet, Jupiter, is roughly 11 times the diameter of Earth. There also are very different spacings between individual planets, particularly the inner planets.

"This means our solar system may have formed differently than other solar systems did, the research team suggested, although more observations are needed to learn what the different mechanisms were.

"The planets in a system tend to be the same size and regularly spaced, like peas in a pod. These patterns would not occur if the planet sizes or spacings were drawn at random," Lauren Weiss, the study's lead author.

***

"After running a statistical analysis, the team found that a system with a small planet would tend to have other small planets nearby — and vice-versa, with big planets tending to have big neighbors. These extrasolar systems also had regular orbital spacing between the planets.

"'The similar sizes and orbital spacing of planets have implications for how most planetary systems form," researchers said in the statement. "In classic planet-formation theory, planets form in the protoplanetary disk that surrounds a newly formed star. The planets might form in compact configurations with similar sizes and a regular orbital spacing, in a manner similar to the newly observed pattern in exoplanetary systems."

"In our own solar system, however, the story is very different. The four terrestrial planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars) are very widely spaced apart. The team pointed to evidence from other research that Jupiter and Saturn may have disrupted the structure of the young solar system. While the statement did not specify how, several other research studies have examined the movements of these giant planets and their potential impact on the solar system.

***

"'Regardless of their outer populations, the similarity of planets in the inner regions of extrasolar systems requires an explanation," researchers said in the statement. "If the deciding factor for planet sizes can be identified, it might help determine which stars are likely to have terrestrial planets that are suitable for life.'"

Comment: More evidence that our solar system is very special. It is obvious that it is specially made to provide for an Earth that can easily produce and maintain life.

Is our solar system weird? Most others are different

by David Turell @, Wednesday, October 17, 2018, 21:32 (2228 days ago) @ David Turell

Another article which shows that our solar system is not like the others we have discovered:

https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/our-solar-system-is-even-stranger-tha...

"In addition to our solar system, we now know of over 400 multi-planet systems, thanks largely to the Kepler Mission. Kepler is a NASA spacecraft (named after the 17th century German astronomer) that was launched in 2009 for the sole purpose of discovering exoplanets—worlds orbiting other stars. It finds those exoplanets by continuously measuring the brightnesses of about 100,000 stars and waiting for the starlight from any of them dim ever so slightly due to the shadow of a planet in transit. The transit of each planet is unique, allowing the discovery of multiple planets orbiting the same star.

***

"The pattern I found on that sunny afternoon: planets in the same system tend to be the same size. For example, if one planet is 1.5 times the radius of Earth, the other planets in the system are very likely to be 1.5 times the radius of Earth, plus or minus a little bit.

"This is not at all what my colleagues and I expected. In our solar system, planets range from the size of Mercury (less than half the radius of Earth) to Jupiter (more than ten times the radius of Earth). The whole population of exoplanets discovered by Kepler ranges from one quarter the size of Earth to about twenty times the size of Earth. Yet, despite this wide range of possible sizes, planets tend to be about the same sizes as their neighbors.

***

"A widely accepted (but unconfirmed) theory about planet formation involves the rise of so-called “oligarchs,” young precursors of planets that each influence a swath of fixed width within the disk around the star. (Pluto is no longer considered a planet because Pluto was never big enough to be an oligarch.)

"Oligarchic theory predicts roughly equal-mass oligarchs spaced at regular intervals, with the size of the oligarch dependent on the width of its influence. However, because our solar system is not a system of equal-mass planets at regular spacing, the rise of oligarchs is considered a mere chapter in our solar system’s history, an early pattern that was later overwritten by violent impacts that formed our very dissimilar terrestrial planets."

Comment: Another article which shows we live in a very special and unusual solar system. We can add this to the fine tuning theories.

Is our solar system weird? All others are different

by David Turell @, Tuesday, December 11, 2018, 17:43 (2173 days ago) @ David Turell

None are seen so far like ours:

https://www.reasons.org/explore/blogs/todays-new-reason-to-believe/read/todays-new-reas...

"Astronomers have detected and measured the mass and/or orbital features of 3,869 planets in 2,887 planetary systems beyond the solar system.1 This ranks as a staggering rate of discovery, given that the first confirmed detection of a planet orbiting another hydrogen-fusion-burning star was as recent as 1995.2 What do the characteristics of these systems reveal about potential habitability for advanced life?

***

"The Italian team reported on the frequency of inner low-mass planets in the presence of outer gas giant planets.3 The Chinese astronomers, Wei Zhu and Yanqin Wu, reported on relationships they discovered between super-Earth planets and cold gas giant planets.

"The three most common exoplanets discovered to date are super-Earths, hot Jupiters, and cold Jupiters. Super-Earth planets are those with masses and radii greater than Earth’s but less than Neptune’s. Hot Jupiters are planets more massive than Saturn that orbit their host stars closer than Earth orbits the Sun. Cold Jupiters are planets more massive than Saturn that are more distant from their host stars than Earth is from the Sun.

"Of the 3,869 confirmed exoplanets, astronomers possess both a measured value of the mass and a measured value of the orbital radius for 1,553 planets. Of these 1,553 exoplanets, 20.5 percent are super-Earths, 33.0 percent are cold Jupiters, and 37.7 percent are hot Jupiters.

***

"For more than a decade, astronomers have recognized that the solar system is highly unusual. It possesses cold Jupiters closer to the Sun than 14 times Earth’s distance from the Sun but lacks one or more super-Earth planets, hot Jupiters, or cold Jupiter planets with orbital eccentricities greater than 0.09. Each one of these four features, if present in a planetary system, rules out the possibility of any kind of advanced life existing in the system.

"How many of the known multiple-planet systems exhibit these life-essential features? The answer for the 638 known multi-planet exoplanetary systems is zero.13 How about the known exoplanetary systems where only one planet has been discovered? Of these 2,249 systems, they either lack a cold Jupiter closer than 14 times Earth’s distance from the Sun or the planet they contain possesses characteristics that would rule out the possible existence of another planet in the system capable of sustaining advanced life.

"The presumption back in 1995 was that astronomers would find many exoplanetary systems where the probability of advanced life possibly existing in that system would be greater than zero. More than twenty-three years later, with a database of 2,888 planetary systems and 3,877 planets, only one planetary system and only one planet possess the characteristics that the possible existence of advanced life needs. It requires little effort to discern the identity of that single planetary system and single planet."

Comment: Our planet is special and so is our solar system. God at work

Is our solar system weird? All others are different

by dhw, Wednesday, December 12, 2018, 11:05 (2173 days ago) @ David Turell

QUOTE: "The presumption back in 1995 was that astronomers would find many exoplanetary systems where the probability of advanced life possibly existing in that system would be greater than zero. More than twenty-three years later, with a database of 2,888 planetary systems and 3,877 planets, only one planetary system and only one planet possess the characteristics that the possible existence of advanced life needs. It requires little effort to discern the identity of that single planetary system and single planet."

DAVID: Our planet is special and so is our solar system. God at work.

I wonder why the authors specify “advanced life”. Do they expect to find primitive life? Even the simplest form of life is extremely complex. But I’m afraid it will make no difference to theists or atheists if life is or is not found. If it’s not found, atheists will say: “Lucky us.” Theists will say: “God at work.” If it’s found, atheists will say: “In the right conditions, life will arise spontaneously.” Theists will say: “God at work.” I’m not sure, though, how many theists will say: “God specially designed these primitive forms of life on Planet X because his sole purpose was to specially design H. sapiens on Planet Earth.”

Is our solar system weird? All others are different

by David Turell @, Wednesday, December 12, 2018, 14:46 (2172 days ago) @ dhw

QUOTE: "The presumption back in 1995 was that astronomers would find many exoplanetary systems where the probability of advanced life possibly existing in that system would be greater than zero. More than twenty-three years later, with a database of 2,888 planetary systems and 3,877 planets, only one planetary system and only one planet possess the characteristics that the possible existence of advanced life needs. It requires little effort to discern the identity of that single planetary system and single planet."

DAVID: Our planet is special and so is our solar system. God at work.

dhw: I wonder why the authors specify “advanced life”. Do they expect to find primitive life? Even the simplest form of life is extremely complex. But I’m afraid it will make no difference to theists or atheists if life is or is not found. If it’s not found, atheists will say: “Lucky us.” Theists will say: “God at work.” If it’s found, atheists will say: “In the right conditions, life will arise spontaneously.” Theists will say: “God at work.” I’m not sure, though, how many theists will say: “God specially designed these primitive forms of life on Planet X because his sole purpose was to specially design H. sapiens on Planet Earth.”

The authors were describing the opinions of scientists many years ago. Hugh Ross, a theistic scientist, is simply expressing how unusual our Earth seems to be.

Is our solar system weird? our planets don't hit each other

by David Turell @, Thursday, May 11, 2023, 17:04 (561 days ago) @ David Turell

The orbits are slightly chaotic but very stable:

https://www.livescience.com/space/cosmology/scientists-discover-secret-symmetries-that-...

"Earth probably shouldn't exist.

"That's because the orbits of the inner solar system planets — Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars — are chaotic, and models have suggested that these inner planets should have crashed into each other by now. And yet, that hasn't happened.

"New research published May 3 in the journal Physical Review X(opens in new tab) may finally explain why.

"Through a deep plunge into the models for planetary motion, the researchers discovered that the motions of the inner planets are constrained by certain parameters that act as a tether that inhibits the system's chaos. Besides providing a mathematical explanation for the apparent harmony in our solar system, the new study's insights may help scientists understand the trajectories of exoplanets surrounding other stars.

"Planets constantly exert a mutual gravitational pull on each other – and these little tugs constantly make minor adjustments to the planets' orbits. The outer planets, which are much larger, are more resistant to little tugs and so maintain comparatively stable orbits.

"The problem of inner planet trajectories, however, is still too complicated to solve exactly. In the late 19th century, mathematician Henri Poincaré proved that it is mathematically impossible to solve the equations governing the motion for three or more interacting objects, often known as the "three body problem." As a result, uncertainties in the details of the planets' starting positions and velocities balloon over time. In other words: It is possible to take two scenarios in which the distances between Mercury, Venus, Mars and Earth differ by the slightest amount, and in one the planets smash into each other and in another they veer apart.

***

"Delving through the math, Laskar and his colleagues then identified for the first time "symmetries" or "conserved quantities" in the gravitational interactions that create a "practical barrier in the chaotic wandering of the planets," Laskar said.

"These emergent quantities remain nearly constant and inhibit certain chaotic motions, but don't prevent them altogether, much like the raised lip of a dinner plate will inhibit food falling off the plate but not prevent it completely. We can thank these quantities for our solar system's apparent stability.

'Renu Malhotra(opens in new tab), Professor of Planetary Sciences at the University of Arizona who was not involved in the study, highlighted how subtle the mechanisms identified in the study are. Malhotra told Live Science that it is interesting that "our solar system's planetary orbits exhibit exceptionally weak chaos."

"In other work, Laskar and colleagues are searching for clues as to whether the number of planets in the solar system ever differed from what we currently see. For all the stability evident today, whether that has always been the case over the billions of years before life evolved remains an open question."

Comment: we still are a priveleged planet protected by a tiny bit of chaos in our neighboring planets motions. Earth needs this stability. God, as designer, provided it. Why some chaos? If God did it, it was required.

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