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What mechanism(s) perturb objects from their origin in the Oort cloud into orbits that take them into the inner solar system?

2006-11-16 16:54:03 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

6 answers

Interactions with massive giant molecular clouds and other stars are what can swipe angular momentum of objects in Oort clouds sending them falling straight down into the inner parts of the Solar System (in this context 'inner' means inside of Neptune's orbit). These are the same mechanisms that fluffed out the Oort cloud in the first place. (This is why the Oort cloud has a diameter roughly the scale of the distances between stars in the outer solar system.)

If you think about it, Jupiter could only eject early solar system comets or throw them into highly elliptical but still Jupiter crossing orbits, so it is these same interactions that build up the Oort cloud in the first place (otherwise, eventually Jupiter ejects everything)

2006-11-18 00:50:32 · answer #1 · answered by Mr. Quark 5 · 0 0

The binary star system Sirius is responsible for the perturbations in our Solar System, including the dislodging of the debris from the various debris fields, e.g. Oort Belt, Kelper Belt and Asteroid Belt. An electromagnetic stellar arcing that oscillates from weak amplitude force to strong amplitude force exists between Sirius and our Solar System’s Sun. The arcing enters the plane of our system's ecliptic at 19.5 degrees, called the 19.5 Degree Caniculan Effect (after Canis Major, Sirius A). This is why all the planets in our solar system are confined to an angle of perturbation held within the wedge of 19.5 degrees. This is why all the powerful storms on all the planets materialize at the 19.5 degree latitude, e.g. Jupiter's 300 year old storm, the Red Spot, Neptune's Dark Spot, all the hurricanes that develop on Earth, and the Sun Spots. This is why all the violent volcanoes are located at the 19.5 degree latitude, e.g. Kilauea of Hawaii, and Olympus Mons on Mars, the largest volcano in the Solar System. The 19.5 Degree Caniculan Effect is increasing radically in amplitude, indicating that our Solar System is on a collision course with the Sirius Binary, both systems are electromagnetically interlocked. Thus Jupiter has developed another Red Spot Jr.; the Earth has developed a third belt to the two existing belts in the Van Allen Radiation Belt; and Pluto’s atmosphere appears warmer than usual. Hence, global warming is not precipitated by emission pollutions and greenhouse gases as Eco-Whackos and Al Gore would have you believe, but rather by the 19.5 Degree Caniculan Effect. As the star Sirius nears ever closer, indicated by the Doppler blue shift, the Earth’s environment will increasingly deteriorate, because the Earth is a giant electromagnet and the internal magma is becoming exponentially agitated. This has caused the eruption of nearly 10,000 seafloor volcanoes, which is heating the temperature of the oceans, thus killing the coral reefs, melting the polar ice caps and altering the climatic conditions. Even the polar ice caps of Mars are melting.

2006-11-16 18:47:49 · answer #2 · answered by . 5 · 0 0

The biggest one is of course the Sun. It pulls them in constantly, but it doesn't seem so because of the great orbital period it takes to make a complete orbit from inside to back outside to the outer Oort Cloud. Many comets like Halley's don't make the complete trip and this is what gives them a relatively short orbit, like 70 something years.

We figure there are extra-solar bodies that we can't see that could "spin" them off to the inner solar system, however we can only guess at these.

2006-11-16 17:20:33 · answer #3 · answered by AdamKadmon 7 · 0 0

PLEASE!!!!Sirius effecting the Oort cloud??!!!Read any Astronomy magazine or check out Planetary.org.Tme gravity effect from the large outer planets,especially Jupiter are the main reason for perturbances in the Oort Cloud.

2006-11-17 05:08:57 · answer #4 · answered by Raymond S 1 · 0 0

Eris, the biggest dwarf planet accepted, replaced into got here across in an ongoing survey at Palomar Observatory's Samuel Oschin telescope through astronomers Mike Brown (Caltech), Chad Trujillo (Gemini Observatory), and David Rabinowitz (Yale college). We formally reported the call on 6 September 2006, and it replaced into time-honored and presented on 13 September 2006.

2016-11-24 23:55:13 · answer #5 · answered by holguin 4 · 0 0

gravity

2006-11-16 17:22:38 · answer #6 · answered by bprice215 5 · 0 0

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