English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

If we look at sun and all it planets (with few noughty exceptions) are in plane of rotation in one plane, the axis of rotation is same for all of em. And IS the axis of planet rotation itself also is in same plane (almost) like earth is tilted by 4 or 5 degrees due to some planetry impact

2006-11-30 06:11:03 · 6 answers · asked by ViM 2 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

6 answers

Now that you have heard the tired old stuff out there, how about hearing what is going on. If you will check out www.thunderbolts.info and do a bunch of reading you will begin to get a hint. The real reason is that the solar ecliptic plane is electrically conductive and as charges travel on the surface of the plane, the whole solar system focuses inside the conductor. As objects appear coming in from outside the solar system, any deviations are pushed towards the plane. This is why comets flare up and such. Honestly it is a force 10 E39 times greater than gravity. The whole system is run by the EM force and Gravity well it just doesn't enter into the equation.

There is a whole lot out there that doesn't match up to the sad old worn out tale of the universe forming from a dust nebula. The first thing of this is that a nebula could never form a planet or a star as it lacks enough gravity. It gets much worse than that.

If you check out www.4threvolt.com or www.nealadams.com you will learn some more fantastic things. On Neal Adams site be sure to check out his science stuff.

In the words of the guy at the 4threvolt site. If this is so, then "Everything we know is wrong." Well it is just about that wrong in cosmology and I though you might like to know. It is so far wrong that the IEEE kicked of a whole study effort on cosmology to deal with the discoveries that just don't get along with the tired old nebular theories. The electrical universe has the data and the science. The rest just talk a good line.

Besides: Gravity doesn't exist as a force. It is a cross product of the EM field force. In the words of "Doc" from the movie "Back to the Future" --- This sucker is electrical. (The whole universe) Some really great work is coming out of Brazil on this. (http://users.elo.com.br/~deaquino/)

Have fun!

2006-11-30 06:32:03 · answer #1 · answered by Arthur N 1 · 0 1

This issue was discussed on Seti site at http://setiathome.berkeley.edu/forum_thread.php?id=33754

One answer said: As Kolch theorises, it is to do with gravity.

As matter fell towards the centre of the cloud that formed the solar system, the Sun formed first. As it grew, it began to spin and the gravitational field generated, began rotate with it. This had the effect of packing the dust cloud into an "accretion disk". Such disks have been observed in other systems, by various means. Over time, of course, the materials in the disk formed planets.

Simple??? Not if you've seen the mathematics!! lol

I believe Pluto orbits the Sun at an angle of several degrees to the "ecliptic" (The plane the other planets have settled in). This has led to the theory that Pluto was a wandering planet that was captured by the Sun's gravity, and did not form with the rest of the solar system. To me, this idea makes sense, as the four outermost planets are all Gas Giants. (Pluto is no longer deemed a planet)

2006-11-30 06:16:28 · answer #2 · answered by blapath 6 · 1 0

Because before the planets were formed, the solar system was a flat disk shape with a buldge in the middle which eventually became the sun.

The other areas condensed into planets, but remained in the disk plane formation.

Other solar systems might have wilder orbits depending on thier previous formations.

2006-11-30 06:16:23 · answer #3 · answered by Ganymede 3 · 0 0

Earth's tilt is more than 4 or 5 degrees, it's about 23.5 degrees. Just wanted to point that out. Uranus tilts at about 98 degrees. Impacts could well be the cause.

2006-11-30 06:25:48 · answer #4 · answered by Sangmo 5 · 1 0

Because they all share the angular momentum of the original dust ring that they formed from in the time of the formation of the solar system.

2006-11-30 06:16:01 · answer #5 · answered by campbelp2002 7 · 1 0

Because they all share the angular momentum of the original dust ring that they formed from!

2006-11-30 07:36:11 · answer #6 · answered by URFI 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers