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I had a similar theory when I was about ten years old, but eventually I realized there's not enough mass there for a reasonable sized planet. Then we analyzed asteroids from the asteroid belt and learned that they couldn't have all been from the same planet!
originally posted by: Ravenwatcher
I've been looking into this for a bit and have come to the conclusion that the Asteroid belt is the missing Planet It was blown up , If you look at it and the area it's in there should be a Planet there .
Interesting demonstration, but somewhat misleading because it's not exactly why planets orbit the same way.
originally posted by: UpThenDown
a reply to: Ravenwatcher
its not so much about the fabric, jump to 2.50 in video he loads it with marbles in both directions yet watch as they collide into each other and then the ones left are all spinning (edit otrbiting the large mass) the same way
Yes, that's a pretty good description of the rotation of the "proto-planetary disk" that forms solar systems.
originally posted by: datguy
Why Do the Planets Orbit in a Plane Parallel to the Spin Axis of the Sun?
Best I can do
It's obvious you've fallen for some of the common mythology anout the Coriolis effect which is not true. The Coriolis effect definitely exists, but it is completely overwhelmed in that demonstration in the video by the random initial motions of the marbles when he releases them into the fabric. There are hoaxes at the equator where they show water draining different directions on either side of the equator, and again in that case if it wasn't being hoaxed by some trickery, the coriolis forces of the small demo setups would be overwhelmed by the random motions of the particles initially before the draining started. The hoaxes can performed by making the initial motions non-random, see link below.
originally posted by: Ravenwatcher
originally posted by: UpThenDown
a reply to: Ravenwatcher
its not so much about the fabric, jump to 2.50 in video he loads it with marbles in both directions yet watch as they collide into each other and then the ones left are all spinning (edit otrbiting the large mass) the same way
But in his experiment If he was on the other side of the World would the Marbles be spinning in the opposite direction influenced by Earths Coriolis effect , Which would not apply in space ?
Firstly, a container filled with water is set up perfectly on the line of the equator. The plug is removed and the water drains – apparently without a vortex being created in either direction. Next, the container is moved a few metres away from the line, and the experiment is repeated. The water now forms a vortex! Magic.
Well... not quite. While the Coriolis effect is very real, its effects would actually never be noticeable in this sort of situation. It’s actually weakest at the equator. The experiment above is a trick because the container of water in the first experiment was almost motionless before the plug was pulled, while the second one was poured in with momentum, which caused the vortex. In reality, variables such as how you pour water in, the shape of the tub, and many other factors will dictate how the water drains, not the hemisphere you are in.
originally posted by: mysterioustranger
a reply to: Ravenwatcher
Been well established since the 1960's that the asteroid belt is planetary debris stuck in its orbit.
We new knew this 50 years ago in 1976, and "The 12th Planet"- Zecaria Sitchin came out soon after...
how was this orbiting field of debris formed? Does it represent the rocky bones of a former planet from eons past, or is it a type of gathering place for a planet-to-be?
Scientists have considered both responses as possibilities over the decades. But more recent theories contend that the vast ring of space rocks likely never was a whole planet and is unlikely to be so in the relatively near galactic future. Why? There simply isn’t enough material there.
Scientists thought that “maybe there was a planet there and it got blown to smithereens,” explains Sean Raymond, an astronomer at the Astrophysical Laboratory of Bordeaux, in France. But after researchers began to examine the patterns in iron meteorites that fell to the Earth as meteors, Raymond says, it became clear they didn’t come from one parent body...
Just because the asteroid belt doesn’t represent the leftovers of a former planet doesn’t mean scientists have abandoned the idea entirely. The belt might have come from parts of other planets that still exist, or be part of a planetesimal — which is like a baby planet — that never completely formed before being smashed apart...
We now know the asteroid belt doesn’t contain material from a single source. Some of its components may have been derived from the general region of space it currently inhabits. Other material may have come from sources beyond the orbit of Jupiter, Bottke says. Still other asteroids may have arrived from the inner-planets zone, as bits that broke off at some point.
Losing mass doesn't change the analysis of the asteroids showing they couldn't possibly have all been from the same planet.
originally posted by: Ravenwatcher
Are considering the age of the Asteroid belt and the fact that been losing mass for around 4 billion years ?
The science says the asteroids couldn't have all come from the same planet. The science does not yet have any definitive answer to that question but I can make educated guesses. My link for this article went to the wrong place in my previous post, so I'll post it again here going to the correct location, but the part I already cited mentioned some possible sources.
originally posted by: Ravenwatcher
a reply to: Arbitrageur
I understand what you are saying but explain how material from different sources ended up where a planet should be ?
We now know the asteroid belt doesn’t contain material from a single source. Some of its components may have been derived from the general region of space it currently inhabits. Other material may have come from sources beyond the orbit of Jupiter, Bottke says. Still other asteroids may have arrived from the inner-planets zone, as bits that broke off at some point.
So that's one of the reasons why some of the objects the OP calls "planets" are no planets according to the definition adopted in 2006, they didn't clear their neighborhoods.
"Clearing the neighbourhood" (or dynamical dominance) around a celestial body's orbit describes the body becoming gravitationally dominant such that there are no other bodies of comparable size other than its natural satellites or those otherwise under its gravitational influence.
"Clearing the neighbourhood" is one of three necessary criteria for a celestial body to be considered a planet in the Solar System, according to the definition adopted in 2006 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU).