Our solar system mostly revolves around the sun on the same axis (apart from Pluto). Our galaxy does the same (along with other galaxies). Why? Gravity is linear?

Would it matter if we tried to escape the sun’s gravity by going “up?”

  • snooggums
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    3 months ago

    So, the star and planets all started as one big gas nebula, then the nebuka as a whole started spinning due to uneven distribution of matter within the cloud as it condensed. This spin increased over time and as the sun formed in the center, and planets clumped around in its orbit. The spin relative to each other, along with some interesting collisions between massive bodies, is why a few don’t fit the general mold of spinning the same ways on the same plane. We may have even picked up a planet or two over time that was ejected from another solar system!

    This video does an ok job of explaining the spinning and planet formation part. I’m sure thete are better ones out there.

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=sCkhEu3lYNc

    • @SzethFriendOfNimi
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      3 months ago

      It’s like how the earth bulges out at the equator.

      The momentum pulls them out, gravity pulls it back. Similar thing at the solar and galactic planes.

      They “bulge” relatively to the spin of the material over time and the clumps of material then forms planets along that general plane.

      From the aboves video you can see this at 44seconds

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sCkhEu3lYNc&t=44s

      And a relevant PBS Spacetime video

      Why is the Earth Round and the Milky Way Flat? | Space Time | PBS Digital Studios

      But the biggest reason is the way gasses form in space. As noted in the above video at the 8:45 mark. Gasses aren’t able to fall back into the center along their axis of spin because of their momentum. But the gassed above and below the plane can move towards the gathering material there by gravity and so it flattens out.

      https://youtu.be/Aj6Kc1mvsdo?t=8m45s

      • @[email protected]
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        22 months ago

        Ah, that makes sense.

        Once you have a slight more mass in any plane, eventually everything will move to that plane.