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Newtonian mechanics & Oort Cloud Shell |
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| May16-10, 11:55 AM | #1 |
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Newtonian mechanics & Oort Cloud Shell
Last week there was a documentary program on Nat Geo I believe having to do with the composition and origins of comets. The narrative seemed to imply that comets originate within & are rather randomly dislodged from a spherical shell around the Solar System called the Oort cloud. This dislodging of the comet supposedly takes place when one of the outer planets such as Pluto or Neptune passes near the shell, haphazardly pulling a random comet out of the Oort cloud causing it to fall towards the sun (!). This explanation also seems to entail that the comets comprising the shell were formed out of the original dust and debris that accumulated into the aggregation and eventual formation of the solar system billions of years ago.
Do I have this right? Does the above sum up the current thinking as to the origin of Comets? Somehow, none of this seems right to me, just intuitively speaking. For one thing, isn't it a fact that many comets have orbital trajectory planes highly inclined from the Ecliptic plane of the solar system? How would the outer planets have been able to influence comets say 60 degrees or more inclined from the celestial equator? As to how the individual comets in the Oort cloud shell stay suspended there unless influenced by an outer planet controverts my understanding of Newtonian Gravitation. The outer boundaries of the shell are nowhere near the where the influence of the nearest stellar neighbor Proxima Centauri would start pulling things in that direction, are they? How does cometary material just stay "suspended" there in the Oort Cloud and not either fall towards the sun or towards the nearest gravitational influences such as nearby stars or perhaps even the galactic center? Jim Ostrowski |
| May16-10, 04:43 PM | #2 |
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The oort cloud actually extends quite far out (about 1 light year in either direction IIRC). The cloud doesn't all contract inwards probably (and I'm not 100% sure about this) because it's in some sort of hydro-static equilibrium with the solar system. Gravity in is being balanced by gravity out. The nuances with gravity is hard to do exactly, but it's not hard to imagine that things are very delicately balanced. A slight nudge in one direction or another may cause the comet to fall out of its place in the oort cloud and tumble into our solar system.
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| May16-10, 05:57 PM | #3 |
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Without knowing anything much about the topic of the thread, it does seem that large planets are quite capable of slingshotting any rock or spacecraft that happens by, into a nearly arbitrary trajectory. |
| May16-10, 06:19 PM | #4 |
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Newtonian mechanics & Oort Cloud Shell |
| May16-10, 07:31 PM | #5 |
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So then why is it necessary to believe in the idea that they all exist in a spherical shell called the Oort Cloud when the observed situation is that all known comets are in highly elliptical orbits around the sun? Granted they spend long periods of time out in the apogee areas, but isn't that a characteristic of objects having highly elliptical orbits around their primary? IOW why bother postulating that comets have to be pulled into the inner reaches of the solar system only by means of the influence of the outer planets? Jim PS thanks for the quick responses I wasn't expecting anything on the weeke nd. I figured all you college professors would not be at your computers at all on a weekend! |
| May16-10, 08:03 PM | #6 |
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Secondly, one expects solar system formation to begin with a fairly uniform disc of gas and dust (or rather, one would calculate that collapsing gas/dust interacts randomly to form a fairly uniform distribution), which explains nearly circular orbits as the natural state. Also, you seem to be concerned with the influence of distant stars. It's probably better to note that asteroids fall towards them only at about the same rate that the sun and everything else here does. |
| May16-10, 08:06 PM | #7 |
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| May16-10, 08:26 PM | #8 |
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| May16-10, 08:34 PM | #9 |
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NASA gives us some history about the Oort Cloud that I thought would be helpful for our viewers. I love NASA as some of our experts here already know!
And, it gives me an opportunity to share NASA with our viewers with hope they will explore it's wonderful website and enjoy it as much as we do Physicsforums! ![]() |
| May16-10, 09:16 PM | #10 |
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If the Oort cloud hasn't been directly verified, I wonder if it would be possible to detonate a flare out where we expect it to be..? |
| May16-10, 09:55 PM | #11 |
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anybody for Protocomets = Coronal Mass Ejections? I recall reading something about back in the days of above ground Nuclear testing there was supposedly a plan in the works to set off a nuclear weapon in outer space, possibly on the moon to help scientists of the day determine the spectral composition of the debris. ... I think the Oort cloud should remain just a theory until we figure out something better... Jim |
| May16-10, 10:50 PM | #12 |
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Ho hum. Cesiumfrog and Jim Ostrowski, NASA is backed up by this latest article as well.
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| May16-10, 11:39 PM | #13 |
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Now then, since a "cloud" of circularly orbiting comets has never been observed, the idea that the Oort cloud consists of circularly orbiting comets is a theory that is not backed up by any observations. As to your cut and pasted article, the planned observation of stellar occultations by objects in the theorized Oort cloud will prove exactly what? Are they going to be able to prove by these occultations (presuming any occur) that the orbits of the objects are circular? I sorta doubt that Views of Mars. Not enough of an arc present in an occultation to do any tracking. Jim |
| May17-10, 07:14 PM | #14 |
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Jim Ostrowski wrote:
Oort noted that the number of returning comets was far less than his model predicted, and this issue, known as "cometary fading", has yet to be resolved. No known dynamical process can explain this undercount of observed comets. Y'all know I'm right, don't ya? That's ok, everyone have fun with your anonymous little forum, when you kids grow up and are ready to use your real names like the big people, drop me a line. Jim Ostrowski |
| May18-10, 08:09 AM | #15 |
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Consider. The usual estimates suggest that the inner edge of the Oort cloud is somewhere between 2000 and 5000 AU from the sun, while the outer edge is something like 50000 AU out (with some estimates suggesting it's much farther). It seems pretty reasonable to say that any orbit remaining within those bounds is in the cloud. But, even using the most conservative numbers (5000 AU to 50000 AU), orbits remaining entirely within the Oort cloud can have eccentricities up to around .8. (And, of course, if we take less conservative estimates of the bounds of the Oort cloud, the maximum allow eccentricity goes up.) What makes the Oort cloud a spherical (or nearly so) shell isn't that all orbits in it are circular but that there isn't a preferred direction for the orientation of the orbits. That is to say, the perihelia of the orbits can be in any direction from the sun. One final point. If we consider the full class of small objects in closed orbits with semi-major axes in the thousands to tens to thousands of AU, the only ones we will be able to observe easily are those with eccentricity very close to 1, simply because the rest will never get close enough for us to see without great difficulty. |
| May18-10, 12:15 PM | #16 |
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Let's go over this again.... Cesiumfrog believes: "their (a comet's) volatile composition means that as they repeatedly approach the Sun, radiation gradually boils the volatiles off until the comet splits or develops an insulating crust that prevents further outgassing. Thus, reasoned Oort, a comet could not have formed on its current orbit, and must have been held in an outer reservoir for almost all of its existence." And I pointed out: Parlyne writes: http://sungrazer.nrl.navy.mil/ "SOHO is the most successful comet discoverer in history, having found over one thousand six-hundred comets in over thirteen years of operation! What's even more impressive is that the majority of these comets have been found by amateur astronomers and enthusiasts from all over the world, scouring the images for a likely comet candidate from the comfort of their own home. Absolutely anyone can join this project -- all you need is an internet connection and plenty of free time! (See the FAQs for more information.) " Jim |
| May18-10, 02:42 PM | #17 |
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Now, if what you're meaning to imply is that there's an overpopulation of sun-grazing comets compared to other inner solar system comets, you should probably remember that the closer a comet comes to the sun in the first place, the more likely it is to fragment due to uneven heating and be seen as multiple comets on subsequent passes. As for your coronal mass ejection idea, in addition to problems with how the material ejected would manage to coalesce into objects as large as comets, this idea wouldn't be able to explain the composition of comets. Most of the matter in CMEs is in the form of free protons and electrons; but, comets are known (both from spectra features and direct examination) to be compose largely of water ice, rock, and dust with significant quantities of carbon compounds. |
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