Originally posted by r637h
Mainly for quantumcarl:
Just please don't confuse the O Henry candy bar with the sacred Goo Goo Cluster. The revered Goo Goo Cluster, like certain cosmic phenomena, actually improves with age.
...
If not that or some other rational explanation; then we would have to re-evaluate our concept of Time, The Big Bang, etc. That's probably not going to happen.
Thanks, Rudi
Rudi, I had to laugh on rereading my post on this thread with all its references to "globular clusters"---now visualized as chocolate/nut confections.
In any case I did not "get" all the excitement about this news item
since the age question just involves the age of M4.
The information has been around for a long time that those globs are nearly as old as the universe, so what's new? Finding that planet merely drew public attention to the fact that M4 and
similar things are known to be very old.
Maybe the more interesting consequences (though not so earth-shaking) of assuming that the planet is as old as M4---and not the result of some later fluke process such as you suggest----is that it would then have formed out of light elements.
There would have been less time for heavier elements to be cooked inside an previous generation of stars and released so that they could be involved in planet formation.
All that is at stake, so it seemed to me at least, is some ideas about whether or not heavier elements (by contributing to cores around which lighter matter can collect) play an essential role in forming planets. Maybe I'm missing something and there is more to it.
BTW to confirm the alternative fluke possibilities----I think, maybe someone can correct me if I am mistaken, that globular clusters are compact enough that they can actually fall through (!) the less-dense part of a spiral galaxy disc. A swarm of more than 100 globs is actually orbiting the Milky Way, but at large distances like tens of thousands of LY. Their orbits are so long that they seldom do encounter the disc, but on the rare occasions when M4 was falling thru the MW it MIGHT in fact have been in a position to absorb disc material, maybe not enough to significantly change the statistics, but enough to account for a younger star or planet getting into the mix.
The person who could clear up that possibility is Labguy, he posts here often and knows a lot of down to Earth astronomy. Like, do globular clusters actually fall thru the MW disc on rare occasions?---he would probably know this.