quincy harman
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Does the mass of a spinning object twist space time? If so is this why all natural satellites orbit in the same direction as the spin of the said object?
quincy harman said:Does the mass of a spinning object twist space time?
quincy harman said:If so is this why all natural satellites orbit in the same direction as the spin of the said object?
A.T. said:Not sure if that's what you mean by "twisting":
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frame-dragging
This has to do with how solar systems are created:
A.T. said:Not sure if that's what you mean by "twisting":
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frame-dragging
This has to do with how solar systems are created:
Angular momentum is conserved. If it has it now, than it had it back then.quincy harman said:The cloud has to have some angular momentum first?
where does it come from?A.T. said:Angular momentum is conserved. If it has it now, than it had it back then.
From probability. Zero total angular momentum is one among infinitely many other possible values.quincy harman said:where does it come from?
I don't understand. It's more likely to have some angular momentum than none? But it still had to come from somewhere right?A.T. said:From probability. Zero total angular momentum is one among infinitely many other possible values.
No it doesn't. A conserved quantity can never "come from somewhere", else it is not conserved. (There is more to the issue, but first I want to push on this first - if it's conserved, not only doesn't it need to come from somewhere, it can't come from somewhere.)quincy harman said:I don't understand. It's more likely to have some angular momentum than none? But it still had to come from somewhere right?
So it is a form of potential or stored energy? and the direction is random? You got me interested. Tell me more! :DPAllen said:No it doesn't. A conserved quantity can never "come from somewhere", else it is not conserved. (There is more to the issue, but first I want to push on this first - if it's conserved, not only doesn't it need to come from somewhere, it can't come from somewhere.)
One point is that if there is one isolated gas cloud in the universe, the total angular momentum of any future state (e.g. planetary system) will be the same as the initial angular momentum. Then, the angular momentum is just an initial condition, no different than the initial mass (would you wonder so much where that came from?).quincy harman said:So it is a form of potential or stored energy? and the direction is random? You got me interested. Tell me more! :D
PAllen said:No it doesn't. A conserved quantity can never "come from somewhere", else it is not conserved. (There is more to the issue, but first I want to push on this first - if it's conserved, not only doesn't it need to come from somewhere, it can't come from somewhere.)
So it's essentially just a consequence of inertia and gravity? How do the up and down motions cancel out over time?PAllen said:One point is that if there is one isolated gas cloud in the universe, the total angular momentum of any future state (e.g. planetary system) will be the same as the initial angular momentum. Then, the angular momentum is just an initial condition, no different than the initial mass (would you wonder so much where that came from?).
The 'more to it' comment is that if you were to imagine a cloud that happened to have zero total angular momentum, that ultimately split, the probability that each would have zero angular momentum is zero. It would be analogous to two billiard balls colliding such that they hit dead center and ricocheted with zero spin. Instead, each would have nonzero angular momentum (such that the total of both is zero), and each would form planetary systems with non-zero angular momentum.
Thus, whatever you consider about initial conditions, the collapse of clouds to bodies or systems has basically zero chance producing non-spinning bodies.
quincy harman said:is this why all natural satellites orbit in the same direction as the spin of the said object?
Inelastic collisions.quincy harman said:How do the up and down motions cancel out over time?