Is It Natural for the World to Have Zero Angular Momentum?

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The discussion centers on the reasons behind Earth's spin, attributing it to the conservation of angular momentum and the effects of gravitational forces during its formation. As Earth orbits the Sun in an elliptical path, centrifugal force and gravitational pull contribute to its rotation. The conversation also touches on the improbability of a primordial dust cloud having zero angular momentum, suggesting that the solar system's rotation has been inherent since its formation. Additionally, the impact of nearby large gravitational bodies and the potential for planets to be ejected from their original systems are explored. Overall, the dialogue raises questions about the natural occurrence of angular momentum in planetary systems.
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What makes the world spin?
 
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Hello, mrblint.

Why won't you tell us what do you think it is, so we know where to start explaining?
 
I think that as the world travels around the sun in an elliptical orbit, there is a force pulling away from the sun (the centrifugal force) and also the sun is also pulling the mass of the Earth towards itself (the sun being the more massive body). As the Earth moves in the elliptical orbit, the slightly changing orientation of the pull results in spin of the planet on its axis. That's what comes to mind just thinking about it. But I'm wondering now if the Earth spins at different speeds as it moves through the elliptical orbit.
 
Yes. The speed increases as Earth gets closer to the Sun. The orbit is only very slightly elliptical though so it's not a big change.
 
The reason the world spins on its axis has to do with the conservation of angular momentum.

As the dust gathered that formed our planet the dust collisions imparted inertia. As the diameter decreased the angular momentum increases much like a spinning figure skater.
Nearby large gravitational bodies can affect the spin in a fashion called "tidally locked"
 
Mordred said:
The reason the world spins on its axis has to do with the conservation of angular momentum.

As the dust gathered that formed our planet the dust collisions imparted inertia. As the diameter decreased the angular momentum increases much like a spinning figure skater.
Nearby large gravitational bodies can affect the spin in a fashion called "tidally locked"

Correct. May I add that it would be extremely unlikely to have a huge primordial dust cloud with a very small or zero angular momentum. So the rotation of the entire solar system was pretty much there since it formed. Otherwise one would expect the whole thing collapses in one blob point without rotation. As far as I know, all planets move in the same direction in the disc around the sun and the sun itself rotates in that direction. There are, as far as I know, only a few captured moons for the big planets that rotate in other ways, and there is just one "misbehaved" planet, Uranus, where the axis of rotation is almost parallel to the planetary disk. (Well, Uranus also got a weird name, at least in English ;-).

I still wonder though if there are any planetary systems out there where all this isn't the case, and where the planets are not just in one disk but varying planes of their orbits - and then why that could be?
 
rewtnode said:
I still wonder though if there are any planetary systems out there where all this isn't the case, and where the planets are not just in one disk but varying planes of their orbits - and then why that could be?

Planets that have been thrown out of their original systems and hurtle through space and end up in other systems could be such cases. Among the gazilions of stars there surely must be numerous examples of such planets.
 
I thought love made the world go around!
 
HallsofIvy said:
I thought love made the world go around!

if its any consolation it will still make your head spin lol
 
  • #11
Roflmao now there is a correlation I never would have thought of lol
 
  • #12
rewtnode said:
I still wonder though if there are any planetary systems out there where all this isn't the case, and where the planets are not just in one disk but varying planes of their orbits - and then why that could be?

Could be, but it probably wouldn't last long. The mutual interactions between the planets in all of those strange orbits would tend to either kick some of them out of the system or settle them into one plane.
 
  • #13
mrblint said:
What makes the world spin?
Would you really consider it "natural" if the world happened to have exactly 0 angular momentum?
 
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