A physics prof. I had a few years ago said that in studies he had performed that it is more like the development of "cobwebs". He suggested that gravitation isn't strong enough to get chunks to stick together. Over time the cobweb like objects grow and join with other cobweb like objects until gravity is strong enough to take over. Clear skies, Dale. -----Original Message----- From: Jim Gibson [mailto:jimgibson00@yahoo.com] Sent: Thursday, March 25, 2004 8:30 AM To: List; UVAA List Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] Trapezium ... The dust in the nebulosity was like fine grains of sand or smaller. Over time the dust coalesced in to larger clumps and like a snow ball rolling down hill it continued to grow. Actually there were several snow balls all getting larger at the same time. For over a million years they grew from marbles to boulders, to planetoids, to planets and finely so large that the physics involved with gravity and impacting debris there was a nuclear fusion reaction igniting a star. JG
--- Dale Hooper <Dale.Hooper@sdl.usu.edu> wrote:
A physics prof. I had a few years ago said that in studies he had performed that it is more like the development of "cobwebs".
You know, I've seen thousands of cobwebs in my life, but never a single "cob". Curious. C. __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Finance Tax Center - File online. File on time. http://taxes.yahoo.com/filing.html
On Mar 25, 2004, at 9:56 AM, Chuck Hards wrote:
--- Dale Hooper <Dale.Hooper@sdl.usu.edu> wrote:
A physics prof. I had a few years ago said that in studies he had performed that it is more like the development of "cobwebs".
You know, I've seen thousands of cobwebs in my life, but never a single "cob". Curious.
C.
C'est moi? ---- Jim Cobb james@cobb.name
Old World spelling, eh Jim? ;) C. --- Jim Cobb <james@cobb.name> wrote:
On Mar 25, 2004, at 9:56 AM, Chuck Hards wrote:
--- Dale Hooper <Dale.Hooper@sdl.usu.edu> wrote:
A physics prof. I had a few years ago said that in studies he had performed that it is more like the development of "cobwebs".
You know, I've seen thousands of cobwebs in my life, but never a single "cob". Curious.
C.
C'est moi? ---- Jim Cobb james@cobb.name
__________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Finance Tax Center - File online. File on time. http://taxes.yahoo.com/filing.html
Dale Here are a couple of article on a shuttle experiment designed to see what dust particles do in space. I couldn't find the actual results of the experiment only the plans to do it. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/1998/04/980408081612.htm http://ncmr04610.cwru.edu/events/fluids1998/papers/215.pdf JG Dale Hooper <Dale.Hooper@sdl.usu.edu> wrote: A physics prof. I had a few years ago said that in studies he had performed that it is more like the development of "cobwebs". He suggested that gravitation isn't strong enough to get chunks to stick together. Over time the cobweb like objects grow and join with other cobweb like objects until gravity is strong enough to take over. Clear skies, Dale. -----Original Message----- From: Jim Gibson [mailto:jimgibson00@yahoo.com] Sent: Thursday, March 25, 2004 8:30 AM To: List; UVAA List Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] Trapezium ... The dust in the nebulosity was like fine grains of sand or smaller. Over time the dust coalesced in to larger clumps and like a snow ball rolling down hill it continued to grow. Actually there were several snow balls all getting larger at the same time. For over a million years they grew from marbles to boulders, to planetoids, to planets and finely so large that the physics involved with gravity and impacting debris there was a nuclear fusion reaction igniting a star. JG _______________________________________________ Utah-Astronomy mailing list Utah-Astronomy@mailman.xmission.com http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/utah-astronomy Visit the Photo Gallery: http://www.utahastronomy.com --------------------------------- Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Finance Tax Center - File online. File on time.
participants (4)
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Chuck Hards -
Dale Hooper -
Jim Cobb -
Jim Gibson