Friday, July 19, 2019
Beta Pictoris: Planets? Life? Or What? :: essays research papers fc
 BETA PICTORIS: PLANETS? LIFE? OR WHAT?      JARA    ASTRONOMY 102 SEC 013    The ultimate question is; Is there a possibility that life might exist on a  planet in the Beta Pictoris system? First, one must ask, Are there planets in  the Beta Pictoris system?. However, that question would be impossible to answer  if one did not answer the most basic questions first; Where do planets come  from? and do the key elements and situations, needed to form planets, exist in  the Beta Pictoris system?.  To understand where planets come from, one has to first look at where the  planets in our solar system came from. Does or did our star, the sun, have a  circumstellar disk around it? the answer is believed to be yes.  Scientists believe that a newly formed star is immediately surrounded by a  relatively dense cloud of gas and dust. In 1965, A. Poveda stated, ââ¬Å"That new  stars are likely to be obscured by this envelope of gas and dust (1).â⬠ In 1967,  Davidson and Harwit agreed with Poveda and then termed this occurrence, the ââ¬Å"  cocoon nebulaâ⬠ (1). Other authors have referred to this occurrence as, a ââ¬Å"  placental nebulaâ⬠ (1), noting that it sustains the growth of planetary bodies.  For a long time, even before there was the term cocoon nebula, planetary  scientists knew that a cocoon nebula had surrounded the sun, long ago, in order  for our solar system to form and take on their currents motions (1).  In 1755, a German, named Immanuel Kant, reasoned that ââ¬Å"gravity would  make circumsolar cloud contract and that rotation would flatten it (1)." Thus,  the cloud would assume the general shape of a rotating disk, explaining the fact  that the planets, in our solar system, revolve in a disk-shaped distribution.  This idea, about the disk-shaped nebula that was formed around the early  sun, came to be known as the nebula hypothesis (1). Then, in 1796, a French  mathematician named Laplace, proposed that the rotating disk continued to cool  and contract, forming planetary bodies (1). Also, when investigating the  evolution of stars, it was proposed ââ¬Å"that a star forms as a central condensation  in an extended nebula... The outer part remains behind as the cocoon nebula (1)â⬠  . During the same study it was also indicated that under various conditions  such as: rotation, turbulence, etc. the nucleus of the forming star may divide  into two or more bodies orbiting each other (1). This may be the explanation as  to why more than half of all star systems are binary or multiple, rather than  singles stars, like ours, the sun.  This same fragmentation may also form bodies too small to become stars.  					    
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