![Image](http://i.livescience.com/images/i/000/019/295/i235/montage-1000.jpg)
How it may have been?
![Confused :?](./images/smilies/icon_e_confused.gif)
![Wink ;)](./images/smilies/icon_e_wink.gif)
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_e_biggrin.gif)
Everything that happens is natural.perpetual motion wrote:I will try posting this in this category.Like I mentioned in my headline,
what are the odds of a bunch of rocks, planet size to this solar system,
wondering through a galaxy, meeting up with a star like the one we
see and become its satellites.And besides that where in the heck did
"they" originate from.
The odds of this happening must be beyond comprehension.
Anyone ------ is there an overview, without the names or locations of Herbig/Haros?Xuxalina Rihhia wrote:Something like this with Neptune and then Uranus above Saturn in a Herbig-Haro configuration with them both also in glow mode. Neptune and Uranus would be off view in this instance.
The reasons for rejecting the Saturn-from-SDG idea are as follows: The fact of the roughly 26-degree axis tilts of Neptune, Saturn, Mars, and Earth indicate, as Troy and I have noted, that those bodies flew into the plane of the sun/Jupiter/Mercury system at a ~26 degree angle from the South in the form of an axially aligned, Herbig/Haro object string; as the individual bodies broke loose and began to orbit the sun as they do now, they simply kept the ~26 degree tilt.Lloyd wrote:Earth History
Saturn System Formation - ?
Age of Darkness
Saturn Flare - 10,000 BP
Golden Age
Saturn System Breakup - 5,000 BP
Ancient Civilization
Modern Era
* As explained in the Cardona Interview thread at http://www.thunderbolts.info/wp/forum/phpB ... =10&t=3824 Earth was initially part of the Saturn System in the Sagittarius Dwarf Galaxy (SDG), which is wrapped around the Milky Way and the two galaxies intersect near our present location. Star and planet formation are electrical plasma events, according to EU findings. I think Cardona said the makeup of stars in the SDG is a bit different from most stars in the local Milky Way.
* The Age of Darkness began probably shortly after the Saturn System formed. Saturn may have been a lone dwarf star, or it may have been part of another system and it may have had one or more satellite planets from the outset. That's not yet known.
* Saturn was knocked out of the SDG at some point and it moved from its former location toward the Sun in a manner like a comet.......
Again Wikipedia is a valuable resource for topics not involving any sort of controversy, and there is none within this context.HH objects are transient phenomena, lasting not more than a few thousand years. They can evolve visibly over quite short astronomical timescales as they move rapidly away from their parent star into the gas clouds of interstellar space (the interstellar medium or ISM). Hubble Space Telescope observations have revealed the complex evolution of HH objects over the period of a few years, as parts of the nebula fade while others brighten as they collide with clumpy material of the interstellar medium.
You have to ask yourself what the chances are, of a HH object surviving the 65,000 light year trip from SDEG to here, reasonably intact......The Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy (Sgr dE or Sag DEG) is an elliptical loop-shaped satellite galaxy of the Milky Way Galaxy. It consists of four globular clusters, the main cluster having been discovered in 1994. Sag DEG is roughly 10,000 light-years in diameter, and is currently about 70,000 light-years from Earth,
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests