Plausibility of Electrical Birth of Asteroid Belt: Difference between revisions
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Formation of the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter is traditionally assumed to have occurred primordially when a group of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetesimal planetesimals] formed [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protoplanet protoplanets] that, through [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity gravitational] perturbations from Jupiter, were imbued with too much orbital energy to [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accretion_(astrophysics) accrete] into a planet, until violent collisions shattered most of the protoplanets, thereby forming the asteroid belt. Electric Universe theory contends there was an electrical discharge interaction on a planetary scale when a planetesimal closely encountered Mars, causing not only Mars’ material to be ejected, but also disintegrated much, if not all, of the planetesimal. The ejected debris eventually formed the asteroid belt; and possibly Valle Marineris which scars nearly 20% of Mars’ circumference, is the ‘smoking gun.” Here I examine not the electrical discharge phenomena, but crudely estimate whether or not the total mass of the belt could have arisen from such an interaction. | Formation of the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter is traditionally assumed to have occurred primordially when a group of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetesimal planetesimals] formed [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protoplanet protoplanets] that, through [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity gravitational] perturbations from Jupiter, were imbued with too much orbital energy to [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accretion_(astrophysics) accrete] into a planet, until violent collisions shattered most of the protoplanets, thereby forming the asteroid belt. Electric Universe theory contends there was an electrical discharge interaction on a planetary scale when a planetesimal closely encountered Mars, causing not only Mars’ material to be ejected, but also disintegrated much, if not all, of the planetesimal. The ejected debris eventually formed the asteroid belt; and possibly Valle Marineris which scars nearly 20% of Mars’ circumference, is the ‘smoking gun.” Here I examine not the electrical discharge phenomena, but crudely estimate whether or not the total mass of the belt could have arisen from such an interaction. | ||
[[Category:Scientific Paper]] | [[Category:Scientific Paper|]] | ||
[[Category:Gravity]] | [[Category:Gravity]] | ||
[[Category:Cosmology]] | [[Category:Cosmology]] | ||
[[Category:Electric Universe]] | [[Category:Electric Universe]] | ||
Latest revision as of 12:54, 1 January 2017
| Scientific Paper | |
|---|---|
| Title | Plausibility of Electrical Birth of Asteroid Belt |
| Read in full | Link to paper |
| Author(s) | Raymond H Gallucci |
| Keywords | Asteroid Belt; Electrical Discharge; Mars; Ceres; Valle Marineris |
| Published | 2015 |
| No. of pages | 2 |
Read the full paper here
Abstract
Formation of the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter is traditionally assumed to have occurred primordially when a group of planetesimals formed protoplanets that, through gravitational perturbations from Jupiter, were imbued with too much orbital energy to accrete into a planet, until violent collisions shattered most of the protoplanets, thereby forming the asteroid belt. Electric Universe theory contends there was an electrical discharge interaction on a planetary scale when a planetesimal closely encountered Mars, causing not only Mars’ material to be ejected, but also disintegrated much, if not all, of the planetesimal. The ejected debris eventually formed the asteroid belt; and possibly Valle Marineris which scars nearly 20% of Mars’ circumference, is the ‘smoking gun.” Here I examine not the electrical discharge phenomena, but crudely estimate whether or not the total mass of the belt could have arisen from such an interaction.
[[Category:Scientific Paper|]]