Our Solar System
is a pretty calm place these days, all things considered, but that wasn’t
always the case. In the period when the planets were still forming, collisions
between various large bodies were common, and they ultimately helped shape the
system that we see today.


New research shows
that Uranus, a chilly, hostile planet with a number of peculiar features, was
the victim of a devastating impact during those early years, and it might
explain some of the planet’s strange personality.
Uranus moves much
differently than the other planets in our Solar System, spinning on its side in
comparison to the rest of the worlds in our neighborhood. Astronomers have
often wondered just how this happened, but simulations performed by scientists at Durham University’s
Institute for Computational Cosmology might have finally produced the answer.
“We ran more than 50 different impact scenarios using a high-powered super computer to see if we could recreate the conditions that shaped the planet’s evolution," lead author Jacob Kegerreis explains.“Our findings confirm that the most likely outcome was that the young Uranus was involved in a cataclysmic collision with an object twice the mass of Earth, if not larger, knocking it on to its side and setting in process the events that helped create the planet we see today.”
A massive object has been devastating the United States since January 20, 2017. It's unlikely the country will ever recover, either.
ReplyDeleteAwwwwe, poor baby. Need your nookie?
Deletebut of course, that could never happen again.... :o
ReplyDelete