Our Lunar Moon -A Rarity in the Cosmos
The moon has for so long been an intrinsic part of the human way of life, that at times it is just gone unnoticed. Wolves have howled at it for millennia, it was Kennedy’s big dream, and it has been an object of poetry, music and myth.
But only relatively recently have we become aware of its true history. It did not just magically appear out of the big bang, during the evolution of our Solar System along with our sun and our planet Earth.
We know now that a sized object, most likely a planet, occasionally named Orpheus or Theia, collided with a very young Earth. Amidst its debris came together what is now our own Moon, while the rest of the debris floated in to the asteroid belt or the sun.
But according to NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, there are very few moons alike to our own inhabiting the universe.
Apparently, they are so uncommon that they appear in only 5 to 10 percent of planetary systems.
"When a moon forms from a violent collision, dust should be blasted
everywhere," said Nadya Gorlova of the University of Florida,
Gainesville, lead author of a new study appearing November 20 in the
Astrophysical Journal. "If there were lots of moons forming, we would
have seen dust around lots of stars - but we didn't."
The study
looked at around 400 stars that all roughly log in at 30 million years
old – approximately the same age our own sun was when Earth’s moon
formed. In those 400 stars, only one was surrounded by the telltale
dust that would suggest a collision had occurred, large enough to
create a Lunar-style moon.
"We don't know that the collision we
witnessed around the one star is definitely going to produce a moon, so
moon-forming events could be much less frequent than our calculation
suggests," said George Rieke of the University of Arizona, Tucson, a
co-author of the study.
On top of the lack of Lunar-style
moons, the researchers also found that the planet-building process had,
by the 30 million year mark, wound down. The current belief is that the
messy collisions that formed our own solar systems rocky planets occur
between 10 and 50 million years after a star forms. However, that only
1 planet in the 400 showcased the dust from such collisions, it
suggests that by 30 million years, the process has slowed to a halt.
"Astronomers have observed young stars with dust swirling around them
for more than 20 years now," said Gorlova. "But those stars are usually
so young that their dust could be left over from the planet-formation
process. The star we have found is older, at the same age our sun was
when it had finished making planets and the Earth-moon system had just
formed in a collision."
Luckily, for the moon obsessed, take heart. Five or ten percent of billions, is still a fair few moons for you to gaze at.
Posted by Josh Hill.
Related Galaxy posts
Japan's SELENE Captures Earth Rise at the Lunar North Pole
Moon-Base Architects Plan 1st Step in Exploring the Cosmos –A Daily Galaxy Interview
Links:
http://www.physorg.com/news114795175.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_impact_hypothesis
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2007-132
http://cahntybanty-topstories.blogspot.com/2007/11/astronomers-say-moons-like-ours-are.html
http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/spitzer.







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