A new study has revealed that our solar system could have formed in a bubble produced by a giant, long-dead star, which was 40 to 50 times the size of the sun. The general prevailing theory is that our solar system was formed billions of years ago near a supernova. The study addresses a nagging cosmic mystery about the abundance …
Washington: Scientists have found how our solar system formed in the wind-blown bubbles around a giant, long-dead star. The general prevailing theory is that our solar system formed billions of years ago near a supernova. “It begs the question of why one was injected into the solar system and the other was not,” said Vikram Dwarkadas, a research associate professor …
This puts end to 35 year long debate over whether it was there during formation of solar system Forget Curious George, it's all about Curious Marie. It is thought that curium became incorporated into the meteorite, or Curious Marie, when it condensed from the gaseous cloud that formed the sun early in the history of the solar system. 'The possible …
Maybe our solar system isn’t such an oddball after all. “It really, as far as we can tell, is pretty much like what Jupiter looked like at that age,” study leader Bruce Macintosh, an astronomer at Stanford University, said of the young planet. While Kepler’s method was powerful, Macintosh said, it was also “frustrating because you don’t actually get to …