When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Nebular hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebular_hypothesis

    The nebular hypothesis is the most widely accepted model in the field of cosmogony to explain the formation and evolution of the Solar System (as well as other planetary systems). It suggests the Solar System is formed from gas and dust orbiting the Sun which clumped up together to form the planets.

  3. History of Solar System formation and evolution hypotheses

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Solar_System...

    The most widely accepted model of planetary formation is known as the nebular hypothesis.This model posits that, 4.6 billion years ago, the Solar System was formed by the gravitational collapse of a giant molecular cloud spanning several light-years.

  4. Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Chrowder_Chamberlin

    In 1905, Chamberlin and Forest Ray Moulton developed a theory of the formation of the Solar System that challenged the Laplacian nebular hypothesis. Their theory, the Chamberlin-Moulton planetesimal hypothesis , received favorable support for almost a third of a century, but passed out of favor by the late 1930s.

  5. Formation and evolution of the Solar System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formation_and_evolution_of...

    The nebular hypothesis says that the Solar System formed from the gravitational collapse of a fragment of a giant molecular cloud, [9] most likely at the edge of a Wolf-Rayet bubble. [10] The cloud was about 20 parsecs (65 light years) across, [9] while the fragments were roughly 1 parsec (three and a quarter light-years) across. [11]

  6. Pierre-Simon Laplace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre-Simon_Laplace

    This hypothesis remains the most widely accepted model in the study of the origin of planetary systems. According to Laplace's description of the hypothesis, the Solar System evolved from a globular mass of incandescent gas rotating around an axis through its centre of mass. As it cooled, this mass contracted, and successive rings broke off ...

  7. Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vestiges_of_the_Natural...

    The book begins by tackling the origins of the solar system, using the nebular hypothesis to explain its formation entirely in terms of natural law. It explains the origins of life by spontaneous generation , citing some questionable experiments that claimed to spontaneously generate insects through electricity .

  8. Chamberlin–Moulton planetesimal hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chamberlin–Moulton...

    The Chamberlin–Moulton planetesimal hypothesis was proposed in 1905 by geologist Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin and astronomer Forest Ray Moulton to describe the formation of the Solar System. It was proposed as a replacement for the Laplacian version of the nebular hypothesis that had prevailed since the 19th century.

  9. John Pringle Nichol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Pringle_Nichol

    Nichol turned to popular lecturing and authored a number of popular and successful books about astronomy, especially championing the nebular hypothesis. [ 2 ] [ 4 ] In 1841 George Eliot wrote: [ 1 ] I have been revelling in Nichol's Architecture of the Heavens and Phenomena of the Solar System , and have been in imagination winging my flight ...