Our solar system mostly revolves around the sun on the same axis (apart from Pluto). Our galaxy does the same (along with other galaxies). Why? Gravity is linear?

Would it matter if we tried to escape the sun’s gravity by going “up?”

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    32
    edit-2
    3 months ago

    It’s not. But orbits do tend to coalesce around the same plane, this is true. Planets pull on each other, and over time this results in orbits being on a similar plane. However, it’s not perfectly flat - there is some variation, just look at Pluto as a good example.

    The same orbital mechanics that cause star systems to look this way also translates to galaxies.

    In short, stuff likes to stay together, but when said stuff is in motion, they instead form orbits of similar inclination. The rings of Jupiter and Saturn also display this. If I remember correctly, part of that mechanism is called “Sheparding”

    And if you were to go what one would consider “up” from this percieved orbital plane, then you’d be going in that direction. There’s nothing special, there’s just less stuff there. The same orbital mechanics apply, you’re just on a much more inclined orbit.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      23
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      I hate to be that guy, but this is wrong.

      The solar system is mostly in one plane because it formed from a cloud of gas. The cloud of a gas has some total non zero rotation and as the cloud collapses interactions flatten the cloud into a disk, where all of the planets formed.

      This same principle applies to galaxies.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        73 months ago

        It’s a combination of both, I believe.

        The initial conditions had a definite rotational bias. This is preserved in the current orbital plane and direction.

        On top of that, anything massively off that plane is liable to hit or interact with the material in the plane, given enough time. It will be flung around, eventually either out of the system or into the plane.

        Stuff orbiting relatively close to the plane will have a biased pull towards the “average” plane. This will slowly flatten the orbits out.

        All these processes take a lot of time. The solar system, in general, has had enough time to settle. The ort cloud and other outer bodies are still quite chaotic. We see a lot more off plane than within the traditional solar system. They experience the latter effects far less, and so take longer to equalise. They still have a bias towards the initial spin however.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        53 months ago

        I was explaining why the orbits are similar, not why orbits exist. You’re arguing a different topic.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          33 months ago

          The original question was why solar systems and galaxies are in planes, and your explanation is wrong.

          What do you even mean by similar orbits? Most orbits are circular for a totally different reason, and that is tidal interactions.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        33 months ago

        It’s been a long time since I got my astronomy degree, but your version is what I recall also. Whatever small rotational perturbation in the initial gas becomes more pronounced as it coalesces in on itself and defines the plane of the star system. Planets form within this plane after it is defined, and they all travel in the same direction around the star.

        Regarding galaxies, the most common spiral ones like our own Milky Way follow the same principle at a larger scale. But there are also elliptical galaxies, not to mention irregular ones. In an elliptical galaxy, there is a more random movement of stars in a cloud around its core. So they look more 3D I guess, to go back to what the OP was asking about. I seem to recall the most accepted explanation for how these form is from the aftermath of a collision between 2 spirals? So presumably, when our galaxy collides with Andromeda in several billion years time, the resulting combined galaxy may emerge as an elliptical?

      • bizarroland
        link
        fedilink
        23 months ago

        I bet there’s probably some sort of energy improvement for the orbits to roughly line up the way they do, sort of how geese will fly in V formation.