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| Thinking | Why do heavenly bodies spin? Is there some connection between the reason balls spin and planets etc. in space? I ask this as a layman, who has noticed that balls travelling through the air rotate, whether thrown or kicked (Using a dog ball thrower this can be observed because when the ball hits the water, which acts as a brake, it is still turning; likewise a bouncing ball can be seen to spin). Another observation that may be related to this is pushing a flat bottomed object over grass as opposed to ice. When travelling over the latter, the natural inclination is for it to spin,to maintain forward motion because of gravity causing friction, which is reduced when travelling over ice. This ties in with my thread 'Why do UFO's spin?' in The Strange Claims forum as I'm speculating if there could be a connection between all these phenomena theoretically, even if Flying Saucers may not have been proved to be objectively real and not all incidents report this kind of movement either. |
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| Creating Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: U.S. Midwest
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: Why do heavenly bodies spin? The conservation of angular momentum says that when something very large rotates very slowly and shrinks to a smaller size - it will rotate faster. Think of an ice skater with their arms swinging out wide - they turn slow. When they bring their arms in close to their body they rotate faster. That's conservation of angular momentum. Same thing happens when heavenly bodies form. A very large nebula of gas and dust may spin very, very slowly; but when it collapses it will conserve its angular momentum causing it to rotate much faster by the time it becomes a star. The process is similar for galaxy and planet formation. There's no constant force making these things rotate. When you start something rotating in space it will continue rotating by Newton's first law. So, the rotation you see now is what's left from the original rotation when these things formed. ~modest
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| Creating Join Date: May 2005 Location: Silver Spring, MD, USA
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Except for special cases involving objects that can stabilize themselves in some manner (eg: a paper airplane, or your example of something sliding across grass), nearly any collection of bodies held together by something (the gas of a star, the rocky material of a planet, held together by gravity, a football held together by leather and thread, etc.) are more likely to spin than not. This is because there are many more possible initial conditions (eg: infalling gas and solids in a forming solar system) where the individual bodies making up a system have direction other than all toward the system’s center of mass. It is, in principle, possible to throw or kick a ball so that it doesn’t spin, but very difficult to do so. Likewise, a pre-stellar nebula could, in principle, collapse into a star with no rotation, but this would be an incredibly rare occurrence. There are some astronomical objects that, on some scales, have little spin. Globular clusters are an example. The stars in them don’t orbit their center of gravity in fat ellipses, but in ones so thin they are nearly straight lines. The whole cluster sort of falls in on its own center, contracting into a dense ball, the then falls out again into a tenuous one. You can run simulations to determine the probability of a particular gas/dust cloud forming a system with particular spin rates. The result (I assume – I’ve not personally done such a sim) shows that most systems behave something like our solar system, or the various other star systems we’ve observed.
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| Wedding Planner | Re: Why do heavenly bodies spin? Quote:
__________________ Hypography Science Forums Moderator --- "There are no passengers on Spaceship Earth. We are all crew." - Marshall McLuhan "We must not forget that when radium was discovered no one knew that it would prove useful in hospitals. The work was one of pure science. And this is a proof that scientific work must not be considered from the point of view of the direct usefulness of it." - Marie Curie | |
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| Understanding Join Date: Mar 2007
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: Why do heavenly bodies spin? G'day from the land of ozzzzzzzzz The seed of a pepper corn tree is quite small and yet it is able to produce the same huge tree every time with a bit of variation that depends on the egology of the area. Same with matter, subatomic particles have a spin and you would expect the seed to form matter that has a spin. Maybe this can be explained by the wave theory and the wave centres of every so called particle. |
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| Understanding Join Date: Mar 2007
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: Why do heavenly bodies spin? G'day Talking about spins [0710.4073] Estimating the Spins of Stellar-Mass Black Holes by Fitting Their Continuum Spectra Estimating the Spins of Stellar-Mass Black Holes by Fitting Their Continuum Spectra Authors: Ramesh Narayan, Jeffrey E. McClintock, Rebecca Shafee (Submitted on 22 Oct 2007) Quote:
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| Creating Join Date: May 2005 Location: Silver Spring, MD, USA
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Quote:
the spin of quantum mechanical systems ("particle spin") possess several non-classical features and for such systems spin angular momentum cannot be associated with rotation but instead refers only to the presence of an 'angular momentum-like' property.In short, the use of the word “spin” in quantum mechanics appear to be one of may cases where it’s connection to classical mechanics is only an analogy intended to help make the often counterintuitive formalism of QM more comprehensible. I’ve long wondered if this nomenclatural approach is effective – that is, if, when considering all potential students, it enhances or retards comprehension. It’s pretty easy to show that particle spin and angular momentum are unrelated, via thought experiment such as the following:
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| Thinking | Re: Why do heavenly bodies spin? Quote:
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