The observational astronomer generally feels only an indirect interest in the problem of how our earth and its companion planets came into being; his telescope can give him no direct information on the subject, since such planets as other suns may possess are too small and too distant to be observed
β¦ LIBER β¦
The origin and evolution of the solar system
β Scribed by Prof. Michael Woolfson
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 279 KB
- Volume
- 41
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1366-8781
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The origin of the solar system
β
James Hopwood Jeans
π
Article
π
1931
π
Elsevier Science
π
English
β 588 KB
The solar system evolution
β
G. P. Gladyshev; V. P. Budtov
π
Article
π
1981
π
Springer Netherlands
π
English
β 904 KB
The stability and evolution of the solar
β
A. E. Roy
π
Article
π
1980
π
Springer Netherlands
π
English
β 878 KB
Origin and early evolution of the planet
β
D. MΓΆhlmann
π
Article
π
1985
π
Springer Netherlands
π
English
β 706 KB
It is shown by linear stability analysis that a preplanetary (presatellite) disk of dust and gas with Keplerian velocity field can become unstable due to the collective self-gravity of the disk. The radial distribution of rings, which may result from this instability, is derived. These rings later o
On the question of the origin and evolut
β
VladimΓr NovΓ‘k; Vlastimil Liebl
π
Article
π
1975
π
Springer Netherlands
π
English
β 194 KB
Protostars and the origin of the angular
β
Paul S. Wesson
π
Article
π
1984
π
Springer Netherlands
π
English
β 390 KB