
Artist's impression of exoplanet Wasp 8b. ESO/L.
Calçada
Backwards Planets
May 26, 2010
What force determines the
direction and angle of planetary
orbits?A
new study of exoplanets
finds that many have orbits that are
tilted relative to the equators of
the stars they orbit. Some even
revolve in the opposite direction
(retrograde) to the rotation of the
star.
Standard theory requires planets
to move in the same direction as the
star and to orbit in or near to the
star’s equatorial plane. This is
because the planets are thought to
condense out of a rotating
protoplanetary disc that is spun out
as the star collapses from a cloud
of gas.
In an electrical system, planets
may form in the polar “jets” (Birkeland
currents) of young stars (such as
Herbig-Haro objects), or they may be
ejected from active stars much like
CMEs from the Sun. When the polar
jet discharge quenches, the planets
will “scatter like buckshot,” as
seen in lab discharges. The planets
may then be gravitationally captured
in any configuration of orbit,
although a prograde equatorial
configuration is most likely.
Mel Acheson
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