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The Early Evolution of the Solar System
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 April 2016
Abstract
The problems of relating collapse conditions in an interstellar cloud to a model of the primitive solar nebula are discussed. In such a nebula there is a radial force balance between gravity, the pressure gradient, and centrifugal forces due to the rotation. Approximate values are given for the combinations of temperature and density throughout the nebula, from a maximum of about 2000° K near the center to less than 200° K in the outer portion. These conditions are based upon the compression adiabats in the terminal stages of the collapse of an interstellar cloud. One general conclusion, of great importance for accumulation of bodies within the solar system, is that interstellar grains should not be completely evaporated at distances in the nebula beyond about one or two astronomical units.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- International Astronomical Union Colloquium , Volume 13: Evolutionary and Physical Properties of Meteoroids , June 1971 , pp. 347 - 353
- Copyright
- Copyright © NASA 1971
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