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Post by Pincho Paxton on Mar 5, 2014 11:35:00 GMT
Energy always moves towards the area of least resistance. To get a planet you need an area in space that is less resistant than the surrounding area. You then need a lot of particles to move to that hole. I have the Black Hole or whatever it is randomly creating atoms, and slinging them sideways. I have the sun as a hole created by the black hole (or whatever it is). The sun gets first pick of the material, because it is less resistant than the Earth area. So most of the first particles become suns. the sun then creates its own area of least resistance. The sun's area of least resistance is slung outwards by scaling down gravity to keep gravity at a constant. These new areas are weaker, and you get planets. Then planets create an area of least resistance, and those areas create moons. The moon bowshock is now very weak, and the best you can get is rings like Saturn. Although Saturn also has some more interesting physics that you can apply with a downwards meeting of 2 pressure points.
Pincho Paxton
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Post by Pincho Paxton on Mar 5, 2014 11:54:07 GMT
On top of this you can add that the sun slings out magnetic bubbles in the Earth's direction. Those magnetic bubbles are just right for creating an area of least resistance for the Earth to occupy, and an asteroid belt.
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