Why Celestial Bodies Come in Different Sizes
Researchers find that a universe that contains some big objects and many small objects relieves gravitational tension faster than a uniform universe.
From the Journal of Applied Physics
By Catherine Meyers
WASHINGTON , D.C. ,
March 1, 2016 – Our solar system contains one massive object – the sun – and
many smaller planets and asteroids. Now researchers from Duke
University in Durham , N.C.
have proposed a new explanation for the size diversity, which is found throughout
the universe and is called hierarchy. The researchers report their finding in
the Journal of Applied Physics, from AIP Publishing.
Bejan and his student, Russell Wagstaff, started by calculating the tension caused by gravitational attraction between bodies of the same size, uniformly distributed in space. They showed that if the bodies coalesce into some large bodies and some small bodies, the tension is reduced faster than if the bodies merged uniformly.
Researchers find that a universe that contains some big objects and many small objects relieves gravitational tension faster than a uniform universe.
From the Journal of Applied Physics
By Catherine Meyers
“Since the
1700s scientists have known that gravity causes objects in the universe to get
bigger, but the phenomenon of growth does not explain the hierarchy,” said
Adrian Bejan, a professor of mechanical engineering at Duke University .
“To my huge surprise this question has been overlooked.”
Bejan’s
specialty is in thermodynamics and he is the author of the Constructal Law,
which states that natural systems evolve to facilitate flow. He had
already applied the law of evolution to explain the shape of snowflakes, river
basins, lungs and even airplanes, when a conversation with an undergraduate
student prompted him to consider how the Constructal Law would manifest itself
in the cosmos.
“This is my
first trespass into planetary science,” he said.
Bejan and his student, Russell Wagstaff, started by calculating the tension caused by gravitational attraction between bodies of the same size, uniformly distributed in space. They showed that if the bodies coalesce into some large bodies and some small bodies, the tension is reduced faster than if the bodies merged uniformly.
“The discovery
is that hierarchy ‘snaps’ from the very beginning, spontaneously,” Bejan said.
The break-up of the uniform suspension of bodies into a few large and many
small bodies occurs because it’s the fastest way to ease the internal tension
caused by gravity, he said.
The natural
tendency of a system to evolve toward a state of reduced tension is a
manifestation of the Constructal Law, Bejan said, and can be seen in other
phenomena, such as soil cracking under a drying wind. “The working title for
our paper was actually ‘The Universe as Cracked Mud,’” he said.
Bejan said he
hopes the application of the Constructal Law to the cosmological scale will
inspire other researchers to consider how the law could be applied in their own
fields.
“I never
thought I would have anything to say about celestial bodies in pure physics,
but by chance I realized I have a key to open a new door,” he said. “Everything
has evolution and the Constructal Law can help predict it. The plan is to keep
exploring.”
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