EXO WORLDS
Making planets in a rocket
by Staff Writers
Paris (ESA) Nov 18, 2019

illustration only

How are celestial bodies created? Aside from philosophical questions, researchers are taking practical steps to investigate the very first moments when planets are born - on a sounding rocket launching from Sweden next week.

Astronomers conclude that planets are formed out of cosmic dust and gas from an interstellar cloud around a new-born star, but exactly how dust particles start to assemble into larger celestial bodies is still a mystery.

Go back far enough in time and Earth will not have existed, but its formation must have started somewhere, sometime. And this very first clumping together of dust particles in zero gravity will be investigated in the ICAPS experiment.

Researchers will shoot silicon dioxide - also called silica - dust particles into a vacuum chamber and observe their growth, how they interact and stick together.

"It is a bit like hosting a party where you want people to mingle and interact", likens Astrid Orr of ESA's SciSpacE team. "We are trying to create the ideal conditions for small groups to form by adjusting the style of the room, or playing the right music - in this case we are adjusting the conditions in the experiment chamber, relative speed of the particles and especially particle concentration.

"Like making a snowman, you need the right snow."

The ICAPS experiment is a 1.2-m-long module that houses the vacuum chamber, an injector of silica particles, and cameras to observe their interaction. The experiment has 'flown' with promising results in the ZARM drop tower in Bremen, Germany, but scientists want to observe the process for longer.

Drop tower experiments allow for up to nine seconds of microgravity whereas sounding rockets will allow researchers to watch up to six minutes of planet formation in progress.

The experiment aims to simulate growth of micrometre-sized particles - similar in size to talcum powder - to millimetre-sized aggregates and investigate the physical phenomenon of Brownian motion. This process is believed to be the main mechanism of how "planet embryos" evolved in the young Solar System.

"When you see dust moving in sunlight, the tumbling motion of the small dust is in part due to Brownian motion." explains Astrid. "The Brownian model describes the movement of particles suspended in a gas or a liquid, but on Earth gravity also influences the movement and makes it hard to create a pure laboratory model of Brownian motion."

The ICAPS experiment will provide insight into the very early stages of planet formation. Meanwhile, ESA's exoplanet satellite Cheops - scheduled for launch in mid-December - will study the end result of this process: planets outside our Solar System typically orbiting other stars and known as exoplanets.


Related Links
Human and Robotic Exploration at ESA
Lands Beyond Beyond - extra solar planets - news and science
Life Beyond Earth

EXO WORLDS
Distant worlds under many suns
Jena, Germany (SPX) Nov 14, 2019
Is Earth the only habitable planet in the universe or are there more worlds somewhere out there that are capable of supporting life? And if there are, what might they look like? In a bid to answer these fundamental questions, scientists are searching space for exoplanets: distant worlds that orbit other stars outside our solar system. More than 4,000 exoplanets are known to date, most of them orbiting single stars like our Sun. Now astrophysicist Dr Markus Mugrauer of Friedrich Schiller University ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

EXO WORLDS
EU to create own early missile warning system

Erdogan says would buy Patriots but won't give up S-400s

Russia sends S-400 system to Serbia for drills

US to Turkey: Don't turn on Russian system, avoid sanctions

EXO WORLDS
North Korea fires short-range projectiles: South's military

S. Korea to buy AMRAAM missiles in $253M deal

OpFires program advances technology for upper stage with PDR completion

State Department OKs Javelin missile sale to Ukraine

EXO WORLDS
Iris Automation and Kansas DOT complete historic beyond-visual-line-of-sight drone flight

GMV presents dronelocus for the safety and management of USpace

Mosquito courting strategies could inspire quieter drones

Israeli drone overflying Lebanon targeted by missile: army

EXO WORLDS
F-35 to Space? US Air Force looks to connect stealth fighters to X-37B Spacecraft

U.S. Air Force testing secure data links between F-22, F-35

GenDyn nets $783M for next-gen Navy MUOS operations

GatorWings wins DARPA Spectrum Collaboration Challenge

EXO WORLDS
Catapults, flaming arrows: Hong Kong protesters' medieval tech

Clark Construction lands $570 million contract for Walter Reed renovations

AFRL tests in-house, rapidly developed small engine

AFRL personnel connect with creative thinking process to enhance problem solving

EXO WORLDS
EU adopts 13 new projects under PESCO defense-cooperation program

Taiwan seeks return of 'criminal income' from frigate scandal

Sisi suggests floating Egypt military firms on stock exchange

Pentagon awards $10 bn cloud contract to Microsoft, snubbing Amazon

EXO WORLDS
Turkey's Erdogan calls Macron's NATO comments 'unacceptable'

Macron rues 'unprecedented' global crisis, says new alliances needed

Bolsonaro says China part of Brazil's future

Beijing slams Pompeo for 'Cold War thinking' in Berlin speech

EXO WORLDS
SMART discovers breakthrough way to look at the surface of nanoparticles

Visible light and nanoparticle catalysts produce desirable bioactive molecules

Flexible, wearable supercapacitors based on porous nanocarbon nanocomposites

Scientists create a nanomaterial that is both twisted and untwisted at the same time