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Old November 6th 18, 06:43 AM posted to sci.astro.amateur
Gerald Kelleher
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Default Supernova event as a transition phase

Now that the usual slogan chanters and bullied individuals had their say, back to the topic at hand.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...omalhaut_B.jpg

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fomalh...oma lhaut.jpg

The issue of solar evolution in tandem with the motion of a star in its galactic orbital motion allows for the creation of a solar system from a transitional phases where a star loses intrinsic mass but creates a solar system in the process.

The offset Sun and a planet moving in a circular trajectory meshes in with the fact that the closer a planet is to the Sun the faster it moves (Venus moves faster than the Earth, Mercury moves faster than Venus). It brings into focus a top-down approach to planetary motion for variations in planetary orbital speeds is a consequence of the solar system's orbital motion around the galaxy.

People stuck in late 17th century experimental ideologies or their exotic 20th century counterparts wouldn't have a clue what is going on here but even in its infancy, a lot of information fits together in a coherent narrative, not just solar system evolution but that evolution within a galactic framework where that system is moving with great distances between stars.