thINK
Chaos: Part of Our
Ever-Changing Solar System
The population has a good idea about
how the world formed, through the big bang theory. Until recently, I have
thought I knew how the solar system functioned. But an article called “It All
Began in Chaos” by Robert Irion changed my thinking. Scientists have recently
discovered just how chaotic the solar system actually works using ideas formed
by Sir Isaac Newton. The solar system, much like any human life, has had three
instances of extreme change.
Every human has gone through a time
of infancy and childhood. Some childhoods are calm, but others are very chaotic,
much like my own. The solar system went through an infancy and childhood
similar to mine, filled with chaos. This happening is known as the big bang
theory. When it occurred, the planets and moons formed from rock and debris
that violently crashed together, much like two cars flying into one another.
Just as childhood provides a developmental stage for a human, the eight
planets, the sun, and moons developed in the system’s youth.
The next step is adolescence. For
many teens, including myself and the solar system, most everything changes in
intense disorder. As the solar system experienced puberty, gravity forced the
giant planets out of their spots in line, towards the front, and put them
towards the back. The planets were also pushed farther apart, and their orbits
were maimed so they were no longer perfect circles. The solar system was turned
inside-out, much as my house is when I’m looking for a misplaced object.
Of course, the inevitable adult
stage follows. While this is a bit harder for me to relate to, I have
interacted with many adults and the solar system now seems
to follow the same patterns as those adults. Knowledge comes with the age in
both humans and the solar system. Just in the last year or so, scientists have
discovered hundreds of extrasolar planets beyond Pluto. These planets will help
us understand how all solar systems work and maybe how ours will turn out.
While no one knows how our solar system will end up, we know it’s similar to
the collapse of health in adults. Gravity has begun to pull Pluto and Neptune
away from the sun and towards other solar systems. The sun’s opposing gravity
is making the planets’ orbits go awry. They are no longer circular, comparing
to the way health fails humans in their downfall. Just as I know I will
someday, the solar system may die.
The timeline of a solar system is
similar to mine. Towards the beginning, there is a time of development and a
time of extreme change. The end is not nearly as clear. No one knows exactly
how I will die, and no one knows exactly how the solar system will die. All
anyone knows is the solar system and I will continue to be full of chaos.
I must say that I rather liked the way you personified the solar system and compared it to yourself.
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