Chapter IV
Our solar system started its materialization process about 4.5 to 5 billion years ago.
Around that time, a cloud charged with cosmic dust gathered at the edge of the Milky Way.
The centripetal force in the cloud caused the formation of a more dense center. This
created heat, which speeded up the rotational force and flattened the form. After millions
of years the immense gathering of energy in the center caused a nuclear reaction and
self-inflammation. At other places in this cloud smaller concentrations of gas and cosmic
dust gathered as a result of the lower density. They did not inflame but materialized.
The specific place and orbit of each planet in our solar system is located at the balance
point between the rotation force/centrifugal force and the gravitational force /centripetal
force both in relation to the sun.
The planets closer to the sun were baked and became very hard because the gases
were dispersed by the heat and the ion/electron wind sent into the universe by the sun.
Further out from the sun, the temperature is much lower. The planets there materialized
into big balls of fluid gas with a vast center, often with a crust of frozen substance.
Expansion and Contraction of the Solar System
Astronomical studies tell us that there are billions of milky ways in the universe and that
there are also billions of stars in most of these milky ways. Our solar system travels through
the universe at a speed of about 300 km/sec. Even at this speed it takes about 230 million
years for our solar system to make a complete cycle through the Milky Way. During such
a cycle or what is called a galactic year, the solar system is not always at the same dis-
tance from the center of the Milky Way.
When the solar system is closer to the center this is called the galactic summer. Our
solar system responds to the stronger contractive force at this point in the galactic year.
The planets come closer to the sun in this period, the atmosphere heats up and greatly
enhances the size of the flora and fauna. When the solar system is further away from the
center of the milky way, the solar system expands, so a greater distance arises between
the earth and the sun. This creates lower temperatures and plants and animal species will
be smaller (more arctic).
It is generally believed that the first life forms on earth appeared some 3.2 billion years
ago. This means that the earth moved about 13 cycles in the milky way.
Fig. 4.1 Formation of our Solar System
Gas Cloud Gas Concentration
Around Core
Spontaneous
Self-Inflammation
Formation
of other Planets
Solar System
Now