All i can say is that Neptune was once the closest planet to the Sun. But since these 4 terrestrial planets formed and the 5th Giant orbits, Neptune got kicked far away from the sun. And that made Neptune a child grabber.
You can fit the entire existence of humans in any of the gaps in between these types of events, so its was never any more exciting then it is right now.
There were SO many collisions in the early solar system: there was this, Mercury got smacked and it blew off most of its mantle leaving only a huge iron core, Uranus got knocked on its side, Uranus's moon Miranda got blown apart and put back together again, Venus hot slammed so hard it spins backwards, and the proto-Earth plowed into Theia and had a Moon baby.
@@theradgegadgie6352 I watch an documentary on it. It does sound better. Nothing could had really knocked Uranus on its side. It's too big of a Planet. Their thoeries no one was around to really know what happen. We could both be wrong.
Neptune was "lucky" to hit the Old Planet when Triton was at 90deg relative to the impact line. Otherwise it would have swalowed the whole thing with little to nothing to show for it.
What if the gas giant that got kicked out of the solar system by Jupiter, once it reached the out skirts became re influenced by the sun's gravity and became planet 9?
Sun: Boss Mercury: Dank Memer Venus: Hot Earth: Planet diagnosed with cancer because of 95% of all humans Mars: Calm and Steady Jupiter: Fat Bodyguard Saturn: Fashion on the outside but hell on the inside. Uranus: Your ass Neptune: Absolute Psychopath Pluto: Misfit, introvert with suicidal rhoughts, harrased by others, bullied by Neptune.
Rocky planets and asteroid belt are between Jupiter and the Sun. Neptune is way out there, far away from the rocky planets. Neptune messing with the rocky planets without Jupiter and Saturn getting involved requires some explanation. It is of course possible but Jupiter and Saturn should have bigger appetite for smaller planets.
Another theory for the retrograde orbit of Triton is that is was once a object in a independent orbit around the sun, much like Pluto is; a dwarf planet that became a moon.
MIT's non-collision Uranian axis hypothesis stated that Uranus could have been dragged over by a massive moon if Uranus had sufficient tilt. The moon then was hurled from the Uranian system with any other massive proto-moons. This moon could then be the Neptunian planet with a Uranian moon.
Planet Nutstaste has been renamed the planet Norrissea, home planet of the Norrisseans, prototype being Chuck Norris. Imagine a planet populated by beings of Chucks skill, tenacity, ability.
The chance's of any star having as many planets orbiting around it as this/our one does is in the billions (research it). And to theorise (based on evidence such as our perfect moon and the uncanny rotations of the other planets and moons) that it had even more is hard to believe, which makes the solar system we live in that much more BEAUTIFUL 💜
Good video, but which is the actual temperature of Neptune that makes it warmer than other planets at that distance? I think it was missed to mention in the video. Good Job and very interesting videos.
NEPTUNE is a REBEL! Eatin’ planets and stealing moons! And I’m an official Martin (Aries) so we love us some REBELS! Welcome to the club majestic Neptune. Now if we can just get Bananarama off VENUS, we have a planetary triad!
Hi Anton. Planetary collisions or near-collisions seem to be an important feature of early solar system history. However I'm finding it hard to get my head around what actually happens. Very large objects, though they may seem solid to us small beings, are not going to simply bump into each other like snooker balls. A collision is surely going to be more like a splash, or in the case of slightly smaller objects, like a couple of handfuls of gravel meeting mid-air. Could you do a video discussing things like the influence of close approaches and collisions on plate tectonics, atmosphere, heat, momentum, where debris goes afterwards etc? What exactly would an observer see? I think it would be very interesting. Thanks!
Most likely, Neptune was raised in an abusive family. When Neptune grew up, it continued the cycle of abuse by capturing planets and stealing moons. It's unfortunate. Cheers!
How is it that the "only possible explanation" is so ridiculous? Throughout this collision, Triton doesn't miss a beat and just merrily orbits Neptune like nothing major happened?
I would love to read more about these theories about the things you've mentioned. Can you please site the papers that have been proposed that support these theories? I am a student of the evolution of our solar system and would like to know more. Thanks Antov!
Old Planet: why am I coming towards you Neptune? Neptune: I'm quite hungry... Old planet: ummm DONT EAT ME!! Neptune: eats Jupiter: WHAT DID YOU DO THAT FOR! Neptune: well I haven't ate anything in about more than a billion years, what do you expect! Jupiter: I haven't either and I'm not eating FAMILY PLANETS! Mars: HEY HEY STOP ARGUING Earth: YEAH LOSERS Sun: Children! Stop fighting! You're all grounded. NO MORE EATING, NEPTUNE!!! Neptune: ok mama IM GONNA STOP
Perhaps, the planet wasn't really ejected and still lingers out there somewhere in the Kuiper Belt or Oort Cloud, waiting to be discovered. Maybe, it's gases froze and it became one of the so-called dwarf planets. Actually, that's something I've always wondered, whether some of the objects out there may have been Gas Giants that got too far out and froze. Maybe, they went through a heating and cooling cycle that shredded their atmosphere away, leaving their sad, sad cores, like possibly Pluto.
Wasn't Triton part of a double dwarf planet system like Pluto and Charon? If "Old Planet" existed how do the dwarf planets and Planet 10 form? Sure Planet 10 could have migrated like Planet Nine, but Old Planet is eating up a lot of material that should be reserved for dwarf planets. However, this does do a good job of explaining the Neptune heat anomaly.
Nelisha: Don't eat or capture planets, we don't have a lot in this system Neptune: okay, mom Also neptune: *eats and captures planets*ㅤ Nelisha: what did I tell you to NOT do Neptune: eating and capturing planets Nelisha: then why did you eat and capture planets??? Neptune: uhhhhh uhhhh uhhhhh uhhhhh uhhh
The planet that was kicked out was called Odin. Odin was of course the king of the Norse gods. He can kick Jupiter's ass but he was too drunk to do it that day.
While this is a very plausible explanation that fits all the currently known facts, I feel that the weakness of the theory is that we seem to be going backwards from rather few known facts to hypothesizing a possible explanation. We know Neptune is hotter than it should be, that there was once more planets in the solar system than present and that the present ones were not always where they are now, so have used those few facts to hypothesize the explanation as to why Neptune may be hotter than it should be. It may be the right one, but it may be entirely wrong and for all we know it was some other mechanism at work. Irrespective, it is certainly interesting.
What happened to the comment section? It used to be a nice place but since a couple of weeks its only annoying. This will hurt this channel eventually. So, everyone stop feeding the troll.
Cuzeg Spiked, I feel your pain, yes you explained on how you don't like these "planet role players" (like me) and on how you think all we do is post comments. I do watch these videos and if you find anything about me or what I've said offensive or annoying I'm completely sorry.
Neptune: :O dang thats a Big Moon! *Checks the moons* Neptune: -_- Crappy Small Ass Moons Old Planet: Hey triton ima do something stay here Triton: Okay Neptune: o.o *Swings near Triton* Triton: HELPPPP!!!!! Neptune: :) *Years passed* Neptune: I forgot where i got Triton.
Great video as always Anton. Just one question. Since Neptune is further away from the sun than Uranus is, wouldn't that mean that Neptune must be cooling down? Unless it's gas traps the heat in, somehow, I suppose.
Great content Anton. Earth is a planet eater also hence why we have our moon. Neptune and Earth are both Planet eaters that’s why we have so much internal heat also perfect for life. Maybe we should be looking at Neptune for alien life. Just look at the smokers under the ocean teeming with life maybe it’s the same on Neptune. Big thumbs up 👍👍
Neptune is a murderer, a cannibal, has no problems committing adultery, and will also steal your significant other. Neptune doesn't give a shit, honestly.
So it basically commited the celestial equivalent of cannibalism and Triton is just the adopted rogue that didn't actually know it was adopted by the psychopath that killed its parent... Is Triton bound to collide into Neptune at any point in the far future?
Stopped video at time mark 1:24/8:00 Triton sustained a serious impact resulting in a moon orbiting the opposite direction of the other moons. play video 22:16