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How the solar system was born

Shell London Lecture Series - June Lecture

Organised by: Main Geological Society events
Date: 19 June 2008
Event Type: Lecture
Venue: The Geological Society (Burlington House)
Accessibility: Hearing Aid Loop Wheelchair Access
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Speaker: Sara Russell, (NHM)

Meeting format:
  • 17.30  Tea, coffee and biscuits
  • 18.00  Lecture begins
  • 19.00  Short reception
  • 20.00  Depart

Abstract

A virtual consensus holds that the solar system - the Sun and the orbiting planets - formed from the collapse of intersellar cloud material under its own gravity about 4.56 billion years ago.  This process led initially to a dusty disk forming around the newly formed Sun.  The material in the disk quickly accreted into small planetary bodies, called planetesimals, which in turn made up the buidling blocks of planets.  In the asteriod belt between Mars and Jupiter, the planet building process was thwarted at an early stage, and small pieces of planetesimals survived.  Impacts within the belt can send fragments of these bodies towards the inner solar system, and they make up the majority of meteorites that fall to Earth.

We can learn about the events that happened four and a half billion years agao using both geological and astronomical techniques.  From laboratory analysis of meteorites and other extra-terrestrial materials (such as material returned from space missions to a comet) we can learn the environment in which planets formed and the timescales over which they accreted.  From astronomical observations and modelling we can compare our solar system to young planetary systems forming today.  In the talk I will summarise some of the latest results from both fields of study.

You can now view this presentation online.



Speaker biography

Professor Sara Russell obtained her PhD from the Open University, on the topic of diamond and silicon carbide in meteorites, in 1993.  After postdocs in the USA she came to the Natural History Museum in 1998, where she is now Head of Meteoritics.  Her research interests lie in using meteorites to better understand the timescales involved in planetary formation and the conditions prevalent in the protoplanetary disk.  She has also participated in many space missions, most recently as Science Team member of the C1XS instrument on the lunar mission Chandrayaan-1.
 
 

Sponsors

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Convenor contact details:

Name: Alys Johnson
Address: Geological Society
Burlington House
London
Postcode: W1J 0BG
Country: United Kingdom
Telephone: 020 7432 0981
Fax: 020 7494 0579
E-Mail: alys.johnson@geolsoc.org.uk