Interesting questions asked here. The big one though, is just how is it possible for a planet to explode at all. Assuming only a third of the mass is involved to make the whole exercise worthwhile, all that mass M must achieve a velocity able to remove it from the planet's center of mass but also outside the planetary orbit itself.
The only prospective planet is actually Mars. It requires the elimination of gravity over a large enough disc to allow all material to migrate to the ejection jet so formed. Olympus Mons looks like the remnant of such a jet and exploding and pop corning rock would fill the jet to possibly produce the asteroid belt..
This is the best explanation for Olympus Mons i have come up with so far. Add in all the rock used for the early bombardment event and we likely have another Earth originally. My real point though is that no chemical process caused any of this. So all that explosive record may be produced by gravity manipulation to engineer this solar system.
This could also be a lot more recent than we expect as well.
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Astonishing ‘Explosions’ and Surprising Shifts in the Planet’s History
By Tara MacIsaac, Epoch Times | January 22, 2015
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1214152-astonishing-explosions-and-surprising-shifts-in-the-planets-history/
The universe is full of mysteries that challenge our current
knowledge. In "Beyond Science" Epoch Times collects stories about these
strange phenomena to stimulate the imagination and open up previously
undreamed of possibilities. Are they true? You decide.
At
one point in the history of the Earth, the land was pulled toward the
equator. The shift was so great, it was like Boston being pulled down to
the equator. Then the land moved back again!
Adam Maloof, an associate professor of geosciences at Princeton
University, explained in an NPR interview that this massive shift
happened 800 million years ago at a rate about 20 inches (50
centimeters) a day, which is breakneck speed in geology. That’s five
times as fast as the Earth’s crust is shifting today.
He explained that the globe shifts its weight toward the equator to
maintain equilibrium as it rotates. Maloof said that the crust is
literally sliding: “The core of the Earth, the outer part, is actually
fluid iron, and it has about the viscosity of water.”
Similarly, on a larger scale, scientists have discovered in recent
years that the solar system has been a lot less stable since its birth
than previously thought.
In 2006, a space probe named Stardust brought back to Earth
interesting materials from the comet Wild 2. Scientists were expecting
to find material formed far from the sun—”cold” material. They found
instead it had both material forged close to the sun and material forged
far from the sun.
The astonishing implication was that matter abundantly formed in the
inner solar system and shot out to the edge of the solar system.
Exploded Planet Hypothesis
Astronomer Tom Van Flandern counts these findings from Wild 2 among
evidence supporting the Exploded Planet Hypothesis. He has said that
over the course of the solar system’s 4.6 billion-year history, some
planets in it have exploded.
This is a controversial hypothesis, and Van Flandern has said he’s
received pressure from his colleagues to drop it. He became a supporter
of this hypothesis while doing research with the intent to discredit it.
He received his Ph.D. in astronomy from Yale University, worked for 20
years at the U.S. Naval Observatory, where he became the chief of the
celestial mechanics branch, then began independent research on his more
controversial interests.
In a paper published in the International Journal of Astrobiology in 2007, titled “The Challenge of the Exploded Planet Hypothesis,” Van
Flandern listed off some of the predictions made by this hypothesis
that have rung true, including: “(1) satellites of asteroids; (2)
satellites of comets; (3) salt water in meteorites; (4) ‘roll marks’
leading to boulders on asteroids; (5) the time and peak rate of the 1999
Leonid meteor storm; (6) explosion signatures for asteroids; (7) the
strongly spiked energy parameter for new comets; (8) the distribution of
black material on slowly rotating airless bodies; (9) splitting
velocities of comets.”
Some of the objections to the theory include that the mass of
said exploded planets is missing in the figuring of materials in our
solar system. He counters this objection on his website:
“Consider what would happen if the Earth exploded today. Surface and
crustal rocks would shatter and fragment, but remain rocks. However,
rocks from depths greater than about 40 km [24 miles] are under so much
pressure at high temperature that, if suddenly released into a vacuum,
such rocks would vaporize. As a consequence, over 99 percent of the
Earth’s total mass would vaporize in an explosion, with only its
low-pressure crustal and upper mantle layers surviving.”
“Over 99 percent of the Earth’s total mass would vaporize in an
explosion, with only its low-pressure crustal and upper mantle layers
surviving.”, astronomer
While some explanations for how exactly these explosions occurred
remain unclear, Van Flandern pointed out that we are no more certain
about how the widely accepted phenomenon of “late heavy bombardment”
occurred.
Late Heavy Bombardment
Not long after the major planets formed, an unexpectedly large number
of asteroids are thought to have collided with the terrestrial planets,
including Earth.
Paul Weissman of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory wrote in his paper “The Impact History of the Solar System: Implications for the Origin of Atmospheres,” that “a plausible explanation for the late heavy bombardment remains something of a mystery.”
“A plausible explanation for the late heavy bombardment remains something of a mystery.”
, NASA
, NASA
Van Flandern wrote on his website: “The late heavy bombardment, a real solar system event, sounds like an early planetary explosion event.”
NASA’s website explains that planetary migration may have caused the late heavy bombardment.
Planets Moving
It states: “One model for our own solar system suggests that our
giant planets’ orbits shifted dramatically early in the solar system’s
history, with Jupiter’s orbit migrating slightly inward toward the Sun,
and those of Saturn, Neptune, and Uranus expanding farther from the Sun.
These dramatic movements gave us the order of the planets and smaller
bodies that we are familiar with today, and caused many smaller bodies
(such as comets) to scatter.”
Pull from cosmic bodies outside of the solar system continues to
create changes in the placement of planets, as slow and minute as those
changes may appear to us.
The bumpy past of our planet and our solar system is still being
investigated and uncovered by scientists. Did the planets form in their
present locations, or have they moved around dramatically over the
course of history, and have some even exploded? The mysteries of the
planet’s history direct the imagination into the future. Does the future
hold exploding planets, shifting landmasses on Earth, and planets
traveling across the solar system?
Follow @TaraMacIsaac on Twitter, visit the Epoch Times Beyond Science page on Facebook, and subscribe to the Beyond Science newsletter to continue exploring ancient mysteries and the new frontiers of science!
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