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Solar System Formation Explainer

Explain solar system formation as one process, from the solar nebula through the protoplanetary disk to the frost line dividing rocky and gas giant planets.

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Created byOguz Serdar
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Reviewed byCuneyt Mertayak

Prompt Template

You are an astronomy educator who explains planet formation as one continuous physical process governed by temperature and distance from the young Sun, rather than as a separate trivia fact about each individual planet with no connective thread running underneath them.

Cover [SCOPE:select:the full formation process from nebula to planets,just the terrestrial vs gas giant divide and the frost line,just the solar system's present-day large-scale structure] at a [LEVEL:select:conceptual overview,with the frost line's approximate location included] depth.

Start with the solar nebula theory. Roughly 4.6 billion years ago, a region within a much larger interstellar cloud of gas and dust began collapsing under its own gravity. As that collapsing cloud contracted, it conserved angular momentum, the same physics behind a spinning ice skater speeding up as they pull their arms in, so it spun faster and flattened into a rotating disk, a protoplanetary disk, with the young Sun forming and igniting at its dense center. Within that disk, solid dust grains collided and stuck together in a process called accretion, gradually building up from pebbles to kilometer-sized planetesimals to full protoplanets, all through the same basic collision-and-stick mechanism operating at ever larger scales.

If [SCOPE] covers the frost line, or the full process, or [LEVEL] asks for its location, cover the boundary that split the resulting planets into two structurally different families. The frost line, located a few astronomical units out from the young Sun, is the point in the disk cold enough for volatile compounds, water, ammonia, methane, carbon dioxide, to freeze into solid ice grains rather than remain gas. Inside that line it stayed too warm for those compounds to condense, so only rock and metal were available as solid building material, producing the terrestrial planets, Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars, small, dense, and rocky. Beyond the frost line, ice joined rock and metal as solid material, roughly doubling or tripling the total mass available for a growing planetary core, so cores out there reached a critical size, roughly 10 Earth masses, fast enough to gravitationally capture huge amounts of the surrounding hydrogen and helium gas directly from the disk before it dissipated, building the gas giants, Jupiter and Saturn, and the more distant ice giants, Uranus and Neptune.

If [SCOPE] covers the solar system's present-day structure, cover what's left over from this process today. The asteroid belt, sitting between Mars and Jupiter, is rocky leftover material that never accreted into a full planet, partly because Jupiter's gravity kept stirring the region up and preventing planetesimals there from settling together peacefully. The Kuiper belt, beyond Neptune, holds icy leftover bodies from the outer disk, and the Oort cloud, at the solar system's far outer edge, holds an even more distant spherical shell of icy bodies, both act as reservoirs that still supply comets today.

State the pattern connecting all of it: essentially the entire large-scale architecture of the solar system, small rocky planets close in, giant gas and ice planets farther out, and belts of leftover rocky or icy debris at specific distances, is a direct fossil record of exactly how warm each region of the original disk happened to be, nothing more mysterious than temperature deciding what kind of material was available to build with at each distance.

Close by naming what this explainer leaves out: the detailed dynamics of planetary migration, evidence suggesting Jupiter and Saturn shifted position significantly after forming, and the specific accretion physics of exactly how colliding planetesimals stuck together instead of shattering on impact, both matter but need more depth than fits here.

Pair this with the [asteroids, comets, and meteors explainer](#prompt:writing/academic/asteroids-comets-and-meteors-explainer) for the detailed composition and structure of the leftover material this process produced, the [orbital mechanics formula solver](#prompt:writing/academic/orbital-mechanics-formula-solver) for calculating the actual orbits these formation dynamics settled into, or the [stellar life cycle explainer](#prompt:writing/academic/stellar-life-cycle-explainer) for the Sun's own eventual fate once its main sequence phase ends.

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About Solar System Formation Explainer

The solar system's planets usually get taught as eight separate trivia entries, Mercury is small and rocky, Jupiter is huge and gaseous, with no explanation of why that pattern exists at all or what actually separated the rocky inner planets from the giant outer ones.

This explainer covers the whole formation process as one continuous story, the collapsing solar nebula flattening into a protoplanetary disk around the young Sun, dust grains sticking together through accretion, and the frost line, the temperature boundary that decided whether a growing planet ended up small and rocky or large and gas-rich. It also covers today's leftover structure, the asteroid belt, Kuiper belt, and Oort cloud. Set [SCOPE] to the full process, just the frost line divide, or just the present-day structure, and [LEVEL] to a conceptual overview or one with the frost line's approximate location.

Run it in the Dock Editor to build a solar system formation reference next to your astronomy notes, or pair it with the asteroids, comets, and meteors explainer for the detailed composition of the leftover material, or the habitable zone explainer for where in that same protoplanetary disk a planet could actually end up with liquid water.

How to Use Solar System Formation Explainer

1

Pick Your Scope

This runs anywhere: paste it into the Dock Editor, ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini. Set [SCOPE] to the full formation process from nebula to planets, just the terrestrial vs gas giant divide and the frost line, or just the solar system's present-day large-scale structure.

2

Pick Your Depth Level

Set [LEVEL] to a conceptual overview, or one that includes the frost line's approximate location within the original disk.

3

Start With the Collapsing Nebula

See how a collapsing cloud of gas and dust flattened into a rotating protoplanetary disk around the young Sun through conservation of angular momentum.

4

Understand the Frost Line Divide

Learn exactly why the same disk produced small rocky planets close in and large gas and ice giants farther out, driven entirely by temperature.

5

See What's Left Over Today

Connect the formation process to the present-day asteroid belt, Kuiper belt, and Oort cloud as direct leftovers from the original disk.

Who Uses Solar System Formation Explainer

High School Astronomy Students

Learn why the inner planets are small and rocky while the outer planets are huge and gaseous, traced back to one boundary, the frost line.

Intro College Astronomy Students

Set [LEVEL] to include the frost line's approximate location and connect it directly to where each planet type actually formed.

Students Preparing for an Astronomy Exam

Drill the sequence from collapsing nebula to protoplanetary disk to accretion, and the specific role temperature played at each stage.

Curious Learners Wanting the Solar System's Structure Explained

Set [SCOPE] to present-day structure to understand exactly what the asteroid belt, Kuiper belt, and Oort cloud actually are and where they came from.

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