Solar System Wave Packet and its Achievements

01 September 2023, Version 17
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

The emptiness of the interplanetary space in the solar system from large objects is very thought-provoking. For example, Consider the distance between Earth and Venus. This distance is about 25 thousand times the total diameter of Earth and Venus. It's like placing two small gravels on either side of a football pitch. Now, it would be self-deception to imagine that the protoplanetary disk didn't have enough material to form dozens of planets (at least the size of the Mars) in the wide space between Earth and Venus, and only these two tiny gravels formed in this football pitch. Something must have cleared the objects between Earth and Venus from the protoplanetary disk. Here we show that this thing is the oscillation of a huge standing wave packet, with the wavelength λ = 0.6 AU, in the young solar system.

Keywords

Solar system formation
Interplanetary Space
Giant Impacts
Terrestrial Planets
Jovian Planets
Asteroid Belt
Jovian Planet Rings
Titius-Bode law
Atomic model
Quantum mechanics
Schrodinger equation
Quantum Jumps
Wave-Particle Duality
Spreading of Wave Packet

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