![]() Some planets will be destroyed, and others ejected into interstellar space. In the distant future, the gravity of passing stars will gradually reduce the Sun's retinue of planets. In roughly 5 billion years, the Sun will cool and expand outward to many times its current diameter (becoming a red giant), before casting off its outer layers as a planetary nebula and leaving behind a stellar remnant known as a white dwarf. Planetary migration may have been responsible for much of the Solar System's early evolution. ![]() The positions of the planets might have shifted due to gravitational interactions. Unlike the planets, these trans-Neptunian objects mostly move on eccentric orbits, inclined to the plane of the planets. Several thousand trans-Neptunian objects have been observed. Beyond Neptune, many sub-planet sized objects formed. Collisions between bodies have occurred continually up to the present day and have been central to the evolution of the Solar System. Still others, such as Earth's Moon, may be the result of giant collisions. Many moons have formed from circling discs of gas and dust around their parent planets, while other moons are thought to have formed independently and later to have been captured by their planets. The Solar System has evolved considerably since its initial formation. Since the dawn of the Space Age in the 1950s and the discovery of exoplanets in the 1990s, the model has been both challenged and refined to account for new observations. Its subsequent development has interwoven a variety of scientific disciplines including astronomy, chemistry, geology, physics, and planetary science. This model, known as the nebular hypothesis, was first developed in the 18th century by Emanuel Swedenborg, Immanuel Kant, and Pierre-Simon Laplace. ![]() ![]() Most of the collapsing mass collected in the center, forming the Sun, while the rest flattened into a protoplanetary disk out of which the planets, moons, asteroids, and other small Solar System bodies formed. The formation of the Solar System began about 4.6 billion years ago with the gravitational collapse of a small part of a giant molecular cloud. Modelling its structure and composition Artist's conception of a protoplanetary disk ![]()
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