How Our Solar System Really Orbits The Sun



    by ajd416

    32 Comments

    1. ElkIntelligent5474 on

      It is so logical and it was only in the recent past that I understood the spiraling solar system. How did I ever think that our solar system was static in this ever expanding universe.

    2. Both are inaccurate in the aspect that the solar system is significantly larger than the scales presented.

    3. We are blasting through space at mach fuck on a rock spinning around a perpetual nuclear reaction and I need a fucking credit score what the fuck is this bullshit

    4. kingvolcano_reborn on

      This is not true. The plane of the solar system is tilted 60 degrees of the direction of movement.

    5. Warm_Produce_4892 on

      Stop fucking showing this. It has been noted, debunked and called out so many times over the years. It’s wrong. Like, 100% wrong.

      The solar system is not a vortex. It is a gravitationally bound system where planets orbit the sun in roughly the same plane as the sun orbits the galactic center. If this was how it worked, these “orbits” would eventually break down and the planets would fly off. The planets orbits are bound to the sun. Not left behind like a wake.

      Please, fuck off with this trash.

    6. There isn’t a single gram that shows a side angle of the orbital plane in such a way that you can say how accurate this is.

      The angle of our solar systems orbital plane relative to the galaxy is 60° so it might kind of be like this but nearly as dramatic.

    7. As many are pointing out here, both are valid – just a question of which reference frame you like to use. To say that one is right and the other isn’t is to fail to understand this basic idea.

      Still – two mistakes I can see:
      1) In a galactic-centered reference frame (what the vortexy one is trying to depict), you’d also get that the plane of the solar system is slanted 60 degrees with respect to it’s forward motion AND

      2.) Also in the second shot, you’d get some bobbing up and down – the sun (and rest of solar system) rises up through the plane of the milky way and then drops back down again in an cycle, a little like how carousel horses move.

      You can pick any old object as your reference frame and get some pretty wild motions.

    8. Valkyrie_smalkyrie on

      My workmate thinks the earth is flat, and surrounded by a firmament. And many other spurious things. He’s actually a friend….. I’ve only come to learn this recently. It’s very painful

    9. ChromaticCluck on

      Yeah why not just add that our galaxy is also moving and that our universe is expanding too and trying to teach that to children? There is no point of adding the third dimension as it just makes it more confusing, maybe you can say it as an extra point at the end “ah yes the sun is also moving so our solar system moves with it”. Also I swear some of the planets have oval orbits which makes both of these wrong

    10. It just depends what your comparing the motion to. Frame of reference. The first animation is acceptable

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