by S. Bilderback » Fri Nov 11, 2005 2:40 am
As you've probably heard, there is no such thing as a stupid question, OK there are, questions that have not engaged the brain that conceived them, or those that the asker doesn't listen for the answer. You passed this test.
The reason the gas giants tend to have rings is - lots of gravity and their closer proximity to space debris. Rings are inherently unstable and without catastrophic events of the captured solar debris, they will disappear over millions of years; parts of Saturn's rings are thought to be only a few 100,000 years old so Saturn’s rings could look like Jupiter’s in a few million years
There is very little solar debris left near the rocky planets, with less area of space, the faster speeds of the inner orbits, and higher temps to vaporize icy objects, it's already swept clean, and, the gas giants catch most of what new debris is heading towards the inner space.
As you've probably heard, there is no such thing as a stupid question, OK there are, questions that have not engaged the brain that conceived them, or those that the asker doesn't listen for the answer. You passed this test.:D
The reason the gas giants tend to have rings is - lots of gravity and their closer proximity to space debris. Rings are inherently unstable and without catastrophic events of the captured solar debris, they will disappear over millions of years; parts of Saturn's rings are thought to be only a few 100,000 years old so Saturn’s rings could look like Jupiter’s in a few million years
There is very little solar debris left near the rocky planets, with less area of space, the faster speeds of the inner orbits, and higher temps to vaporize icy objects, it's already swept clean, and, the gas giants catch most of what new debris is heading towards the inner space.