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In an older question from June 2011, Why does each celestial object spin on its own axis?, apparently revived by the system, a user is asking about the origin of the rotation of celestial bodies.

The accepted answer (with 17 votes) states the following:

When things collapse under their own gravity in space (i.e. clouds of gas and dust), any small amount of asymmetry in the collapse will be enough start it spinning.

And then it goes on saying:

Even if it spins by a tiny amount, as it collapses, angular momentum conservation will mean it spins more and more quickly.

Is all this really correct?

I could try to ask in a comment to the answer. I actually did. But the author is no longer registered.

Hence I am asking it as a question.

But that is not the end of the story. As I was about to ask my question, I looked for other relevant questions, and there are some. I did not make an exaustive survey, but I did not find one that had satisfactory answers:

  • On the origin of the rotation of celestial bodies (december 2011) has just one accepted answer (0 votes) stating essentially that the solar system has angular momentum because it started from a cloud that had angular momentum. No comment.

  • Why does everything spin? (july 2011) is questionning about everything from galaxies to electrons. The answers are of a much higher quality, but while they seem to justify the possiblility of spin and angular momentum (and its conservation), there are not clear on how it appears, at least for celestial bodies.

  • Origin of motion and relative speed of bodies in the universe (june 2013): That was my own very naive first question on this site. It is related but does not directly address spin.

One answer I found is that momentum appear from bodies in relative motion past each other. Nice, but not really an answer: where did they get their relative speed to begin with. Unfortunately the answer is: from the angular momentum of larger structures they belong to (well, it can be more comples). So this is just chicken and egg explanation. But how did it get started?

Note that my question is not a duplicate, since it is primarily whether the above statements are correct, which is not considered in these other questions.

Furthermore, these questions are fairly old, and given that none had received answers that seem to answer the question of the origine of existence of celestial angular momentum (not in a way I can understand anyway), it may be appropriate to attempt restarting the process, with the above discussion to motivate that an answer should explain the physical mechanism that started the existence of spin of celestial bodies.

babou
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  • As long as no new matter is injected into the system, $L=\rm const$ holds. This means that, given $L=r\times p$ and $r$ decreasing, $p$ must increase. Hence, the 2nd statement is true. – Kyle Kanos Nov 15 '14 at 00:28
  • I think point related to this, but not mentioned above is that after collapse we have an almost flat disk e.g. solar system / spiral galaxy etc. – tom Nov 15 '14 at 00:41
  • @KyleKanos I agree. I added the second statement because it contradict the first. See my answer, which is a layman's answer (I added disclaimers). – babou Nov 15 '14 at 00:53
  • @babou: How does the 2nd contradict the 1st? – Kyle Kanos Nov 15 '14 at 01:19
  • Possible duplicates: http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/12140/2451 , http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/18502/2451 , http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/23104/2451 , http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/68646/2451 and links therein. – Qmechanic Nov 15 '14 at 12:11
  • @Qmechanic I addressed that in my question and even commented on similar questions. I am bothered by the fact that something that seems wrong is stated in a well accepted answer to a question on this topic, and I would like a clear answer on that point. This is my question. A secondary point is that none of the answers I read gives a non-tautological answer (essentially: there is momentum because there was momentum). Can it start from a motionless universe? However I did not ask that since there should be only one point in a question. I do address it in my answer, to justify it. – babou Nov 15 '14 at 21:00
  • @KyleKanos The second statement is about angular momentum conservation. The first statement say that that an assymetric cloud that collapses will start spinning (no other hypothesis given). So where does the spin come from? You need more hypotheses or parameters to get the spin, and, if you add that, the assymetry is no longer needed. – babou Nov 15 '14 at 21:08
  • @babou - IMO, you are focusing overly much on that one statement in what was otherwise a very good answer. Interactions with other nearby objects can transfer angular momentum without need to exchange matter. Things rotate. You are positing something that doesn't exist, a isolated spherically symmetric gas cloud. There is no such thing. The first immense gas clouds that eventually became protogalaxies -- they weren't isolated and they almost certainly were not spherically symmetric. The same applies to gas clouds that become stars and planets. – David Hammen Nov 15 '14 at 21:19
  • As I now point out and provide links for in my answer. Even an "isolated, spherical gas cloud" with no net initial angular momentum, but with a turbulent velocity field, will produce spinning stars and solar systems. – ProfRob Nov 15 '14 at 22:32

4 Answers4

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I asked the question because I did not believe in the accepted answer that has been sitting for more than 3 years.

I have my own understanding, but since it is not good practice to put it with the question, I am posting it as one possible answer.

My problem is that I do not believe the first statement quoted in the question which is contradicted by the second quoted statement. If there is such a thing as angular momentum conservation, I do not see why assymetry alone should produce angular momentum on the assymetric structure.

If the cloud is isolated, it should collapse - period. The assymetry may possibly create some internal spinning (adding to zero angular momentum), but certainly not any global spinning, no global angular momentum, as clearly stated in this first statement.

What can induce spinning in the collapsing cloud is (gravitational) interaction with other external structures. And it is a fact that such external structures always exist. That may be obvious for the author of the answer, or professional astrophysicists, but it is certainly not obvious for laypeople. Hence I do consider this answer misleading at best.

Furthermore, if such external interacting structures exists as they must, then the asymmetry hypothesis is no longer needed, as it will be created by these interactions.

Angular momentum can be "created" only by exchanging angular momentum with another body, so that each gets one of two opposite angular momenta, that sum to no momentum. Then each can go its own way. Of couse, there is globally no creation of angular momentum.

I am not quite sure about the dynamics of the phenomenon, but I can see no other explanation. This kind of interaction is frequent between moving bodies, for example through tidal effect.

Restarting from this questionable answer, I have been wondering whether it can occur within a structure of clouds with asymmetries, initially at rest, both internally and with respect to each other.

What follows is intuitive and speculative, as I do not know how to deal with the problem mathematically.

My own idea of how it could occur, very intuitively and informally, is that when two clouds are both collapsing to their own centers of mass, gravitational attraction of cloud A will slow down the collapse of the closest parts of cloud B (and conversely), so that the center of mass will move, and the the velocity of the collapsing cloud components going no longer through the center of mass, they have acquired angular momentum with respect to that center of mass, which does initiate the spining. Then indeed, the collapse will increase the spin. The symmetry of the phenomenon with respect to the median plane (assuming symmetrical clouds to simplify) applies also to the angular momenta induced in each cloud, so that they get opposite angular momenta, and opposite spin.

So all you need to get started would be inhomogeneity in a motionless cosmic cloud, that lead to collapse of subparts to their center of mass, while being distorted by neigboring subparts. This create spin, from which we get higher speeds as the cloud parts keep collapsing.

This is my own intuitive reconstruction. Hence do not trust me unless it is confirmed by professionals. My problem is finding one who would address/answer this question

babou
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There is an angular momentum problem with regard to star formation, but you have the sense of the problem completely backwards. The problem is not where the angular momentum arises. The problem is where does it go.

Gas clouds a tenth of a parsec across have been routinely been observed to rotate at about one revolution every five or ten million years or so ($\Omega \approx 3\times10^{-14}$ radians/second). That's about 30 or 40 times faster than the mean galactic rotation rate. Those interstellar gas clouds interact gravitationally with one another and with nearby stars. The gravity gradient torque across a tenth of a parsec exerted by a nearby gas cloud or star can easily build up that tiny rotation rate.

That rotation rate sounds tiny, but it's not. Were the entire gas cloud to shrink to a star and conserve angular momentum along the way, the star would necessarily be spinning at about two revolutions per minute. The star could not form! This is the crux of the angular momentum problem.

The old nebular hypothesis (from the mid 18th century) regarding the formation of the solar system had huge problems with angular momentum, so huge the theory was discarded. The revived version of the hypothesis (1970s) is now the dominant theory regarding star and planetary formation because it has solved the angular momentum problem to some extent. The solution isn't complete; some problems with angular momentum remain. "Where does it go?" remains a partially unanswered question.

David Hammen
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  • This is apparently somewhat unrelated to my question. But it is an interesting issue I did not know about. Thanks for the pointer. My basic question is only whether I am correct to think that assymetry in a collapsing cloud is not enough to create global angular momentum (assuming the system isolated). My secondary point would be how then would it be possible to see spinning structure emerge from an initially motionless cloud, not global spin, but spin of subparts, as I need a primitive explanation for spinning structures. A matter of open vs closed system. – babou Nov 15 '14 at 20:40
  • This is very related to your question. Where the rotation comes from - that's simple. It comes from gravitational (and possibly electromagnetic) interactions between the gas cloud and other nearby objects. Not much rotation is needed to create a rotating central star and a protoplanetary disk. Observationally, gas clouds tend to rotate at about one revolution every five to ten million years. That's plenty of angular momentum to explain stars and planets. In fact, it's too much. Research is focused on how nascent star systems dump the primordial angular momentum, not on how they get it. – David Hammen Nov 15 '14 at 21:09
  • I reread your answer. You did not answer my question, but did answer my primary concern, as a side remark so that I missed it. I was wondering how to get the motions observed in the universe starting from a still non homogeneous universe. And gravity gradient torque is the answer. I knew the thing, not the name which I did not recognize. It is a simpler explanation, than my attempt at mimicking something like it in my answer. Your answer is the only one on site using the expression, though it seems actually the ultimate answer to recurrent questions about the origin of spinning structures. – babou Nov 15 '14 at 22:11
  • @babou I don't disagree that gravity gradient torque is a way of making things spin (and this is certainly not a criticism of this excellent answer), but it just transfers angular momentum from somewhere else. It's not an origin of angular momentum. It is absolutely clear that you do not need giant molecular clouds to spin in order to produce spinning stars and planetary systems. – ProfRob Nov 15 '14 at 22:27
  • @RobJeffries I just realized that you are right:if gravity gradient torque is what stabilizes satellites, it is dependent on the motion of the satellite. I got carried away too fast, and it may not be my answer to the emergence of rotating bodies in a still universe. I will have to ask a specific question. – babou Nov 15 '14 at 23:04
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You could start from the premise that there was not net angular momentum in the universe at all; but it would still be the case that everything of interest was spinning.

On the scales of stars and planets there are (at least) two important mechanisms that result in individual systems having angular momentum. The first is turbulence. If you take a parcel of turbulent gas from a giant molecular cloud it will always possess some angular momentum, even if the total cloud does not. As the parcel collapses to form a star/planets... I'm not repeating all this.

Second, stars form in clusters. There is interaction between stellar systems early in their lives. Again, the cluster may have little net J, but groups of stars can, relative to their own centre of mass frame.

On bigger scales (not my field) I think the second of these explanations becomes more important. The interaction and accretion of galaxies is what gives individual galaxies a spin, even if the clusters they are born in have much less or even no net J.

Edit: As an example of how turbulent velocity fields lead to gravitational condensations containing angular momentum you could do worse than study the star formation simulation performed by Matthew Bate and collaborators. These simulations start off in clouds with zero net angular momentum, yet produce a host of stars with swirling accretion disks, binary systems of all shape and sizes etc. An example journal paper can be found here: http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2009MNRAS.392..590B Here is a web page where you can download the animations and study them at length http://www.astro.ex.ac.uk/people/mbate/Cluster/cluster500RT.html

Turbulent clouds are by their nature random and stochastic in terms of their motions. Often the velocity field is defined in terms of a power law dependence on spatial scale. The formation of vortices is a characteristic of turbulent media. They can be produced in the absence of external forces. The vortices contain angular momentum.

ProfRob
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  • I could make the hypothesis of your first sentence ("everything of interest was spinning"), but I do not. It may be so, but why should it be so? My question is primarily whether the first quoted sentence is correct. See details there and in comments. But you are right (see my answer) that I worry about how motion can emerge. My own concern, but I do not have the math to check that with certainty, is whether motion (other than trivial collapse) can emerge from a motionless universe, provided it is not completely homogeneous, as a result of gravitation. – babou Nov 15 '14 at 21:18
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    @babou I fear nothing will satisfy you. As I clearly state: any parcel of turbulent gas, or any group of stars in a cluster, will have angular momentum about its/their centre of mass. Are you asking why it should be turbulent? Because things evolve: stars form; outflows and winds stir the gas; high mass stars heat it; supernovae explode; and on and on... energy is injected into the gas; it becomes turbulent. "Everything of interest is spinning" is not a hypothesis, it is an observational fact. – ProfRob Nov 15 '14 at 21:41
  • @babou - As Rob noted, the universe is a chaotic and turbulent space. While the net angular momentum of the universe might be well be zero, the angular momentum of any finite object is apparently random. Assuming a well-behaved random distribution, the probability of seeing an object with exactly zero angular momentum is exactly zero. – David Hammen Nov 15 '14 at 22:50
  • @DavidHammen I am and was convinced that everything you both say must be right. No need to try harder. The difficulty is of a different nature. You refuse to look as the questions I ask, and reply to the questions you think I should ask. Your questions may be better, but are not my questions. I think the sentence I am criticizing is misleading for its intended readers because it skips the need for interaction with other bodies. However obvious it may be to you, it is not necessarily so for laypeople. And assymetry is unneeded as necessarily arise if there is interaction. – babou Nov 16 '14 at 01:09
  • More accurately, I should have said that the statement was skipping the need for some other phenomenon (such as turbulence, or other) to make things happen. – babou Nov 18 '14 at 21:14
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If you take an air filled rubber ball and try to squash it equally from all sides it is too hard. Twisting the ball either way seems easier to deform it. So perhaps a collapse of lighter material into the gravitation pull of the denser core becomes a vortex because it is the easiest path of momentum to the core. Where friction increases as the material gets denser towards the centre, considering the speed of collapse is faster furtherest from the core, its momentum as it collides with denser material closer to the core it is symptomatically deflected until the whole process becomes a vortex causing angular momentum. It seems that black hole starts rotating from the angular momentum of the material it feeds from.