How is the formation of the solar system related to the big bang?(1 point)
Responses
The solar system was formed before the big bang created the first stars.
The solar system was formed before the big bang created the first stars.
The expansion of the solar system caused the big bang.
The expansion of the solar system caused the big bang.
The solar system formed about 9 billion years after the big bang.
The solar system formed about 9 billion years after the big bang.
The solar system formed during the dark ages directly after the big bang.
The solar system formed during the dark ages directly after the big bang.
3 answers
None of these responses are correct. The formation of the solar system is not directly related to the Big Bang. The Big Bang theory explains the origins of the universe and the initial expansion from a hot and dense state. The solar system, on the other hand, formed much later from a rotating disk of gas and dust around the young Sun. The formation of the solar system was a result of gravitational collapse and condensation of this material, not directly influenced by the Big Bang.
but if you had to choose between these answers what would you choose?
If I had to choose between these options, the closest answer would be:
The solar system formed about 9 billion years after the big bang.
While this is not entirely accurate in terms of the timeline (the solar system formed about 4.6 billion years ago), it reflects the idea that the solar system formed long after the Big Bang.
The solar system formed about 9 billion years after the big bang.
While this is not entirely accurate in terms of the timeline (the solar system formed about 4.6 billion years ago), it reflects the idea that the solar system formed long after the Big Bang.