The Solar system: an Open Star Cluster remnant.
It is assumed that the Solar system represent the remnants of a former Open Star Cluster. The newly formed stars in an open Star cluster are supposed to be formed, if the always growing central star, which is fed by local in-falling gas at the white hole location becomes rotational unstable by its growing mass content. The in-falling gas should be explained as the result of the pressure effect by the complex Local A-Symmetric Oscillating vacuum Frame (LASOF) located in between the SABHs. It is assumed that the rotational instability of the growing central star will originate the splitting of the star into two smaller stars, one star will maining at the white hole center and the other (more metal rich) star is supposed to leave the scene.
Repetition of this process will originate an ever growing number of Single and Binary stars as long as there is enough infalling gas from outside. These stars are supposed to migrate out of the center by the attraction of the dual Stellar Anchor Black Holes SABHs) located on both sides of the central White Hole location. If all the local Gas and dust is consumed, the Open star Cluster will die as a production plant for stars. However it is assumed that one of the stars of the last produced stars, will split into "metal rich" and "metal poor" Planets due to the rotational centrifugal effect of the splitting of process.
The metal rich nucleus of one star of the last Binary could migrate out of the center of the star and leave smaller Planets and "failed stars" behind. This could be the main origin of our Planetary system which show also metal poor and metal rich Planets. Jupiter and Saturn are metal poor Planets and often called "failed Stars", which seem to be well chosen. As a consequence, the Sun can be interpreted as the last central primordial open cluster star.
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