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Originally Posted by justinv3
I had a similar question about this, and didn't really want to create another post. Why are almost all the planets (except for pluto) in the same plain. You know? Why isn't there anything rotating around the sun at a 90 degree angle from the plane all the other planets rotate in? I hope you understand what I'm asking. Thanks!
Oh. This is my first post!! =D>
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Welcome to the board!
The accepted theory for many years has been that the planets condensed ('accreted') out of a rotating disk of gas and dust. That theory is now largely borne out by direct observation of 'circumstellar disks' around young stars like Vega and Fomalhaut. So the central part of the solar system is orbiting roughly in the plane of the disk from which it formed.
Of course, as you are about to point out, this only shuffles the problem along one. Given that stars and their attendant solar systems form from non-planar globules, why do they collapse into a disk in the first place? (Seems to be the natural way of things - it's what galaxies do too - we now think many elliptical galaxies are the result of colliding spirals that mutually disrupt their neat disks.)
Anyway, that's a harder answer (someone will have a better one than me, I'm sure, so don't take my answer as read) and I suspect chaos theory creeps in somewhere.
I think it is ultimately because of galactic tidal effects, causing the initial cloud to rotate. If you rotate an object, it will bulge around its equator, as does Jupiter in our system. The cloud is far larger but vastly more diffuse than Jupiter, and it is also contracting, which will amplify the rotation (the old 'skater's arms' effect.) We are conserving something called angular momentum here.
Eventually the 'bulge' in the star-forming cloud becomes quite extreme - a disk. And in fact the disk of the solar system contains most of the angular momentum in the system (though other processes may also contribute to that).
As for objects outside the plane, 'Xena', the new planet, is one in fact - inclined at 45 degrees or so. The long-period comets, which are thought to come from a vast sphere called the Oort Cloud, also have no preferred inclination. But it is thought that all these 'out-of-plane' objects were ejected from the inner system by gravitational interactions ('slingshots') later on.
[Edited for sense, duh.]