Colliding Worlds cover art

Colliding Worlds

How Cosmic Encounters Shaped Planets and Life

Preview
Try Premium Plus free
Pick 1 audiobook a month from our unmatched collection - including bestsellers and new releases.
Unlimited access to our all-you-can-listen catalogue of 15K+ audiobooks and podcasts
Access exclusive sales and deals.
£8.99/month after 30 days. Renews automatically.

Colliding Worlds

By: Simone Marchi
Narrated by: Jonathan Todd Ross
Try Premium Plus free

£8.99/month after 30 days. Renews automatically. See here for eligibility.

Buy Now for £12.99

Buy Now for £12.99

About this listen

Some 4.6 billion years ago, a planetary system was born from a disc of gas and dust surrounding a young star.

Specks of dust, pushed into dense clumps, collided, stuck together, and grew. While the gas disappeared, the growing bodies clashed in a final violent phase, leaving a series of planets, and much debris. The planets jostled and moved around as they sought a stable arrangement, knocking many small fragments out of the system altogether while others formed a distant icy fringe. The massive violent collisions of this time gouged out vast craters from the newborn planets, and sometimes created moons.

Such was the birth of our Solar System. Only recently have scientists begun to find subtle clues of these ancient, violent times. Remarkably, they are still there, if we look carefully at the Earth’s oldest rocks, at Mars and the Moon with their ancient surfaces, and at the asteroids, which are themselves startlingly varied small worlds. Clues are also to be found in the meteorites that have landed on Earth. From such splinters, from the precious collection of lunar rocks brought back by the Apollo astronauts, and the information gleaned by spacecraft and the Mars rovers, we are slowly building up a picture of the early days of the planets.

Simone Marchi, a planetary scientist involved with several space missions including Dawn, captures the excitement of these discoveries. We learn of the evidence for an early dramatic rearrangement of the big planets; for a once warm and wet Mars where life perhaps still lurks today; and for the huge collisions that have shaped our own planet and affected life’s trajectory upon it. For all their destructive power, cosmic collisions have played a critical role in creation.

Without them, we would not exist.

©2021 Simone Marchi (P)2021 Recorded Books
Astronomy Astronomy & Space Science Science Solar System Interstellar Mars

Listeners also enjoyed...

One of Ten Billion Earths cover art
Worlds Without End cover art
Just Six Numbers cover art
The Little Book of Exoplanets cover art
Galileo's New Universe cover art
The Origins of Everything in 100 Pages (More or Less) cover art
All These Worlds Are Yours cover art
Astronomy: Explore the Truth About Universe, Galaxies, Dark Matter and the History of Astronomy cover art
Symphony in C cover art
Astrobiology cover art
When the Earth Had Two Moons cover art
Human Universe cover art
Strange New Worlds cover art
The Planets cover art
This Is Planet Earth cover art
Improbable Planet cover art
No reviews yet