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Our solar system is extremely weird: Best ideas of the century

Realising that our solar system isn鈥檛 like most others out there has helped astronomers rewrite the story of how it formed

By Alex Wilkins

19 January 2026

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Stephan Walter

The first few exoplanets were discovered in the early 1990s. But it wasn鈥檛 until the early 2000s, when astronomers began carrying out large-scale, long-term surveys of other stars, that we started to get the first hints that our solar system 鈥 with its neat arrangement of four rocky planets, then four gassy giants 鈥 might be unique.

For decades, the High Accuracy Radial Velocity Planetary Searcher in Chile and the California Legacy Survey watched for telltale orbital wobbles that exoplanets might induce in other stars. Though these surveys didn鈥檛 discover as many exoplanets as later telescopes like Kepler and TESS, they did find signs of just how unusual our solar system is.

This article is part of our special issue on the 21 best ideas of the 21st century.
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Our sun, for instance, is larger than 90 per cent of other stars. It is also alone, unlike other stars that have at least one or two close neighbours. Our planets, too, are rare: only around 1 in 10 stars have a Jupiter-sized planet, and when they do, these worlds are often on very different trajectories to Jupiter鈥檚 neat, round orbit. We are missing planets common to most other star systems 鈥 those known as super-Earths or sub-Neptunes, of between about 2 and 10 Earth masses. What’s more, even after finding thousands of exoplanets, we have yet to spot an Earth-like planet around a sun-like star, not to mention alien life.

鈥淭he weird things are both what we have and what we聽don’t聽have. Putting those together,聽we’re聽definitely weird,鈥 says聽 at the University of Bordeaux in France. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not clear yet whether we’re weird at the 1 per cent level, which is a little bit weird, or whether it’s really at the 1 in a million level.鈥

These discoveries also raised questions about how our solar system formed, such as why Jupiter is so far out, at around 700 million kilometres from the sun, rather than a fifth of that distance as we see for Jupter-sized planets in most other planetary systems. The strange orbits of certain exoplanets made astronomers rethink our system鈥檚 history, such as with the Nice model, first suggested in 2001, which posits that a dramatic rearrangement occurred not long after the solar system initially formed, kicking Jupiter out to the periphery and flinging many of the asteroids and moons we see today into new orbits.

鈥淭he idea that that could have happened at all came straight from exoplanets,鈥 says Raymond. 鈥淣ine out of every 10 giant exoplanet systems underwent an instability, and what we see is the aftermath… People saw that and connected the dots and said, 鈥榃ell, if it happened out there, could that have happened here?鈥欌

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