by Chris Peterson » Tue Nov 17, 2009 7:29 pm
NoelC wrote:A long while back I read that planetary orbits around multiple star systems are not likely to be stable. Is that true (and thus an image like this, with the observer's planet and satellites? so close to the suns would not be possible) or have I been mislead
There are relatively stable solutions for planetary systems around binary stars, but they are the exception, and normally depend on the planets orbiting one star while the other star is far away. This is a system with two closely paired stars; I don't think there's any way you could have any planets in stable orbits around this pair. Add to that the bizarre moons: they are orbiting on a radically different plane than the ecliptic plane of the system. So presumably, the planet's axis is highly inclined, and I doubt that the moon system would be stable, either.
There is so much wrong with this image (what force is pulling the transferred material into a narrow beam? We should be seeing intersecting Roche lobes.) I think it is a disappointing APOD. I like fantasy space art just fine, but I like it on the cover of sci-fi books. There is good space art that does a much better job of presenting a realistic view of things we can't image, but this isn't in that category.
[quote="NoelC"]A long while back I read that planetary orbits around multiple star systems are not likely to be stable. Is that true (and thus an image like this, with the observer's planet and satellites? so close to the suns would not be possible) or have I been mislead[/quote]
There are relatively stable solutions for planetary systems around binary stars, but they are the exception, and normally depend on the planets orbiting one star while the other star is far away. This is a system with two closely paired stars; I don't think there's any way you could have any planets in stable orbits around this pair. Add to that the bizarre moons: they are orbiting on a radically different plane than the ecliptic plane of the system. So presumably, the planet's axis is highly inclined, and I doubt that the moon system would be stable, either.
There is so much wrong with this image (what force is pulling the transferred material into a narrow beam? We should be seeing intersecting Roche lobes.) I think it is a disappointing APOD. I like fantasy space art just fine, but I like it on the cover of sci-fi books. There is good space art that does a much better job of presenting a realistic view of things we can't image, but this isn't in that category.