by Ann » Thu Dec 01, 2016 11:41 pm
MarkBour wrote:
Today's APOD serendipitously illustrates just the kind of encounter I was asking about. We happen to have a star passing through a large cloud. Some basic questions are:
- What is the typical mass density of the cloud forming the Flaming Star nebula? and
- What would that come out to as a total mass?
Now, suppose, hypothetically, that AE Aurigae has a planetary system, much like our own. The question I'm wondering about, is: "Would passing through this cloud have any significant effect on the orbits of the planets? Could any of them get stripped away, or would there be any other alteration, less drastic, but still significant?"
I did a quick googling of "Flaming Star Nebula mass" and came up empty.
I think there can be no doubt that the nebula is tenuous. There seems to be agreement that the nebula is about 5 light years across. Obviously the nebula is not a flat disk but an irregular sphere, and its depth might well be 5 light years, too.
If AE Aurigae had not been there, there would have been no Flaming Star Nebula. Also we would not have seen a dark nebula against the background sky. (All right... infrared photography would definitely have detected dust in the region of the Flaming Star Nebula, but only cutting-edge visual photography would have spotted it.) I agree that AE Aurigae might act as a snowplow, piling up gas and dust in front of it, so that the nebula has become thicker because of AE Aurigae's effect on it than it would otherwise have been. Nevertheless, it is still very thin.
So while AE Aurigae has a great impact on its surroundings, its surroundings have little influence on AE Aurigae or on any planets it might have. The greatest danger to those planets would be AE Aurigae itself, at least if we are considering planets bearing life forms on their surfaces.
Jim Kaler wrote:
...AE's temperature measured at 36,500 Kelvin (anomalously high for its class; 33,000 might be better). In either case, the star is very luminous, between 26,000 and 33,000 times the luminosity of the Sun (depending on the temperature and the allowance for ultraviolet radiation) and massive (at least 17 times solar...
AE Aurigae can be expected to go supernova in, oh, twenty million years? In either case, you wouldn't want to be in orbit around such a monster star.
Ann
[quote="MarkBour"]
Today's APOD serendipitously illustrates just the kind of encounter I was asking about. We happen to have a star passing through a large cloud. Some basic questions are:[list] [*]What is the typical mass density of the cloud forming the Flaming Star nebula? and [*]What would that come out to as a total mass?[/list] Now, suppose, hypothetically, that AE Aurigae has a planetary system, much like our own. The question I'm wondering about, is: "Would passing through this cloud have any significant effect on the orbits of the planets? Could any of them get stripped away, or would there be any other alteration, less drastic, but still significant?"
[/quote]
I did a quick googling of "Flaming Star Nebula mass" and came up empty.
I think there can be no doubt that the nebula is tenuous. There seems to be agreement that the nebula is about 5 light years across. Obviously the nebula is not a flat disk but an irregular sphere, and its depth might well be 5 light years, too.
If AE Aurigae had not been there, there would have been no Flaming Star Nebula. Also we would not have seen a dark nebula against the background sky. (All right... infrared photography would definitely have detected dust in the region of the Flaming Star Nebula, but only cutting-edge visual photography would have spotted it.) I agree that AE Aurigae might act as a snowplow, piling up gas and dust in front of it, so that the nebula has become thicker because of AE Aurigae's effect on it than it would otherwise have been. Nevertheless, it is still very thin.
So while AE Aurigae has a great impact on its surroundings, its surroundings have little influence on AE Aurigae or on any planets it might have. The greatest danger to those planets would be AE Aurigae itself, at least if we are considering planets bearing life forms on their surfaces.
[quote][url=http://stars.astro.illinois.edu/sow/aeaur.html]Jim Kaler[/url] wrote:
...AE's temperature measured at 36,500 Kelvin (anomalously high for its class; 33,000 might be better). In either case, the star is very luminous, between 26,000 and 33,000 times the luminosity of the Sun (depending on the temperature and the allowance for ultraviolet radiation) and massive (at least 17 times solar... [/quote]
AE Aurigae can be expected to go supernova in, oh, twenty million years? In either case, you wouldn't want to be in orbit around such a monster star.
Ann