by johnnydeep » Thu Jul 13, 2023 3:14 pm
Hmm, 50 young stars within a volume of about a cubic lightyear! This makes me wonder whether, if, over time, it is natural for sibling stars to migrate away from each other, which behavior would seem to be necessary to explain why most older stars - like our Sun - are found several lightyears apart. The counter case I suppose would be much larger nurseries of stars which might tend to form large clusters of stars that manage to stay together due to a stringer collective gravity?
Hmm, 50 young stars within a volume of about a cubic lightyear! This makes me wonder whether, if, over time, it is natural for sibling stars to migrate away from each other, which behavior would seem to be necessary to explain why most older stars - like our Sun - are found several lightyears apart. The counter case I suppose would be much larger nurseries of stars which might tend to form large clusters of stars that manage to stay together due to a stringer collective gravity?