Chris Peterson » Wed Aug 28, 2013 1:52 pm
No, this is not the case. The material in a nebula is only very loosely bound gravitationally. Some of the nebular mass is concentrated into stars as they are formed, and some is lost as the stellar radiation pressure causes it to dissipate. Gravitational perturbations very early on eject stars (that is, they are tweaked into hyperbolic orbits with respect to the center of mass of the nebula contents, including other stars). So there is no reason at all to think our solar system is anywhere near other stars that formed in the same stellar nursery, and we don't have enough information about the precise location and dynamics of all the galactic material to integrate very far backwards to find where things actually were long ago. In fact, this is probably an inherently unsolvable problem.
Viewed from Orion, I wonder about the shape of the "asterism or constellation" our Sun is a member of. Are the stars in constellations we see from Earth not bound by gravity? I imagine they are because the shapes they take are cyclical from our perspective. If so, how and when did this happen? Did they just randomly happen to catch each other as they travel in their respective hyperbolic orbits? Are the stars in the same constellation of same age and properties? Even if they are not, this does not mean they come from different nurseries.
There's little reason to think the nearest stars are siblings. Most differ significantly in age. Also, there is no reason to expect any original black holes to have remained local, nor to expect them to contribute significantly to any local center of gravity. Keep in mind these would simply be stellar mass black holes. Dynamically, they are no different from stars, but stars are far more abundant.
By siblings, I don't mean twins. If the original black holes did not remain local, were they also kicked out and took the hyperbolic trajectory wandering alone in the galaxy? As these black holes are of stellar mass, any chance there could be black holes with solid rocky planets? They would be pretty hard to see. So we will never know.
Why would you expect stars formed in a nebula to be orbiting a black hole formed by a supernova in that nebula? If they weren't orbiting the star that exploded (and generally, why would they be?) they won't be orbiting it after it becomes a black hole, and has even less mass than it started with.
What would determine the mass of the resulting black holes? From wikipedia : "A stellar black hole (or stellar mass black hole) is a black hole formed by the gravitational collapse of a massive star.[1] They have masses ranging from about 3 to several tens of solar masses.[2] The process is observed as a supernova explosion[citation needed] or as a gamma ray burst[citation needed]. These black holes are also referred to as collapsars."
"Our" black hole, or any stellar mass black hole, cannot be distinguished gravitationally from any star. Gravity wave detectors cannot detect ordinary black holes. Detectable gravity waves are formed by the collision of black holes, or by processes around supermassive black holes. These are completely different things.
Keep in mind that the shortest evaporation time for any type of black hole known to actually exist is something like 60 orders of magnitude longer than the age of the Universe. For all practical purposes, we can consider stellar mass black holes to last forever.
Galileo;s telescope has evolved and gave us the Hubble. Whose is to judge what future gravity/black hole wave detectors can do. Since these stellar black holes are very long lived, there is time for new detectors to evolve. No need to rush.