3-star system mechanics

From: Tim Ventura (TVentura@illuminet.com)
Date: Tue Feb 22 2000 - 23:52:33 MST


The three-star system is intriguing when you think about what the orbit of any planets must be like--it would seem offhand (of course I'm no physicist) that the energy from the combined three suns would cook the living heck out of anything on the planet's surface--you'd think that the people in the movie would get at least three times the exposure to solar radiation, which would be immediately unhealthy, at the very least. I suppose they might get less if the planet orbited farther out from the suns, though.

I'd bet that based on the assumed requirements for an M-class star, you could theoretically calculate the mechanics of the stable 3-star system without needing much information to go on. What I mean is that with 3 stars in such close proximity to each other, the solar orbits would almost seem self-defining.....if there was an exception to the orbit, the stars would have collided long before then. THEN, if you know what the solar orbital mechanics are, I'm sure that there could only be a very few different ways that a planet could orbit around one or more of these stars in a stable manner. And whoila! The mechanics are so complicated (at least to my tired brain tonight) that you end up with the self-defining system.



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