Post #10by selden » 12.10.2004, 11:13
Joe (Oh),
A barycenter isn't a physical object. It's not something you can literally see.
.
It's the "center of mass" of a collection of bodies.
It's exactly the same as the "center of gravity" of an irregularly shaped object, except that several separate objects are involved instead of just one.
The "center of mass" of any two bodies is somewhere
between them. When the two bodies have almost the same mass (weight), then the barycenter is almost exactly halfway between them. Usually, though, the bodies involved have quite different masses, so that the barycenter, the center of mass of the two of them, is somewhere inside one of the two. The barycenter of the Earth-Moon system, for example, is somewhere inside the Earth, on the line between the center of the Earth and the center of the Moon.
When you're watching a system of several different bodies from a distance, they seem to be orbiting around their mutual barycenter -- around their center of mass.
Does this clarify things at all?
Selden