granthutchison wrote:They can't reach maximum elongation at the same time, because they're constrained to be on opposite sides of the centre of mass - when one reaches max elongation, the other is either well past it or still approaching it. You've worked out sin(0.5/2.5), which is correct for the max elongation of one star, but their farthest separation is going to be closer to 2*tan(0.5/2.5) - ie, when they're in the 90-degree position.
That's when they should be farthest apart from eachother, yes - and it does look like that happens when they are in the 90 degrees position (I swung above the system at that point to take a look).
But each star should apparently still be a maximum of 11.536 degrees from the CoM when it's at 'the 78 degree position' (0 degrees being the line from the CoM to the planet), but that doesn't seem to be happening at all - it looks like they're at the widest separation from the CoM at 90 degrees, and the separation is too small. It doesn't sound like my calculation is in error (for once!), and I can't see anything wrong in the ssc file... the orbits aren't eccentric, the stars' periods and distances are exactly the same and the orientation is correct. I'm using the FOV measurements at the bottom right of the screen to tell me the angular diameter of my field of view - am I misinterpreting that, or could it be wrong?
I dunno if this will give you an idea what I'm doing... Star2 is on the right there at the edge of the top view (the view from the planet). The bottom view is the view from above the system, but you can't really see exactly where the stars and planet are.