Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:You do not seem to read my posts well before answering. Sorry, if my English makes you suffer...
The english isn't making me suffer, its the maths... (well, maybe it's both. The fact you're not explaining things much in non-mathematical terms probably isn't helping)
Back up a bit though. If you can have a frame of reference where everything in the system orbits the barycentre, why does it have to be moving at all? Wouldn't the barycentre act as if it's an object that has the mass of the two stars, and everything else would follow an elliptical orbit around it?
You may always chose a frame of your liking. If you want to consider the movement for a fixed barycenter, that's fine. The main drawback is that this frame is unsuitable for binary star observations that provide the crucial input data! Here, you want to place the primary into the center of your micrometer view and measure the secondary's distance and polar angle relative to north, say. In this frame (where the primary is at rest in each observation, the initial conditions x(t0), v(t0) of the secondary at epoch t0 can easily be determined.
Sure enough, in this frame, the observer is moving
In your favorite frame, both the primary and the secondary are moving...
As I emphasized, the physics does not depend on the choice of frame. And different frames can be trivially transformed into each other by applying rotations and translations to the respective orthonormal basis vectors...
Bye Fridger