Physics question for my book.

General physics and astronomy discussions not directly related to Celestia
Topic author
Hunter Parasite
Posts: 265
Joined: 18.09.2005
With us: 19 years 3 months
Location: CT

Physics question for my book.

Post #1by Hunter Parasite » 16.06.2006, 22:19

This is an interesting scenario. Lets just say that there are THREE gravitational fields in a tight cluster. Could a planet or planetoid form in this in this cluster, more importantly can a star? Im not expecting you know, unless some of you are gods, but I want a general possibility. I am molding the home worlds of the three insectoid species that form the space pirates.

buggs_moran
Posts: 835
Joined: 27.09.2004
With us: 20 years 2 months
Location: Massachusetts, USA

Post #2by buggs_moran » 17.06.2006, 01:08

Depends on what you mean by tight, among other things.
Homebrew:
WinXP Pro SP2
Asus A7N8X-E Deluxe
AMD Athlon XP 3000/333 2.16 GHz
1 GB Crucial RAM
80 GB WD SATA drive
ATI AIW 9600XT 128M

Topic author
Hunter Parasite
Posts: 265
Joined: 18.09.2005
With us: 19 years 3 months
Location: CT

Post #3by Hunter Parasite » 17.06.2006, 12:12

tight as in, 2/3 of the distance from the earth to the moon.

buggs_moran
Posts: 835
Joined: 27.09.2004
With us: 20 years 2 months
Location: Massachusetts, USA

Post #4by buggs_moran » 17.06.2006, 23:27

Not at that scale. 2/3 of the distance from the Earth to the Moon is only 256,000 km. That is a bit more than a third of the Sun's radius. That is not to say you couldn't have three Earth sized white dwarves in that volume, but it would be very unlikely from what I understand. From what I know, trinary systems are inherently unstable. One of the members usually gets ejected out. There are some binary systems that could fit within the volume of our Sun.
Homebrew:

WinXP Pro SP2

Asus A7N8X-E Deluxe

AMD Athlon XP 3000/333 2.16 GHz

1 GB Crucial RAM

80 GB WD SATA drive

ATI AIW 9600XT 128M

Topic author
Hunter Parasite
Posts: 265
Joined: 18.09.2005
With us: 19 years 3 months
Location: CT

Post #5by Hunter Parasite » 18.06.2006, 12:53

Ok, we've ruled out the trianry system, how about, instead of stars, planets the size of mars? heh, it rhymes.

buggs_moran
Posts: 835
Joined: 27.09.2004
With us: 20 years 2 months
Location: Massachusetts, USA

Post #6by buggs_moran » 18.06.2006, 14:55

Too unstable.
Homebrew:

WinXP Pro SP2

Asus A7N8X-E Deluxe

AMD Athlon XP 3000/333 2.16 GHz

1 GB Crucial RAM

80 GB WD SATA drive

ATI AIW 9600XT 128M

ajtribick
Developer
Posts: 1855
Joined: 11.08.2003
With us: 21 years 4 months

Post #7by ajtribick » 18.06.2006, 15:06

You could check out Gravity Simulator to test whether your scenarios are stable. It won't tell you whether objects will form in certain regions, but you should be able to eliminate unstable end-configurations.

Topic author
Hunter Parasite
Posts: 265
Joined: 18.09.2005
With us: 19 years 3 months
Location: CT

Post #8by Hunter Parasite » 18.06.2006, 17:18

Thanks, that can help with my many 'unusual' systems.


Return to “Physics and Astronomy”