Most Stars Are Single 100
An anonymous reader writes to tell us Space.com is reporting that 'for more than 200 years, astronomers thought that most of the stars in our galaxy had stellar companions. But a new study suggests the bulk of them are born alone and never have stellar company.' The key difference seems to come from the difference between the highly turbulent clouds that produce massive stars in groups and the less active smaller clouds that produce red dwarfs."
Re:Mod Funny! He's being PUNNY! (Score:2)
Myspace.com (Score:5, Funny)
Sure. (Score:3, Funny)
What? RTFA? Huh, you're new here.
Anyway, where was I, oh yeah, Stars and their divorce rate...
It's disappointing... (Score:2, Funny)
The longer I live, the less enamored I am with science. I was always taught that it's this great infallible thing, that science only knows fact. This is a prime example of just how wrong science can be. I suppose I'm ju
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
What I meant was that nearly every time I've heard extrasolar planets discussed at any length, someone makes it a point to say that the vast majority of star systems are binary or trinary, so simple and predictable planetary cycles like ours are rare. The finding that most stars don't have partners changes all that.
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1, Informative)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:3)
I thought that was only the case in SOVIET RUSSIA...
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:5, Insightful)
Whoever taught you were incorrect then. Science's biggest strength is the fact that it is based around the concept that what we know can, and likely is wrong, and that it can only be verified by observing facts.
In this case, it's quite like relativity generalising Newton's laws - for large, easily observable stars, this rule holds true. But more detailed measurements indicate errors which happen in 'special' (or, in truth, more general) condition.
Development in science is nothing to be afraid of - sure, we were wrong in the past, and probably still are, but now we're a little more right. Maybe it's not a big problem, but it's better than sticking our heads in the sand and never learning.
(Besides, everyone knows Astrophysicists aren't real scientists... or at least that's what I tell my friends in that department. They usually don't disagree :) )
Not Real Scientists? (Score:1)
Ha HAA!!
Re:Not Real Scientists? (Score:1)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Or maybe some Cosmetologists wandered into the wrong building...
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:3, Insightful)
I agree with you in both cases, that this is science's greatest strength and it was incorrectly presented.
HOWEVER, I'll also point out that - barring a few scientists that are very forthright about the limits of their knowledge with "Well, we're pretty sure about X, but we don't know how it explains
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:2, Insightful)
I dunno, my undergrad particle physics was taught by stepping through all the developments of the 'facts' in that area, showing what evidence demonstrated they went wrong, what the new model was, and so forth. And finished up with modern questions and details of experiments which are working on them. Similarly, one of my QM lecturers loved to set assignments researching the background of open questions or significant limitations in QM as taught. An excellent example of h
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1, Insightful)
Key word in science: THEORY.
There is no truth.
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:2)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:2, Insightful)
Recall that Astrophysics is still a relatively young science. As we acquire new observational tools, we find ourselves with more and better data. And so assumptions are adjusted.
It's not flip-flopping. It's learning.
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:3, Insightful)
I know you are somewhat joking, but...
The point of scientific truth, is that there are no constant truths except maybe speed of light. (Even then people are trying to disprove that as we speak)
You must assume everything
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:5, Informative)
It's probable that *everything* you have been taught will some day have to be "unlearned". In this case, as with many others, it's not so much that what you were taught was wrong, only that it was imprecise. The article reaffirms that it is still true that most of the bright stars in the sky are members of multiple-star systems. Just the previously unobserved swarm of very dim, red stars seem to be largely isolated. Still consistent with previous observations.
live longer, then (Score:2)
Problem is, the longer I live, the even less confident I am that { religion | philosophy | technology | love | sex | games | sailboats | witty dialogue | et cetera } provides any reliable answers, either. I'm almost beginning to suspect the problem is not with the tools but with the tool-users...
But anyway, it's a question of relative rates. I think if you live long enough,
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Then the earth was the center of the galaxy and everything revolved around us, and now we're just some random planet in billions that rotates around other things.
And now not all the stars have partners?!? That's crazy talk! I mean, people that believe that nonsense are heretics!
But seriously, I thought we figured this out before... Oh well, I could be wrong. Suppose if we did, we just made sure this time, which i
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:2)
There are theories, and there are theorems. (Score:2)
The longer I live, the less enamored I am with science. I was always taught that it's this great infallible thing, that science only knows fact. This is a prime example of just how wrong science can be.
Science has theories and theorems. Theorems are proven; theorems are fact. On the other hand, theories are probably true, but not proven yet. The theory that most stars are binary was ...a theory, i.e. not yet established with any scientific proof. So it is hardly disappointing for me that there was a cha
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
No, they were mostly religious figures. Scientists, or at least those participating in reason-based free inquiry about the natural world and our role in it, were sometimes hung for the words they uttered.
"Things haven't moved on that much with the illusion of intellect from a scientific mind. As with anything sci
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Well, it's not a particularly surprising response. I understand the human capacity for reason as the force preventing us from living like animals and grunting in amazement at fires and moonlight. Responding with distaste for the suggestion that this capacity should perpetuate its past errors in judgment, such as religion and astrology, is pretty predictable.
"Next time, maybe try and reply with some sense of wh
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
One thing is obvious from the rambling quality of your posts, your denial of absolute knowledge paired with groundless declarations, and inability to see that today's technology was yesterday's science: you have nothing more than words without meaning, the "blarney chattering's and mind murmurings" to which you refer. I wonder what purpose you see in communication between people.
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:2)
You maintain that scientists follow the "dogma" of some kind of science clergy, and that they should abandon their current methods and look for "alternate" explanations.
It's very likely that you are a highly religious person who is unable to imagine a world view without religious belief of some kind. I would wager you regard atheism and agnotisism as "belief systems", even though they are nothing of the kind. You must understand
Re:It's disappointing... (Score:1)
Marketing fiasco! (Score:5, Funny)
w00t!!! (Score:1)
Rats!!!
I knew it was too good to be true!
That's the beauty of science, update your theories when new data is recieved.
Insert obligatory joke... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Insert obligatory joke... (Score:1)
(hollywood for those that are a bit slow)
Re:Insert obligatory joke... (Score:2)
Didja hear that?!? I'm a Star!!
Re:Insert obligatory joke... (Score:2)
[/sarcasm]
Re:Insert obligatory joke... (Score:2)
Just ask your significant other...
(I know, this was a cruel one.)
Quality (Score:5, Interesting)
In astronomy class 4 years ago I learned that most solar systems were binary or more complex, so this is very interesting news indeed. I wonder if this improves the chances of more solar systems having planetary companions, since I'd think it less likely for binary or trinary systems to have planets since more matter in the system is taken up in star mass.
This might also increase the calculable possibility for habitible planets in our galzaxy too.
Re:Quality (Score:2)
So. Yeah. Woo.
Quality .. has sunk? Done sank, has barnacles! (Score:1)
Re:Quality .. has sunk? Done sank, has barnacles! (Score:2)
It's funnier if *I* ask *You* the user with a much lower user ID, that question.
The headline byeline could have been:
From the "there are 10 kinds of binary" department.
Re:Quality .. has sunk? Done sank, has barnacles! (Score:1)
Re:Quality (Score:1)
Re:Quality (Score:2)
That's not the only reason. It's much less likely that a planet will have a stable orbit in a multi-star system, unless one of the stars is very far from the center of gravity. Even so, the chance of ther being a stable orbit inside the star's habitable zone (For earth-like values of habitable.) are very small.
Or the other way... (Score:2)
Re:Or the other way... (Score:2)
Re:Quality (Score:2, Funny)
Now, are you sure that for those stars, the same problem doesn't apply? So most of the easily visible stars are married. However you usually only see the stars produced in big clouds like Hollywood, but there are also e.g. porn stars which are not as easily observed (a regular cinema isn't sufficient for their observation).
well i guess i dont feel so bad.. (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:well i guess i dont feel so bad.. (Score:1)
Yeah, you're still a loser.
But it's OK, so am I.
Re:Of course they are... (Score:1)
Sigh - fooled again (Score:3, Funny)
sheesh!
Re:Sigh - fooled again (Score:4, Funny)
Oh dear, where to begin:
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Oh yeah (Score:1)
Re:Sigh - fooled again (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Sigh - fooled again (Score:1)
Re:Sigh - fooled again (Score:1, Insightful)
That's only a function of the probability of meeting them and making a good first impression upon such meeting. Some celebs do date non-celebs; mostly rich non-celebs, but not always. The most significant limits (in order of precedence) to a relationship like that are:
a) Believing that your are unworthy or incapable of such a relationship, in which case, where do you draw the line? Believing "I'm not good enough for X" precludes X from happening. It
Re:Sigh - fooled again (Score:1)
When you mean 'chance', what's the probability you are stating here?
A blow to the nemesis theory. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:A blow to the nemesis theory. (Score:1)
Re:A blow to the nemesis theory. (Score:2)
True, not true (Score:4, Informative)
However, from my reading it seems that the conventional wisdom that most sun-like stars are binaries is still true. I once learned the humorous mnemonic "Three out of every two stars is a binary".
Re:True, not true (Score:2)
Re:True, not true (Score:1)
Re:True, not true (Score:2)
Re:True, not true (Score:1)
Re:True, not true (Score:2)
Doesn't anyone read the supermarket tabloids? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Old News (Score:3, Informative)
For those who care about the background, the binary frequency has been shown pretty clearly to depend on mass. Solar-mass stars have binary frequencies of at least 60%, stars of 0.5 solar masses have binary frequencies of ~35%, and very low-mass stars and brown dwarfs (under 0.2 solar masses) have binary frequencies of around 10-20%. The binary frequency among more massive stars appears to be even higher than for solar-mass stars.
The popular reason to care about binary frequencies is to determine the frequency with which planetary systems could occur. If you're interested in habitable planets around solar-type stars, the higher binary frequency is one to care about. The frequency with which planets could form around lower-mass stars is intrinsically interesting since they're so common, but they're also much harder to detect any of these planets using existing indirect methods, so it's a harder question to actually answer. Once we have the ability to directly image planets, the problem will invert itself since it's easier to see planetary companions to faint stars than bright stars.
planet formation and ET (Score:2)
And this is probably because it impacts the probability of intelligent life elsewhere, yes?
But the thing is, I have my doubts about the formation of habitable planets being the rate-limiting step, the key term in the Drake Equation, so to speak. I'm thinking the rate of spontaneous creation of life could be the really tough step. Maybe the rate of habitable planet formation isn't awf
Lonely Stars (Score:2)
Others who have had relationships with Black holes have said "Once you've gone Black , there is no going back, especially once you cross the event horizon"
For those Red Dwarf fans :-) (Score:2, Funny)