revelator
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Is anyone know if there exists any solar systems with more than three stars? If so, does anyone know what the largest amount of stars a solar system is known to have?
The discussion revolves around the existence of solar systems with more than three stars, specifically focusing on the potential for planetary systems within such multi-star configurations. Participants explore various examples, theoretical implications, and the challenges associated with stable planetary orbits in these systems.
Participants express varying views on the feasibility of planetary systems in multi-star configurations, with no consensus on the stability of such orbits or the aesthetic implications of multiple suns. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the exact nature and characteristics of these systems.
Participants highlight the ambiguity in defining a "solar system" versus a "cluster," and the challenges in observing distant multi-star systems due to their rarity compared to binary and single star systems.
revelator said:Is anyone know if there exists any solar systems with more than three stars? If so, does anyone know what the largest amount of stars a solar system is known to have?
Some four star systems consist of two binary systems orbiting each other. May be this could be a stable configuration for planetary orbits...?Chronos said:Far as I know, a few are suspected in binary star systems, but not beyond that. It is not easy for a low mass object like a planet to occupy a stable orbit in a binary star system. Having two stars is bad enough, more than two would be a computational nightmare.
so why don't call this type of system a chaotic one?Chronos said:The picture gets a little blurry as you add more stars. There is no particular criteria for differentiating a system from a cluster. Globula clusters are gravitational bound systems that can include millions of stars. I'm curious though, in using the term solar system I had the impression you were asking whether planetary systems are known to occur in multiple star systems. Far as I know, a few are suspected in binary star systems, but not beyond that. It is not easy for a low mass object like a planet to occupy a stable orbit in a binary star system. Having two stars is bad enough, more than two would be a computational nightmare.
revelator said:I mean to imply, as planetary system with more than 3 stars. I got to thinking about it on the bus home, how beautiful sunrises and sunsets could be in such a system. Then got to thinking, should there be such a system with many stars, the planet surrounding it may go long periods of time without ever experiencing a night.
revelator said:Thanks very much for the responses. I mean to imply, as planetary system with more than 3 stars. I got to thinking about it on the bus home, how beautiful sunrises and sunsets could be in such a system. Then got to thinking, should there be such a system with many stars, the planet surrounding it may go long periods of time without ever experiencing a night.
revelator said:T I got to thinking about it on the bus home, how beautiful sunrises and sunsets could be in such a system.
That's Isaac Asimov's http://doctord.dyndns.org:8000/Stories/Nightfall.htm.Cosmo16 said:Issac Assimov wrote an amazing short story about just that kind of system. It tells of what happened when darkness finally comes after 2000 years of light.
ohwilleke said:The Orion Nebula (M42) has a four star system.
http://science.howstuffworks.com/telescope15.htm
So are h5188 , Lac. 8, Lac. Roe 47, Cygnus a 2658, and another four star system in Orion.
Lyr. Epislon and Capricorn Alpha are double-doubles.
See ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/astro/dbases/stars/multistr.txt
See also http://ad.usno.navy.mil/wds/dsl.html and http://sunra.lbl.gov/~vhoette/Explorations/BinaryStars/
Wikipedia claims that there are some systems with up to eight stars:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_star_system
. Capella is a multiple star system containing at least 9 stars, according to this page