Is it possible to find our Sun's siblings?

  • Thread starter saros
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In summary, the article discusses how it is difficult to determine where a star originally came from, and how open clusters, which are relatively short lived, are a likely source for stars like the Sun. The cover story of the March/April issue of Science Illustrated is about research into finding lost siblings of the Sun.
  • #1
saros
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As I understand it, our Sun formed as part of a cluster of stars, whose members have probably long since drifted apart. Is it possible we might be able to ever identify where those stars are now? Would they all be similar to the sun, having formed from the same cluster?
 
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  • #2
Hi saro,
welcome to PF

Have you got any reviewed references to that?
It wasn't something I was aware of and would be interested in reading up on
If there are credible sources of info. :)

Cheers
Dave
 
  • #3
Thank you.
Well, I have read many sources over the years that suggest our Sun was originally a member of a star cluster, but now I don't remember where I read these things. Information about Tau Ceti on Wikipedia suggests that our sun had a close encounter with another star early in it's lifetime that cleared it of much of it's debris, making life on Earth possible.
Also what led me to the question was this post here: https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=486208
 
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  • #4
It would be exceedingly difficult to backtrack 4 billion years of stellar motion to determine where our Sun came from. Also, star clusters produce a varied amount of stars, from small brown and red dwarfs to huge supergiants. While I'm sure that the composition and size of the gas clouds that collapse to form the star clusters have some bearing on the types of stars formed, I don't think that they would form only stars of one type.
 
  • #5
Thanks. I guess I was imagining that our sun formed from a giant molecular cloud that broke into many similar peices forming hundreds of stars just like our sun, now interspersed throughout the galaxy. I'd like to know who "Sol's" siblings are, where it originated and what happened to all those other stars. Perhaps if we could figure this out we might find other solar systems like ours, possibly with Earth like planets.
 
  • #6
There are plenty of stars similar in mass and composition to the Sun. We don't need to find the ones that formed with the Sun in order to find similar star systems to ours. Actually, Earth-like planets might form around a great many different types of stars, not just Sun-like ones.
 
  • #7
Thank you! I strongly disagree though. I believe the metallicity of the cloud that formed our sun had a great influence on the formation of solar systems with Earth like planets. I see it as a very delicate balance, and only solar systems with a metallicity nearly exactly that of our sun could possibly harbour Earth like planets.
However that is just my intuition.
 
  • #8
saros said:
Thank you! I strongly disagree though. I believe the metallicity of the cloud that formed our sun had a great influence on the formation of solar systems with Earth like planets. I see it as a very delicate balance, and only solar systems with a metallicity nearly exactly that of our sun could possibly harbour Earth like planets.
However that is just my intuition.

Believe what you want. Personally I expect to see a great many types of planets, including Earth-like ones, around many stars. The next few years should prove VERY enlightening!
 
  • #9
I very much like this discussion, even though we disagree. I expect the only Earth like planets will be found from molecular clouds nearly exactly like the one that formed our sun or the very one that formed it. Indeed, the next few years will be quite enlightening. Cheers.
 
  • #10
The March/April Issue of Science Illustrated has a cover story on this subject.
 
  • #12
Open clusters are relatively short lived. A few trips around the galaxy tends to widely disperse them.
 
  • #13
saros said:
Thank you! I strongly disagree though. I believe the metallicity of the cloud that formed our sun had a great influence on the formation of solar systems with Earth like planets. I see it as a very delicate balance, and only solar systems with a metallicity nearly exactly that of our sun could possibly harbour Earth like planets.
However that is just my intuition.

Hope so, as the sample of exoplanets goes larger, more details about planets can be revealed. If your idea is reasonable, there may be more similarities between stars having planets possible of forming life.
 

1. Is it possible to find other stars that are related to our Sun?

Yes, it is possible to find other stars that are related to our Sun. These stars are known as solar siblings and they are formed from the same molecular cloud as our Sun.

2. How do scientists identify solar siblings?

Scientists identify solar siblings by studying the chemical composition of stars. Solar siblings will have a similar chemical makeup to our Sun, as they were formed from the same molecular cloud.

3. How many solar siblings are estimated to exist?

It is estimated that there are hundreds of solar siblings in our galaxy, but only a few have been identified so far.

4. What information can we learn from studying solar siblings?

Studying solar siblings can provide valuable insights into the formation and evolution of our own Sun, as well as the processes that occur in other stars.

5. Is it possible for solar siblings to have habitable planets?

Yes, it is possible for solar siblings to have habitable planets. In fact, some studies suggest that solar siblings may be more likely to have Earth-like planets due to their similar chemical composition.

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