Could a Planet Thrive with Two Suns?

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In summary: If the planet is in a stable orbit around both stars, the length of day and night could be similar to Earth's, with some minor variations. However, if the planet is in an unstable or complex orbit, there could be significant temperature variations and potentially extreme weather patterns. Shadows could also be affected, depending on the relative positions and brightness of the two suns. Ultimately, the presence of two suns would greatly impact the planet's environment and could make for an interesting setting in a novel. In summary, the presence of two suns on a planet could greatly impact the length of day and night, casting
  • #1
baobeiiiii
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Hey,

this is a research question for a novel. All advice, comments are much appreciated.

Can a planet have two suns? If so, what are the implications on the length of day and night, casting of shadows, temperatures, etc. Does the planet revolve around just one sun or both at the same time?

Sorry that this is such a general question, thanks!
 
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  • #2
I think there are two realistic cases:

(1) Two stars orbiting each other, and a planet orbiting around both of them.

(2) A planet orbiting a star, and a second star orbiting the first star, but much further out.

The first case looks pretty much like life on Earth except there would be two close together suns where we have one. Day and night would be about the same as we have now, with some minor variations. Imagine a second sun in Mercury's orbit. Since Mercury is always close to the sun in the sky anyway, nothing much changes.

I think for a novel, the second case would be the most interesting. Imagine putting a second sun in Saturn's orbit. During part of the year there would be a second (but probably dimmer) sun in the sky when it would otherwise be night. Temperatures, etc. would depend on the relative brightnesses and distances of the two stars.
 
  • #3
Orbits of a planet around two suns as in phyzguy's first case are quite interesting. In the movie K-Pax the lead character claimed he came from a planet with two suns. After looking at the possible orbits for such a system I came to the conclusion that life on such a planet was not likely. Of course it all depends on relative sizes of the stars and how far apart they are etc. A stable circular or elliptic orbit with not too much eccentricity, possibly necessary for life, is a long way out making it a very cold place. Closer in orbits can be very complicated like figure eights etc, making the temperature variations very large.

If you do a search you will find some interesting information about these orbits. Recently some people posted calculations showing that some more stable orbits suitable for life are possible but I haven't verified these claims.
 
  • #4
the permutations are endless.
if the planet is close enough to the suns then the suns would most likely be orbiting each other.
we then have questions re size of planet which in turn will dictate how close to the suns the planet has to be to be in a stable orbit.
in a complex kelplerian system such as this that has lasted the the potential of being swallowed by the suns or being flung out you need to consider tidal heating and/or syncronization orbits...
a single sun is so much easier...
 
  • #6
http://arxiv.org/abs/0705.3444
Terrestrial planet growth within circumbinary disks was uninhibited around inner binary star systems with binary apastrons (maximum separation) less than ~0.2 AU. Results from our simulations can be scaled for different stellar and disk parameters. Approximately 50 - 60% of binary star systems - from contact binaries to separations of nearly a parsec - satisfy these constraints. Given that the galaxy contains more than 100 billion star systems, a large number of systems remain habitable based on the dynamic considerations of this research.

Kepler-16b is an example of such a planet, and it is within the habitable zone - if it would be smaller, it could have conditions similar to earth. It has one of the largest maximal angle (as seen from the planet) between the stars.

The other option ("2" in phyzguy's post) would be similar to an extremely bright planet - might be bright enough to give visible shadows for a human eye.
 
  • #7
What do you mean by "might be bright enough to give visible shadows for a human eye". You mean multiple shadows as in stadiums lit by flood lights?
 
  • #8
At night, without the main sun and during the right season to see the other star at night. To get a planetary disk around one star, the second star needs some reasonable separation - I might be visible during daytime (but it does not have to, it depends on the distance), but I doubt that you could see multiple shadows with human-like eyes.
 
  • #9
mfb said:
At night, without the main sun and during the right season to see the other star at night.

If you can see the other star it wouldn't be night would it :-)
 
  • #10
cosmik debris said:
If you can see the other star it wouldn't be night would it :-)

It might. If the 2nd star is far enough away or dim enough it would be similar to having a full moon or three. It's still night, it's just not pitch black.
 
  • #11
Suppose you took a star one tenth as bright as the sun and put it in Saturn's orbit. I think this is small enough that the Earth's orbit would still be stable. It would have an apparent magnitude of about -19, which makes it about 250 times as bright as the full moon. Not like a second sun, but much brighter than anything in our sky.
 
  • #12
phyzguy said:
Suppose you took a star one tenth as bright as the sun and put it in Saturn's orbit. I think this is small enough that the Earth's orbit would still be stable. It would have an apparent magnitude of about -19, which makes it about 250 times as bright as the full moon. Not like a second sun, but much brighter than anything in our sky.

A red dwarf such as Proxima Centauri has only about 1.7% the luminosity of the Sun and would probably be a very common star in binary systems. I'm not sure what the apparent magnitude would be if it were at Saturn's orbit.
 
  • #13
Drakkith said:
A red dwarf such as Proxima Centauri has only about 1.7% the luminosity of the Sun and would probably be a very common star in binary systems. I'm not sure what the apparent magnitude would be if it were at Saturn's orbit.

It would be about 5 times fainter than what I calculated, so about magnitude -17. Still about 50 times brighter than the full moon.
 
  • #14
Why not choose Sirius as your binary star.
 
  • #15
baobeiiiii said:
Hey,

this is a research question for a novel. All advice, comments are much appreciated.

Can a planet have two suns? If so, what are the implications on the length of day and night, casting of shadows, temperatures, etc. Does the planet revolve around just one sun or both at the same time?

Sorry that this is such a general question, thanks!

The coolest case would be where it orbits the suns in a figure-8 pattern. There would be great extremes of temperature. The orbit would be chaotic. You could have the inhabitants advanced enough to have some sort of control over the orbit, since a chaotic orbit can be influenced by very small changes. Then the orbit of the planet would be a big political issue. Some beings would have evolved to favor one star or the other, so there would be a huge debate.
 
  • #16
phyzguy said:
It would be about 5 times fainter than what I calculated, so about magnitude -17. Still about 50 times brighter than the full moon.

So night time would be similar to twilight here on Earth then?
 
  • #17
phyzguy said:
Suppose you took a star one tenth as bright as the sun and put it in Saturn's orbit. I think this is small enough that the Earth's orbit would still be stable. It would have an apparent magnitude of about -19, which makes it about 250 times as bright as the full moon. Not like a second sun, but much brighter than anything in our sky.
I don't think you get a real planetary disk if the companion star is so close, unless there is some mechanism which captured the planet (or the star) after the initial formation of the system.Known exoplanets in binary systems
Table A.4 and A.5 list 59 known exoplanets orbiting a single star with a single known companion. The closest companions are at a separation of 20-21 AU, where the planets have an orbital radius of 0.02 to 2.4 AU.
The other values are lower limits on the separation (projected distance as seen by us) - two additional systems have a minimal separation below 100 AU, all other 40 systems (with 52 planets) have a separation of more than 100 AU.
Table A.6 lists 11 exoplanets in systems with 3 or more stars. Two planets might be in systems with less than 100 AU separation between the stars.

A closer look on those close (20-21 AU) systems:
γ Cephei A with 1.4 solar masses has an exoplanet with an orbital radius of 2 AU, Companion star γ Cephei B is a red dwarf with 0.4 solar masses
Gl 86 A has a planet with an orbital radius of just 0.11 AU.
HD 41004 has an orange and a red dwarf, both have one known exoplanet each. HD 41004 Bb has an orbital radius of <0.02 AU, HD 41004 Ab has some weird orbit with an eccentricity of 0.74.
HD 196885 A has a red dwarf as companion, the exoplanet has an eccentricity of ~0.5.

A binary separation of ~10 times the orbital radius (this corresponds to earth<->saturn) is possible, but it is very rare and leads to eccentric orbits.
 
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  • #18
The list of binary star planets is obsolete.

Consider Toliman B planets.

Bb is generally believed to exist. Since planets are lettered in order of discovery, not location, it shall stay Bb.

Since the bolometric luminosity of Toliman B is estimated at 0,500 solar, the habitable zone lies at 0,707 AU. Let´s call a planet there as Bc.

The smallest distance between B and A is 11,2 AU at periastron. Then the distance between Bc and A goes down to 10,5 AU.

The luminosity of Toliman A is 1,52 solar. Thus, at the nearest approach, the light cast by Toliman A on BC is almost 1,4 % of sunlight.

Regarding comparisons: full sunlight is about 129 000 lux.
Clear blue sky with Sun at zenith but in shade is about 20 000 lux, in Earth atmosphere at sea level.

The illumination of a horizontal surface right at dawn or dusk by clear sky illuminated by sun right below horizon is 400 lux.

With Toliman A at closest approach and at zenith - not only would it cast shadows (so does Moon) but the sky would be blue, and the direct light would be enough not only for general illumination but for demanding tasks. The blue sky would be only slightly dimmer than at setting or rising Toliman B.
 
  • #19
α Centauri B has one known exoplanet, and that is not in the habitable zone.

Let´s call a planet there as Bc.
Do you have any reason to expect such a planet? In addition, how would its orbit look like?

Then the distance between Bc and A goes down to 10,5 AU.
Depends on the 3-dimensional orientation of the orbits.
 
  • #20
mfb said:
α Centauri B has one known exoplanet, and that is not in the habitable zone.


Do you have any reason to expect such a planet?
No specific reason to expect exactly this to exist.

On the other hand, γ Cephei B approaches about as close to A as does α Centauri A to B, and γ Cephei Ab manages to orbit unperturbed as far away as 2 AU. Thus, there is no specific reason for α Centauri B habitable zone to be empty.

mfb said:
In addition, how would its orbit look like?
Relative ordinary low eccentricity orbit around α Centauri B with minor perturbations from A (presumably precession of the nodes and apsides).
mfb said:
Depends on the 3-dimensional orientation of the orbits.

Probably at a low inclination to the AB orbital plane. High inclination would be more vulnerable to perturbations.
 
  • #21
ImaLooser said:
The coolest case would be where it orbits the suns in a figure-8 pattern. There would be great extremes of temperature. The orbit would be chaotic. You could have the inhabitants advanced enough to have some sort of control over the orbit, since a chaotic orbit can be influenced by very small changes. Then the orbit of the planet would be a big political issue. Some beings would have evolved to favor one star or the other, so there would be a huge debate.

:D That would be interesting.

the_emi_guy said:
Why not choose Sirius as your binary star.

Unfortunately, Sirius B doesn't seem to be too bright, so it wouldn't have much of an effect.

Now, even more interesting would be a trinary star system. (Or even quaternary.) That would allow for some pretty bizarre life. From an earthling's point of view, I mean.
 
  • #22
snorkack said:
On the other hand, γ Cephei B approaches about as close to A as does α Centauri A to B
There is a factor of 2 between the semi-major axes, and the closest approach corresponds to a higher velocity -> short time there.

and γ Cephei Ab manages to orbit unperturbed as far away as 2 AU.
ε=0.115
Roughly circular, but more eccentric than any planet in our solar system apart from mercury.

In addition, it is the only known system with those properties, indicating that those planets could be quite rare. Possible, but rare - even more if you want to decrease the semi-major axis by a factor of 2.
 
  • #23
Errai AB semimajor axis - 20,2 AU
eccentricity 0,41
period 67,5 years

Toliman AB semimajor axis - 23,4 AU
eccentricity 0,51
period 79,9 years.
 
  • #24
Oh, I misinterpreted your previous post:
snorkack said:
The smallest distance between B and A is 11,2 AU at periastron. Then the distance between Bc and A goes down to 10,5 AU.

Ok, the stellar orbits are similar.

Gamma Cephei A (with planet) has 1.4 solar masses, Gamma Cephei B has 0.4 solar masses. The companion has less mass and less gravitational influence.

Alpha Centauri B (with planet) has 0.9 solar masses, Alpha Centauri A has 1.1 solar masses.
The companion has more mass.
The relative ratios differ by a factor of 4,6.
 
  • #25
If you allow me the license, I thought I would add a marginally off-topic post; perhaps still useful if comparisons to Earth are intended. It involves changes to our own solar system, rather than planets formed from scratch in a binary system, so admittedly not the same.

I was rewatching the movie "2010" recently, which ends (I assume this is no spoiler by now) with Jupiter becoming a second sun. I am no physicist myself, but perhaps many of the other posters may confirm my Wikipedia speculation that this would certainly be no paradise for us.

First, if we are worrying about global warming, now imagine adding a second sun sourcing heat to the planet. But this is not really the worst.

For Jupiter to emit visible light, it would have to increase its mass at least 70-80 times (fusion of elements other than hydrogen may start to occur at a smaller mass, but these would only make it glow in the infrared, like what we know as "brown dwarf" stars; for a shiny second sun you really need to fuse hydrogen). But, as the mass of Jupiter increases that much, it will also start falling towards the sun. Guess who is in the middle. At the very least, a large asteroid belt is. So now you have sort of a kitchen blender splashing rocks at the outskirts of your planetary system. But this is not still the worst.

As Jupiter normally orbits the sun, its present mass makes the sun "wobble" - but not by much: just about as much as the sun's radius, but not really much more. A Jupiter that is 70-80 more massive would make the wobbling extremely close to the orbit of Mercury, at least at Jupiter's current distance (granted, less so as Jupiter starts falling in). Now Mercury gets into a violent eccentric orbit; it may or may not fall into the sun, but it may eventually get fractured in pieces by the violence of its new orbit. So now you have another splashing blender in the middle. But this is not yet the worst.

The rest of the inner planets, Venus, Earth and Mars, will likely leave their almost-circular orbits acquired after billions of years of relative quietness. So now, instead of some dozen degrees of temperature difference per year, your planet (assuming it doesn't smash into something, which it eventually will) may likely have a couple hundred degrees of difference between summer and winter. During the summer, lava will run the surface and stones will melt; in the winter, you will be breathing liquid nitrogen instead of air. Bad for your health.

As said, not the same as the OP's request. But the post was intended to illustrate how relatively peaceful, boringly circular our neighborhood is. And how very different life may have to be (perhaps even subterranean, away from the surface; perhaps without an atmosphere at all) in order to survive planets in eccentric orbits, subject to violent tidal forces and temperature extremes.
 
  • #26
I think the movie did not mention any increase in the Jupiter mass - the object somehow catalyzed fusion (?).
A significant larger Jupiter mass would scatter objects in the asteroid belt all over the solar system - even if our orbit stays reasonable, this would be a serious threat.
 
  • #27
On the limit of extremely massive perturbing body, Moon is perfectly stable long term and has a modest eccentricity although it completes only 13 7/19 orbits in one orbit of te perturbing body. And around Jupiter, S/2003 J 2 has a period almost one quarter that of the perturbing body.
 
  • #28
As was said earlier, there are many possible permutations and outcomes depending on the exact orbital size and mass of the planets. One possible permutation that was not brought up is that the planet will orbit around both stars as they orbit each other.

To understand this, imagine the figure 8 or infinity sign if you will. The planet will orbit in this shape with 2 suns at the focii of the figure ( means the two suns would be in 2 spaces in the figure ).

The implications would be that the planet experences 9 distinct seasons: 4 around one star, 4 around the other star, and one in between the two. The one in between will have the condiition of constant sunlight for that season since the sun shines from both directions. The 4 seasons per star are governed by the distance,size and temperature of that particular star. For example , a winter around 1 and a very cold winter around the other.
 
  • #29
Dodo said:
I

But, as the mass of Jupiter increases that much, it will also start falling towards the sun.

Not so. Masses and densities have nothing to do with orbits. What really matters is angular velocity. If the extra mass changed angular velocity then the orbit would become elliptical.

It is true that randomly adding 80 Jupiter masses to the Solar System would have a major effect on its stability.

I bet Clarke added a Baim Capital Fu-Zo-Matic to catalyze fusion. I don't know whether that is possible.
 
  • #30
aerrowknows said:
One possible permutation that was not brought up is that the planet will orbit around both stars as they orbit each other.
.

Hah! Beat you to it. I think that that is the most interesting scenario. There would be temperature extremes so human life seems impractical, you can have fun inventing some other forms.
 

1. Could a planet survive with two suns?

Yes, it is possible for a planet to survive and thrive with two suns. In fact, there are several known exoplanets (planets outside of our solar system) that orbit binary star systems, which are systems with two stars.

2. How would having two suns affect the climate on a planet?

The climate on a planet with two suns would be significantly different than on a planet with one sun. The amount of sunlight and heat received would vary depending on the distance and orbit of the planet from the two suns. This could result in extreme temperature variations and potentially create habitable zones where life could exist.

3. Would a planet with two suns have longer or shorter days?

It would depend on the distance and orbit of the planet from the two suns. If the planet is closer to the two suns, the days would likely be shorter as it would experience more frequent sunrises and sunsets. If the planet is further away, the days could potentially be longer as it would take longer for the two suns to set and rise again.

4. Can a planet have two habitable zones with two suns?

Yes, it is possible for a planet with two suns to have two habitable zones, where conditions are suitable for life to exist. This would depend on the distance and orbit of the planet from the two suns, as well as the strength and type of radiation emitted by the two suns.

5. Would a planet with two suns have multiple seasons?

Yes, a planet with two suns could experience multiple seasons due to the varying distance and orbit of the planet from the two suns. This could result in different levels of sunlight and heat, causing changes in weather patterns and potentially creating distinct seasons.

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