Are There Habitable Planets Orbiting Alpha Centauri?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the potential for habitable planets in the Alpha Centauri system, which is a trinary system consisting of stars A, B, and C. While Alpha Centauri A and B may allow for stable planetary orbits within their habitable zones, the overall likelihood of finding hospitable worlds is debated due to orbital instability. Concerns are raised about the effectiveness of current detection methods, as the proximity of Alpha Centauri does not necessarily enhance our ability to identify planets. The conversation also references the fictional exploration of this system, highlighting a mix of skepticism and curiosity about its real-world potential. Ultimately, the search for planets in this nearby star system remains an ongoing challenge for astronomers.
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An article about the likely magnitudes and feasibility of terrestrial sized rocky planets orbiting in the habitable zones in the Alpha Centauri system:

(link removed)AA
http://www.publishedauthors.net/aa_spaceagent/
 
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Are you trying to sell that book here or something? Looks like science fiction to me.
 
But didn't the Robinsons already explore that area of space?
 
Alpha Centauri is a trinary system. I dought you'll find any hospitible worlds there. The orbits are just to unstable.
 
hypatia said:
But didn't the Robinsons already explore that area of space?

No, that's where they were headed, but they never actually got there because they became Lost in Space
 
Entropy said:
Alpha Centauri is a trinary system. I dought you'll find any hospitible worlds there. The orbits are just to unstable.

Alpha Centuari A and B have a closest approach of about 11 AU. This means that both have a zone in which they could have stable planetary orbits that extends out to 2 AU from each star. Alpha Centauri C is too small and far away to have any significant effect on the stabilty of planets around the other two (In fact, it is not even clear whether C is even gravitationally bound to A and B)
 
Alpha Centuari A and B have a closest approach of about 11 AU. This means that both have a zone in which they could have stable planetary orbits that extends out to 2 AU from each star.

Of course it is possible for stable orbits to exist, but it isn't that likely.
 
You would have thought being the nearest star system to ours that we'd have found planets already.
 
To support your statement.

I would say that the statement "One cannot see the forest for the trees" applies here.:biggrin:


FeynmanMH42 said:
You would have thought being the nearest star system to ours that we'd have found planets already.
 
  • #10
Have people looked for planets there? I would think we could have deteced planets if they were there.
 
  • #11
Alpha Centauri being closest star system doesn't really benefit the detection techniques. We're not trying to "see" the planets. We're trying to measure a doppler shift in a star's velocity caused by an orbiting planet.
 
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