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So, given that to have life around Alpha Centauri you need planets, it appears that it's still possible - but maybe not too likely. Mike |
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Well I dunno about actually getting their via spacecraft (manned or not) but I could certainly see being able to take more precise readings of the system with advanced telescopes and whatnot.
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"Most editorials are written by people that love to argue but got kicked off debate team for not making any sense." -Seanbaby |
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Isn't Alpha Centauri a trinary system? I know I'm not well versed in this myself, but wouldn't a planet get kind of hot when its orbit is between Centauri A and B, or are they too far apart for the temperature of 1 star to effect a planet in orbit around the other? I'm also wondering if life could evolve on an imbalenced cycle where half the year most of your light comes from 1 star, and the other half receives a great deal more light from the other.
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Obedience brings victory Victory is life That is the order of things |
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No; the third member of the trinary, Proxima, is ten thousand astronomical units away, and would be a fifth magnitude star to the naked eye.
Neither of the main stars would be bright enough to warm the planets of the other appreciably; only the brighter of the two would ever appear as more than a point of light as seen from the other's planets (if any). At its closest, Alpha Centauri A show a tiny disk, and would be 100 times as bright as the Moon as seen from a hypothetical planet around Alpha Cen B; it would turn the night sky dark blue and drown out most of the stars, but would hardly add any warmth.
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Orion's Arm . The Starlark . Voices: Future Tense- Novella Contest Issue! . OA Flickr set |
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Obedience brings victory Victory is life That is the order of things |
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"I'm making wheatloaf. It's like meatloaf, only with wheat" "Isn't that just...bread?" |
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So could there be planets ejected from the system out there? Maybe exoarcheology might have a future.
Working on Celestia, I find that A never gets above -20 from B and B never gets above -18 from A at 1AU from either (although B is K1 so that probably isn't the best candidate anyway). Isn't the full moon -16?
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Freedom For Fission A breath of fresh Iodine-131 |
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"Most editorials are written by people that love to argue but got kicked off debate team for not making any sense." -Seanbaby |
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I agree with Brady. Life could easily start on a moon.
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Freedom For Fission A breath of fresh Iodine-131 |
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But you don't get a moon without a planet; them's the rules.
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Orion's Arm . The Starlark . Voices: Future Tense- Novella Contest Issue! . OA Flickr set |
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Picky, picky, picky.
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Freedom For Fission A breath of fresh Iodine-131 |
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Well, my usual source for this sort of thing let me down; Jim Kaler gives a brightness for Proxima as seen from A+B, but not A+B as seen from each other;
but I remembered a discussion of this topuic by Grant Hutchinson over at Celestia; he says that A would be a thousand times as bright as the full Moon when seen from B (at it's brightest and closest, of course)... Quote:
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Orion's Arm . The Starlark . Voices: Future Tense- Novella Contest Issue! . OA Flickr set |