Re: Solar System around 55 Cancri



On Thu, 08 Nov 2007 19:45:42 -0800, Sir Frederick
<mmcneill@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On Thu, 08 Nov 2007 14:29:06 GMT, Rumpelstiltskin <PleaseDoNotReplyByEmail@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:


Lehrer's newshour yesterday had an unusual segment about
a nearby solar system around a star 40 light years away, in the
constellation Cancer. The interesting thing is that there are
apparently five planets so far around this star, which is evidence
supporting the idea that solar systems are common. The planets
around 55 Cancri are huge by our solar system's standard, the
four smaller ones being about the size of Neptune and the
more distant large one being four times the size of Jupiter, or
we wouldn't be able to detect them yet. We haven't actually
"seen" the planets, we just know they're there by analyzing the
wobble of the star that we can see. Similarly, our own sun
would move slightly back and forth as see from a distance,
because Jupiter pulls on the sun as it orbits around it.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/11/071106133058.htm
Analyzing the components of the wobble of 55 Cancri based
on five large planets pulling on it seems to me quite a difficult
project, because of the exactness required about the change
of position of the star over a period of time needed to allow
multivariate analysis of what components would be contributing
to its complex resultant pattern of motion.

55 Cancri is a yellow dwarf like our sun, and in addition to
its planetary system it has a red dwarf companion 1000 AU
away:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/55_Cancri

40 light years is fairly close to us. The closest star system
to Sol is the Alpha Centauri system four light years away, so
there are (ball-park) only about (40/4) cubed = 1000 stellar
systems that close to us.

My take on the situation is that life, intelligence, etc. is pervasive
throughout. Thus H. sapiens is in no way special, except for our own
hubris. "Life" is probable a tertiary side effect. Kind
of like dust on the stage floor. The main act is far beyond us.
We only have our local fragile garden to care take and imbue with
meaning, through just so stories.



"As flies to wanton boys are we to th' gods,
They kill us for their sport."
-- Shakespeare - King Lear, Act 4, scene 1

" Ah Love, could thou and I, with Fate conspire
To grasp this sorry scheme of things entire
Would we not shatter it to bits and then
Re-mould it closer to the heart's desire ?"
-- Khayyam/Fitzgerald - the Rubaiyat

"Do not trouble yourself with the gods. Their
concerns are not ours. Tend to your fields, and
love your children, for these are the affairs of Man."
-- from The Epic of Gilgamesh

The final words from Candide in Voltaire's
"Candide" are "but let us cultivate our garden".
.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Surviving your stars red giant phase
    ... the star is about to ... leave the main sequence and become a red giant. ... the Sun, except older. ... In terms of resources they have a Solar System very similar to ours. ...
    (rec.arts.sf.science)
  • Re: Surviving your stars red giant phase
    ... the star is about to ... leave the main sequence and become a red giant. ... the Sun, except older. ... In terms of resources they have a Solar System very similar to ours. ...
    (rec.arts.sf.science)
  • Re: Solar System around 55 Cancri
    ... That should have been "We can tell the mass of the ... planets from the mass of the star and the amount of ... Jupiter pulls the sun at 12 miles per second. ...
    (soc.retirement)
  • Views of Extrasolar Planets
    ... Views of Extrasolar Planets ... More than 300 planets have been found outside the solar system, most of them discovered indirectly through their influence on their parent star. ... In a podcast interview, lead author Christian Marois noted that this latter system resembles a scaled-up version of the outer portion of our solar system, with the planets' masses estimated to be between 5 and 13 times that of Jupiter. ...
    (sci.astro.amateur)
  • Views of Extrasolar Planets
    ... Views of Extrasolar Planets ... More than 300 planets have been found outside the solar system, most of them discovered indirectly through their influence on their parent star. ... In a podcast interview, lead author Christian Marois noted that this latter system resembles a scaled-up version of the outer portion of our solar system, with the planets' masses estimated to be between 5 and 13 times that of Jupiter. ...
    (sci.physics)

Loading