drextin wrote:
Quote:
In here also very close stars,jupiter is the normal to a binary system distance(jupiter could be a star it almost hapen in the past),now a brown dwarft I really dont know,do you guys have some source of real picture of a binary system with a more eliptical orbit?
You ready for this?
Seems the only systems that have that type of elliptical orbit are those where one star has died and became a blackhole. When the star implodes the energy send the companion star flying away from the blackhole..........usually to about 1-1.5 light years away before it slows and becomes not a binary system but a star caught in a blackholes influence.
Now the scary part.............
No one would even know the blackhole was there until the companion star moved close enough for the black hole to start siphoning off material from it. Then it would produce the gamma rays that tell us a blackhole is present.
The only truly non binary systems we have observed tend to be loners who have been ejected from stable orbits due to extreme gravitational fields caused by many stars in close proximity..........they wonder throught the galaxy and outside of galaxies and have no planets.........gas clouds and debris.
All other systems that seem to have only one star are believed to be part of a binary system where one star is now a blackhole.
So why the hell are they not concerned about this or not even willing to admit the possibility of this scenario for our own system?
I also dont understand why our solar system must be diferent form almost all the outhers,maybe god is protecting us,lol!
Iff what you say is true than we should be morry worried about looking to the sky than I has thinking,Do you have some links to that study??