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I read somewhere that the sun is part of an open cluster. If thats true,
wouldn;t it have to be awefully OLD for an open cluster? What other stars are in the cluster? How many? How large is it? Any nebula still left? thanks jjb |
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Jeremiah J. Burton wrote:
I read somewhere that the sun is part of an open cluster. If thats true, wouldn;t it have to be awefully OLD for an open cluster? What other stars are in the cluster? How many? How large is it? Any nebula still left? More precisely, the Sun was almost certainly formed as part of such a cluster (based on virtually all young stars we see today coming in clusters and associations). Open clusters lose their identities over time, for at least two reasons. First, the more of the remaining gas is blown away by the most massive cluster members (including their supernovae), the less mass is left to hold the whole cluster together gravitationally. On top of that, random encounters with stars and massive interstellar clouds will strip stars away over time. These are reasons that there are very few open clusters known to nearly as old as the Sun (M67 and NGC 188?), and the number increases rapidly for smaller ages. By now, Sol has lost track of the siblings, although there are a few nearby stars with similar enough space motions that they might share a common origin. Bill Keel |
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Fellow Iowan Sam Wormley was saying
Several of the stars in the "big dipper" have similar motions about the galaxy as our sun. Seems like I can remember reading long ago that Sirius seemed to be moving along with this group too. Marty |
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Marty wrote:
Fellow Iowan Sam Wormley was saying Several of the stars in the "big dipper" have similar motions about the galaxy as our sun. Seems like I can remember reading long ago that Sirius seemed to be moving along with this group too. Marty I believe I've read that too. There is some doubt that any of the stars mentioned in the this thread are the remnants of the original cluster... mostly because the spectral types imply big age differences. |
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In article , Sam Wormley wrote:
"Jeremiah J. Burton" wrote: I read somewhere that the sun is part of an open cluster. If thats true, wouldn;t it have to be awefully OLD for an open cluster? What other stars are in the cluster? How many? How large is it? Any nebula still left? Several of the stars in the "big dipper" have similar motions about the galaxy as our sun. I remember reading that in, I think, T. W. Webb's Celestial Objects for Common Telescopes, and mentioned it here last year. Another poster pointed out that the Big Dipper stars must be much much younger than the Sun. Given that even the dimmest of the bright ones, Megrez, is a main-sequence A star with about 20 times the Sun's luminosity, it sure can't be anything approaching 5 billion years old, so presumably the similar space velocity is only coincidental. Are there stars with ages compatible with the Sun's that have similar space velocities? I'm interested in this too. Stuart |
#6
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![]() " Your answer has NOTHING to do with the question Sammy. How do you figure? He identified several stars that are candidates for having formed in the same cluster as the Sun (inferred from similar motion) and provided evidence for the age of the Solar System, in reference to the age an existing open cluster would be. Seems pretty in line with the original question to me. What are YOU talking about. Your previous response went like this " Sam- That's a really peculiar statement. What exactly is it saying? Are you expressing a range with a different tolerance top and bottom? Are these simply values given from two different sources?" Although you are kinda polite, I am not, but our focus was the same. This Wormley guy provided a left field answer or comment. Something he does a lot. |
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![]() "Jeremiah J. Burton" wrote in message s.com... I read somewhere that the sun is part of an open cluster. If thats true, wouldn;t it have to be awefully OLD for an open cluster? What other stars are in the cluster? How many? How large is it? Any nebula still left? I am amazed no one has mentioned Alpha C - A B and C for starters. At 4.36- 4.5 LYs away, they sure do qualify. Alpha C A is some 7 Billion years old that again qualifies. The sun is 5-6 Byrs. http://www.alphacentauri.org/centauri.html |
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On Fri, 21 May 2004 01:42:24 GMT, "Thomas" wrote:
I am amazed no one has mentioned Alpha C - A B and C for starters. At 4.36- 4.5 LYs away, they sure do qualify. Alpha C A is some 7 Billion years old that again qualifies. The sun is 5-6 Byrs. Based only on the system's nearness? It has a very high proper motion which might argue against formation in the same cluster as the Sun (hint: plot the proper motion backwards 5 billion years; is the system still close?) Also, if the stars are a billion years or more older than the Sun, that argues against a common origin, since star forming regions typically have lifetimes measured in millions of years, not billions. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com |
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On Fri, 21 May 2004 01:31:16 GMT, "Thomas" wrote:
What are YOU talking about. Your previous response went like this " Sam- That's a really peculiar statement. What exactly is it saying? Are you expressing a range with a different tolerance top and bottom? Are these simply values given from two different sources?" Although you are kinda polite, I am not, but our focus was the same. Not even close. I wasn't commenting on anything more than some peculiar, ambiguous wording, which Sam obviously recognized and was quick to clarify. There was nothing at all wrong with what he was saying, and it was perfectly relevant to the original question. This Wormley guy provided a left field answer or comment. Something he does a lot. I disagree. He often has useful contributions (although generally a bit terse). You, on the other hand, appear to have little to contribute here other than negativism. If you think his answers are in left field, I think that says more about you than him. But like you said, you're not polite, a fact sure to seriously dilute anything useful you might have to contribute. _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com |
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