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whether I can believe most stars are solo and not binary; #168; 3rded; Atom Totality (Atom Universe) theory
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Press Release Release No.: 2006-11 For Release: Monday, January 30, 2006 Most Milky Way Stars Are Single Cambridge, MA - Common wisdom among astronomers holds that most star systems in the Milky Way are multiple, consisting of two or more stars in orbit around each other. Common wisdom is wrong. A new study by Charles Lada of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) demonstrates that most star systems are made up of single stars. Since planets probably are easier to form around single stars, planets also may be more common than previously suspected. --- end quoting --- It appears to me that Lada made his conclusions based on inferences of star populations and a survey of stars in the Milky Way. Until recently I thought the mainstream consensus was that binary stars were 70% of stars and solo stars only 30%, but from reading the above reference in Wikipedia that was flipped around to 1/3 stars are binary and 2/3 solo. Which would the Atom Totality theory support? Would it support 1/3 are binary or 2/3 are binary? Since the Atom Totality is layered ages and since some galaxies are far older than the Milky Way, that the Milky Way maybe a new arrival in the cosmos and thus most of its stars are solo. But if we examine a older galaxy we probably end up with 2/3 are binary and 1/3 are solo. In the Big Bang theory, of course, we should expect a uniformity for all the galaxies, since the age of the Cosmos is 14 billion years and no older. In the Atom Totality, the Plutonium recent layer is only 6 billion years old and the Uranium Atom Totality layer is over 20 billion years old. So in the Atom Totality theory we can expect to find galaxies so old that it has almost all stars as binary stars. In the Atom Totality theory, galaxies are categorized as being different ages, so the Milky Way is a relative new comer. If the Sun is 10 billion years old, then the Milky Way was born halfway into the Uranium Atom Totality and if the Sun was 10 billion years old then probably all the nearby stars to the Sun are also 10 billion years old. So what is the closest nearby white-dwarf? Is it far away? Archimedes Plutonium www.iw.net/~a_plutonium whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
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