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... why do so many stars lack the existance of planets ? ...
why do so few stars have planets ?
its very difficult to pin down, the monikas, -stars planets - arise more than a few times !
I think you are right by the reasoning of detection. Im pleased anyway as george lucas's "Starwars universe" is intact, which is what raised the question in the first place. The media has its part in playing out my understanding of the universe, it would be better if the common understanding was all stars have planets, and most with an earth.That brings me to another thought, if planitary formation comes about through circulation, and you have 3? Types of stars (small medium and large) around stars such as our sun (fairly common) do all planitary formations follow a set procedure, ie my very educated mother just served us nine, in that composit mass sequence, ie small planets close getting bigger then smaller, asteroids ,gas giants and then the plutonian area ?I did find another naked science post in the meantime, just its very difficul5 to pin down, the monikas, -stars planets - arise more than a few times !
you have 3? Types of stars (small medium and large)
It makes no sense that stars have to either burn out or have to go nova or super nova, with nothing in the middle...a more limited and controlled explosion
the debris field profile would be based on the weight/mass of the materials ejected; heavy metals and oxides would stay closer, while lighter gases would be propelled much further, with some overlap.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 17/09/2017 21:50:02I think you are right by the reasoning of detection. Im pleased anyway as george lucas's "Starwars universe" is intact, which is what raised the question in the first place. The media has its part in playing out my understanding of the universe, it would be better if the common understanding was all stars have planets, and most with an earth.That brings me to another thought, if planitary formation comes about through circulation, and you have 3? Types of stars (small medium and large) around stars such as our sun (fairly common) do all planitary formations follow a set procedure, ie my very educated mother just served us nine, in that composit mass sequence, ie small planets close getting bigger then smaller, asteroids ,gas giants and then the plutonian area ?I did find another naked science post in the meantime, just its very difficul5 to pin down, the monikas, -stars planets - arise more than a few times !Based on way the stars are arranged in our solar system; small rocky planets, then an asteroid belt, then gaseous giants, then smaller rocky Pluto type planets, suggests a first generation star exploded, but it was not a super nova scale explosion. It was a more limited and controlled explosion, such that the debris field profile would be based on the weight/mass of the materials ejected; heavy metals and oxides would stay closer, while lighter gases would be propelled much further, with some overlap. It makes no sense that stars have to either burn out or have to go nova or super nova, with nothing in the middle. It makes more logical sense that star could also explode in the middle of this range, making planets and then also reforming as a secondary generation star. If the star reforms too fast, there will be no planets. If it reforms to slow there will be too many planets, causing orbital collisions especially at the solid-gas transition zone. We also have the two contemporary extremes which if the star burns out no planets will form and if it goes supernova even a second generation will take time to form.