When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Binary star - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_star

    An eclipsing binary star is a binary star system in which the orbital plane of the two stars lies so nearly in the line of sight of the observer that the components undergo mutual eclipses. [20] In the case where the binary is also a spectroscopic binary and the parallax of the system is known, the binary is quite valuable for stellar analysis.

  3. Researchers find binary stars orbiting near Milky Way's ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/researchers-binary-stars-orbiting...

    The newly-discovered binary star system, which is home to two stars gravitationally bound to one another, was found in a dense stellar cluster orbiting Sagittarius A*, which has an estimated mass ...

  4. Binary system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_system

    (See animated examples.) The most common kinds of binary system are binary stars and binary asteroids, but brown dwarfs, planets, neutron stars, black holes and galaxies can also form binaries. A multiple system is similar but consists of three or more objects, for example triple stars and triple asteroids (a more common term than 'trinary').

  5. Zeta Reticuli - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeta_Reticuli

    The two stars are located at similar distances from the Sun and share the same motion through space, [14] confirming that they are gravitationally bound and form a wide binary star system. They have an angular separation of 309.2 arcseconds (5.2 arcminutes ); [ 15 ] far enough apart to appear as a close pair of separate stars to the naked eye ...

  6. Habitability of binary star systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habitability_of_binary...

    Planets in binary star systems may be candidates for supporting extraterrestrial life. [1] Habitability of binary star systems is determined by many factors from a variety of sources. [2] Typical estimates often suggest that 50% or more of all star systems are binary systems. This may be partly due to sample bias, as massive and bright stars ...

  7. Circumbinary planet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circumbinary_planet

    [21] [22] One notable example is in the HD 98800 system, which comprises two pairs of binary stars separated by around 34 AU. The binary subsystem HD 98800 B, which consists of two stars of 0.70 and 0.58 solar masses in a highly eccentric orbit with semimajor axis 0.983 AU, is surrounded by a complex dust disc that is being warped by the ...

  8. Visual binary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_binary

    An example of a visual binary: Theta1 Orionis C1 (lower) and C2 (upper), as imaged by VLT/GRAVITY. A visual binary is a gravitationally bound binary star system [1] that can be resolved into two stars. These stars are estimated, via Kepler's third law, to have periods ranging from a few years to thousands of years. A visual binary consists of ...

  9. Kepler-47 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kepler-47

    Kepler-47 is a binary star system located about 1,055 parsecs (3,440 light-years) away from Earth. [14] The binary system is composed of a G-type main sequence star (Kepler-47A) and a red dwarf star (Kepler-47B). The stars orbit each other around their barycenter, or center of mass between them, completing one full orbit every 7.45 days. [4]