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The astrophysics of crowded places

Author

Summary, in English

Today the Sun is in a relatively uncrowded place. The distance between it and the nearest other star is relatively large (about 200 000 times the Earth-Sun distance!). This is beneficial to life on Earth; a close encounter with another star is extremely unlikely. Such encounters would either remove the Earth from its orbit around the Sun or leave it on an eccentric orbit similar to a comet's. But the Sun was not formed in isolation. It was born within a more-crowded cluster of perhaps a few hundred stars. As the surrounding gas evaporated away, the cluster itself evaporated too, dispersing its stars into the Galaxy. Virtually all stars in the Galaxy share this history, and here I will describe the role of 'clusterness' in a star's life. Stars are often formed in larger stellar clusters (known as open and globular clusters), some of which are still around today. I will focus on stars in globular clusters and describe how the interactions between stars in these clusters may explain the zoo of stellar exotica which have recently been observed with instruments such as the Hubble Space Telescope and the X-ray telescopes XMM-Newton and Chandra. In recent years, myriad planets orbiting stars other than the Sun-the so-called 'extrasolar' planets-have been discovered. I will describe how a crowded environment will affect such planetary systems and may in fact explain some of their mysterious properties.

Publishing year

2002

Language

English

Pages

2773-2786

Publication/Series

Roy. Soc. of London Phil. Tr. A, Triennial Issue: Astronomy and Earth Science

Volume

360

Issue

1801

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Royal Society Publishing

Topic

  • Astronomy, Astrophysics and Cosmology

Status

Published