English

Is our Sun a Singleton?

Astrophysics 2008-11-26 v1

Abstract

Most stars are formed in a cluster or association, where the number density of stars can be high. This means that a large fraction of initially-single stars will undergo close encounters with other stars and/or exchange into binaries. We describe how such close encounters and exchange encounters can affect the properties of a planetary system around a single star. We define a singleton as a single star which has never suffered close encounters with other stars or spent time within a binary system. It may be that planetary systems similar to our own solar system can only survive around singletons. Close encounters or the presence of a stellar companion will perturb the planetary system, often leaving planets on tighter and more eccentric orbits. Thus planetary systems which initially resembled our own solar system may later more closely resemble some of the observed exoplanet systems.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0709.3101,
  title  = {Is our Sun a Singleton?},
  author = {D. Malmberg and M. B. Davies and J. E. Chambers and F. De Angeli and R. P. Church and D. Mackey and M. I. Wilkinson},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0709.3101},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

2 pages, 1 figure. To be published in the proceedings of IAUS246 "Dynamical Evolution of Dense Stellar Systems". Editors: E. Vesperini (Chief Editor), M. Giersz, A. Sills

R2 v1 2026-06-21T09:19:15.919Z