back to article Plough gives birth to sextuplets

Stargazers at the US's University of Rochester have announced that Mizar in the asterism of the Plough (the Big Dipper to our US cousins) is actually a six-star system. Mizar was scientifically confirmed as the first known binary star system back in 1617, by Benedetto Castelli and Galileo, who demonstrated that Mizar was …

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  1. Chris Bradshaw
    Paris Hilton

    Can you please

    use the term 'nude-eye' instead of naked-eye. It is so much more tasteful...

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Happy

    WOW - that's complicated

    Blimey! Try drawing that with your spirograph!

  3. Richard Tobin

    You're confused

    Castelli and Galileo didn't need to use a telescope to confirm that Mizar and Alcor are separate - that's obvious to anyone with normal eyesight. They in fact made the next discovery, that Mizar itself is a binary.

  4. ed 22
    Thumb Up

    "The City and the Stars"

    Arthur Clark, depicted a six star system. WoW, that'll drive a supercomputer crazy figuring out orbits/periodicity.

    1. Steve Roper

      Not the only one

      Isaac Asimov also depicted a six-star system, in his short story "Nightfall". Which incidentally was one of the best sci-fi pieces I've ever read.

      As to any computer being able to figure out the orbits of six stars - google "three body problem". We can't figure out the orbits of 3 stars, let alone 6!

  5. lglethal Silver badge
    Joke

    Obligatory Red Dwarf reference

    But are there planets which you can play Planetary Pool with?

  6. This post has been deleted by its author

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    hmm

    How can a 6 star system be stable? Surely it wouldn't be stable for a long (in the astronomical scale of things) time? (This is a genuine question, if anyone would care to enlighten me it would be much appreciated)

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Boffin

      Astronomical scale.. and you still ask the question?

      No of course it wont be.. they'll be (to use an NHSism) circling the plug hole..

      Point is that on a Human Scale of things they probably wont have made one orbit since they were named.

      Stable is relative to your timescale. and on an astronomical scale pretty much Nothing is Stable.

    2. JimC

      > How can a 6 star system be stable?

      Well, by the sound of things its not six stars all in a bunch. You've got three pairs of stars, each revolving round a common centre of gravity. Then two of the pairs are revolving round a common centre of gravity, and that cog is revolving round a common cog with the other pair. How stable it is will depend on how far apart each individual pair is... Presumably they are all pretty well spaced...

  8. Luther Blissett

    First?

    I for one welcome our new cool (but dim) M-class dwarf overlords. A real pushover.

  9. May Contain Nuts
    Heart

    Space is fricking awesome...

    ...It makes me so sad that we'll understand such a tiny fraction of it in my lifetime...

  10. Ian Ferguson
    Thumb Up

    Nightfall

    Those are boring names. I vote to change the stars' names to Onos, Dovim, Trey, Patru, Tano and Sitha, in honour of Isaac Asimov and his truly excellent novel Nightfall :D

  11. KaD

    That's how science works...

    The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries, is not Eureka! (I found it!) but rather, "hmm.... that's funny...." - Isaac Asimov

  12. Anonymous Coward
    Headmaster

    Six Suns

    My tattered copy of "Stars and Planets" by Sir Patrick Moore already states that Mizar/Alcor is a six sun system.

    Mind you, the Rochester Uni team must be pretty pleased with being able to take individual photos of them.

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