
A star called 18 Scorpii is a mirror image of our own sunThe faint star 18 Scorpii (arrow), near a “claw” in the constellation Scorpio, is virtually identical to our sun. ATLANTA, GEORGIA–Astronomers can’t stare at our sun at night, but now they’ve identified a star just like the sun to watch instead.
What happened to sun twin
After a few million years together, it drifted away for good, into interstellar space, mingling with the other stars of the Milky Way. But why? “We don’t know exactly how we lost it,” said Steven Stahler, a theoretical physicist at the University of California, Berkeley, and one of the researchers.
What is the sun twin name
In the 1980s it was hypothesized that our star had an “evil twin” named Nemesis, which got its bad rap from its apparent habit of swinging past the solar system every 26 million years or so and sending a cloud of comets hurtling our way
The Sun has been fuelling life on Earth for millions of years, burning up to produce constant energy as astronomers study hidden surface mysteries and coronal differences. However, very little is known about its early days in our solar system and how it led to the emergence of life on the planet
Their radical-sounding theory that the Solar System may have once been a binary star system—so consisting of two stars orbiting a common point in space—perhaps shouldn’t come as a surprise. “Most Sun-like stars are born with binary companions,
Stars form from clouds of dust and gas in space. They don’t form alone, but in clusters, before dispersing. That’s the case with the Sun’s looser “sister” stars, but also for its theorized companion, a star of similar mass.
Where is the second sun now
It could now be anywhere in the Milky Way. “Passing stars in the birth cluster would have removed the companion from the Sun through their gravitational influence
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