Science Illustrated

DOES OUR SUN HAVE A LOST TWIN?

The Sun is a lonesome star, its closest neighbour more than 40,000km away. But that was not always the case. When it formed some 4.6 billion years ago, the Sun was in a densely-packed star cluster, with the space between newborn stars teeming with dust, gas, comets, asteroids – perhaps even planets.

The gravity of the young Sun and the other sibling stars, as astronomers call them, tore at the smaller heavenly bodies, until over millions of years the objects all settled down into individual star systems. And that is how our present Solar System ended up as we know it today – according to the current theory, at least.

But this leaves two mysteries. The first is Planet 9, which calculations indicate may be orbiting somewhere on the outskirts of the Solar System, though it has never been observed. The second is the Oort

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Science Illustrated

Science Illustrated1 min read
3 Things YOU Can Do
→ If you’re truly storm-phobic, you could consider living somewhere with fewer of them. In Australia, quiet spots include South Australia, Perth and further south in WA, even Tasmania; these areas are certainly not storm-free, but have fewer and less
Science Illustrated2 min read
Humans Have Tilted The Earth
CLIMATE It is well-documented that Earth’s axis of rotation and tilt – responsible for the changing seasons on our planet – change over time. But an international research team headed by Seoul National University in South Korea has concluded that sin
Science Illustrated1 min readChemistry
Green Cycle Could Burn Iron Over And Over Again
1 Iron has the chemical formula Fe and can replace coal in a power plant in the form of a powder made from old scrap metal. The iron powder burns at temperatures of around 1800°C. 2 When something burns, it is fuelled by oxygen (O2 ). The burning of

Related Books & Audiobooks