Planets that revolve around two suns may surprisingly survive the violent late stages of the stars' lives, according to new research out of the NASA Goddard Space Flight Centre and York University. The finding is surprising because planets orbiting close to a single sun, like Mercury and Venus in our solar system, would be destroyed when the aging star swells into a red giant.
Led by Veselin Kostov at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Centre, in collaboration with York University master's student Keavin Moore and Professor Ray Jayawardhana, the study found that planets orbiting two (binary) stars - also referred to as circumbinary planets or "Tatooine worlds" after the iconic planetary home of Luke Skywalker in Star Wars - often escape death and destruction by moving out to wider orbits.
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