OneTrikPony
Mongoose
Thank you Spirochete.
VERY cool of you to reply and help me out. I wasn't getting sensible results just by plugging in 3-G and random density to find Radius. 22000km is more interesting than 30000km. Hopefully I'll be able to learn to use the equations by plugging in your numbers.
Where did you learn this? I'm not sure this is something I could have figured out by surfing wikipedia.
I'd like to be able to gather these facts for myself.
On the otherhand It seems, (from reading wikipedia) that DM+2 3312 must have been much hotter at some point because the stats from the book give it a temperature under the threshold for a K class star. Also it seems that during the preplanetary nebula phase the star's temperature is boosted to 30000K and there is a strong solar wind.
So, might King have had all it's hydrogen blown away during this phase, given that it's only .2 AU from it's sun?
VERY cool of you to reply and help me out. I wasn't getting sensible results just by plugging in 3-G and random density to find Radius. 22000km is more interesting than 30000km. Hopefully I'll be able to learn to use the equations by plugging in your numbers.
spirochete said:This is the upper limit for a solid silicate-nickle-iron exoplanet. The minimum molecular weight retained is less than 2, meaning it retains hydrogen in its atmosphere. Since protoplanetary nebulae contain huge amounts of hydrogen, you'll need some explanation for the mechanism by which King escaped snowball accretion into a gas giant.
Where did you learn this? I'm not sure this is something I could have figured out by surfing wikipedia.
I'd like to be able to gather these facts for myself.
On the otherhand It seems, (from reading wikipedia) that DM+2 3312 must have been much hotter at some point because the stats from the book give it a temperature under the threshold for a K class star. Also it seems that during the preplanetary nebula phase the star's temperature is boosted to 30000K and there is a strong solar wind.
So, might King have had all it's hydrogen blown away during this phase, given that it's only .2 AU from it's sun?