Hi!
As an exercise, I'm trying to generate statistics for a planetary system at Gamma Pavonis
<http://www.solstation.com/stars/gpavonis.htm>, home to Traveller's world of Dingir, using Tyge Sjöstrands's world generation system.
I'm having problems with some seemingly contradictory data about the star, though. Sol Station gives it a mass of eight-tenths Sol, a
spectral classificaion of F6-8, a luminosity of ~1.5 Sol, and an age possibly in excess of 9.1 billion years. The Stellar Database gives
similar results <http://www.stellar-database.com/Scripts/search_star.exe?Name=gamma+pavonis>. Both sources identify it as a main-sequence star.
From what I know about stellar evolution, it's impossible for a main-sequence star with a mass eight-tenths that of Sol to have a spectral classification and total luminosity greatly in excess of Sol. The age, too, is another problem--late F-class main sequence stars are supposed to have a life span barely more than half of 9.1 billion years. Gamma Pavonis should look more like Tau Ceti than a stabler metal-poor Procyon.
The only explanation I can think of is that Gamma Pavonis is beginning to move off the main sequence and heating up; but then, surely it should be getter redder, not bluer.
Is there something I'm missing?
As an exercise, I'm trying to generate statistics for a planetary system at Gamma Pavonis
<http://www.solstation.com/stars/gpavonis.htm>, home to Traveller's world of Dingir, using Tyge Sjöstrands's world generation system.
I'm having problems with some seemingly contradictory data about the star, though. Sol Station gives it a mass of eight-tenths Sol, a
spectral classificaion of F6-8, a luminosity of ~1.5 Sol, and an age possibly in excess of 9.1 billion years. The Stellar Database gives
similar results <http://www.stellar-database.com/Scripts/search_star.exe?Name=gamma+pavonis>. Both sources identify it as a main-sequence star.
From what I know about stellar evolution, it's impossible for a main-sequence star with a mass eight-tenths that of Sol to have a spectral classification and total luminosity greatly in excess of Sol. The age, too, is another problem--late F-class main sequence stars are supposed to have a life span barely more than half of 9.1 billion years. Gamma Pavonis should look more like Tau Ceti than a stabler metal-poor Procyon.
The only explanation I can think of is that Gamma Pavonis is beginning to move off the main sequence and heating up; but then, surely it should be getter redder, not bluer.
Is there something I'm missing?