An issue I've found with the Traveller star system generation rules is the way it puts the planets in the same Bode's Law arrangement as Solar planets irrespective of the star they orbit. I'm curious as to the science behind that. Certainly there's a reason the planets fell into that pattern around good ol' Sol, but does that reason apply in exactly the same manner around a B-class giant or an M-class main sequence star?
It occurs to me that material orbiting in the same relative planetary orbits during planet formation would be orbiting at different velocities due to the larger or smaller mass at center, and they might not interact in quite the same way. Wouldn't that have an impact on the likely orbital loci of the various planetary nuclei? (May I never have to use those plurals in the same sentence again.)
It occurs to me that material orbiting in the same relative planetary orbits during planet formation would be orbiting at different velocities due to the larger or smaller mass at center, and they might not interact in quite the same way. Wouldn't that have an impact on the likely orbital loci of the various planetary nuclei? (May I never have to use those plurals in the same sentence again.)