D
DavidSmafield":1wpztad1 said:Can moons have moons of their own or is that impossible ?
DavidSmafield":w058hcir said:Can moons have moons of their own or is that impossible ?
raptorborealis":1za2wlsu said:Any solar system configuration in the universe that 'can exist' probably does when there are 10 to the 23rd power of stars. that's...1000000000000000000000000
DavidSmafield":2o4qpmuq said:Can moons have moons of their own or is that impossible ?
3488":35r9b6tn said:...There is a possibility that some of the outlier moons of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus & Neptune could also be close doubles or contact binaries. I am not sure & the only outlier moon seen in close up to date is the Saturn moon Phoebe.....
Couerl":2f0r43w3 said:raptorborealis":2f0r43w3 said:Any solar system configuration in the universe that 'can exist' probably does when there are 10 to the 23rd power of stars. that's...1000000000000000000000000
There's still more possible positions and combinations on a chess board than there are atoms in the universe but, the likelihood of ever arriving at each and every one of those positions due to general laws of the game make it unlikely and many of them will simply never surface. :geek: