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News "Alien world ‘home to Star Trek’s Spock’ is ‘space illusion’ as scientists warn we’re being tricked"

But more recent analysis using the radial velocity method revealed that the 'planet' is most likely just a cluster of wobbling light that threw off previous researchers

So, in other words, it's a, cloaked planet.

It's Aldea
 
I found this shocking information on the Popular Science website:

We can officially say goodbye to the real-life version of the fictional Vulcan home world.

Astronomers have found that signals interpreted as signs of a world orbiting a star called 40 Eridani A, or HD 26965 – the star around which the planet Vulcan orbits in the sci-fi franchise Star Trek – were false positives, not generated by an orbiting exoplanet after all.

A closer analysis has revealed that the signals likely originate from the star itself.


It's the fourth paper delving into the possible existence of a real-life Vulcan, and the third to find no exoplanet (one of the studies was inconclusive). We can probably safely put the nail in that particular coffin and move on.


So what does this statement on a Gray Universe website mean?

Have we been fooled?

Or is those scientists lying?

Or have we got the wrong information about Vulcan and the truth is that it orbits another sun than 40 Eridani A,
And in that case, where is Vulcan?

Will previous facts about Vulcan be declared as "non-canon" and the location of Vulcan will be altered in future books or series?
 
I found this shocking information on the Popular Science website:

We can officially say goodbye to the real-life version of the fictional Vulcan home world.

Astronomers have found that signals interpreted as signs of a world orbiting a star called 40 Eridani A, or HD 26965 – the star around which the planet Vulcan orbits in the sci-fi franchise Star Trek – were false positives, not generated by an orbiting exoplanet after all.

A closer analysis has revealed that the signals likely originate from the star itself.


It's the fourth paper delving into the possible existence of a real-life Vulcan, and the third to find no exoplanet (one of the studies was inconclusive). We can probably safely put the nail in that particular coffin and move on.


So what does this statement on a Gray Universe website mean?

Have we been fooled?

Or is those scientists lying?

Or have we got the wrong information about Vulcan and the truth is that it orbits another sun than 40 Eridani A,
And in that case, where is Vulcan?

Will previous facts about Vulcan be declared as "non-canon" and the location of Vulcan will be altered in future books or series?
Star Trek's Vulcan isn't real. Sure it was fun that science seemed to indicate that a planet similar to the fictional Vulcan existed, But science has no obligation to full fill our fantasy.
 
I found this shocking information on the Popular Science website:

We can officially say goodbye to the real-life version of the fictional Vulcan home world.

Astronomers have found that signals interpreted as signs of a world orbiting a star called 40 Eridani A, or HD 26965 – the star around which the planet Vulcan orbits in the sci-fi franchise Star Trek – were false positives, not generated by an orbiting exoplanet after all.

A closer analysis has revealed that the signals likely originate from the star itself.


It's the fourth paper delving into the possible existence of a real-life Vulcan, and the third to find no exoplanet (one of the studies was inconclusive). We can probably safely put the nail in that particular coffin and move on.


So what does this statement on a Gray Universe website mean?

Have we been fooled?

Or is those scientists lying?

Or have we got the wrong information about Vulcan and the truth is that it orbits another sun than 40 Eridani A,
And in that case, where is Vulcan?

Will previous facts about Vulcan be declared as "non-canon" and the location of Vulcan will be altered in future books or series?

Merging this with the pre-existing thread.
 
40Eri is too far away for us to really know much about any planets it might have anyway.

And more to the point, at least as of the last time I checked, ST is a work of fiction. The Great Bird of the Galaxy and his successors are writers. They're not gods over anything other than the fictional milieux they create.
 
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