OK, so the discovery that the Kepler project was going to announce today is a Tatooine. That explains the Lucasfilm involvement.
http://news.discovery.com/space/kepler-16b-exoplanet-two-stars-tatooine-110915.html
Unlike the previous “Tatooine”, this is actually orbiting the two stars at the same time, not just one of them, so it is essentially another first.
The stars are 0.2 AU apart, each slightly smaller than the Sun, and the planet is at an orbital distance comparable to Venus. Which sucks, because that's outside of the habitable zone, but nevertheless it would be quite awesome to live at a more distant orbit in such a system. In the habitable zone the two suns would appear smaller than the Sun, and it would be pretty eerie when if they eclipse each other – essentially a habitable planet would get occasional sunrises worthy of an outer, colder orbit. Kinda like a prolonged partial solar eclipse – I think I won't stare at the sun with protective glasses on the next eclipse, thus missing everything that's going on around me.
http://news.discovery.com/space/kepler-16b-exoplanet-two-stars-tatooine-110915.html
Unlike the previous “Tatooine”, this is actually orbiting the two stars at the same time, not just one of them, so it is essentially another first.
The stars are 0.2 AU apart, each slightly smaller than the Sun, and the planet is at an orbital distance comparable to Venus. Which sucks, because that's outside of the habitable zone, but nevertheless it would be quite awesome to live at a more distant orbit in such a system. In the habitable zone the two suns would appear smaller than the Sun, and it would be pretty eerie when if they eclipse each other – essentially a habitable planet would get occasional sunrises worthy of an outer, colder orbit. Kinda like a prolonged partial solar eclipse – I think I won't stare at the sun with protective glasses on the next eclipse, thus missing everything that's going on around me.
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