<node id="622983">
  <nid>622983</nid>
  <type>external_news</type>
  <uid>
    <user id="34626"><![CDATA[34626]]></user>
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  <created>1562162161</created>
  <changed>1562169117</changed>
  <title><![CDATA[Planets in multiple-star systems may be habitable]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p>In a finding that&rsquo;s great news for fans of Luke Skywalker&rsquo;s fictional home planet Tatooine, scientists say planets in multiple-star systems may be habitable &ndash; though in keeping with Tatooine&rsquo;s hardscrabble image, it may be an uphill battle. Astronomers have long known that multiple-star systems are common. &ldquo;Most stars are members of binaries [other than the coolest dwarf stars],&rdquo; Manfred Cuntz, an astrophysicist at the University of Texas at Arlington. And, as astronomers are learning, many of these binary-star systems have planets &ndash; some circling a single star, and some circling both at once. Life on these planets could have a hard go of it, however. In binary star systems, this effect can be radically stronger, says <strong>Billy Quarles</strong>, a research scientist in the School of Physics at the Georgia Institute of Technology, especially if the planet&rsquo;s orbit doesn&rsquo;t lie in the same plane as its stars&rsquo; orbits around each other. &ldquo;Seasons around these binaries may be a lot more variable than on Earth,&rdquo; he says. &ldquo;There are times when there are no seasons, and others when seasons [are larger], on a time scale of a few tens of thousands of years.&rdquo;</p>
]]></body>
  <field_article_url>
    <item>
      <url><![CDATA[https://cosmosmagazine.com/space/planets-in-multiple-star-systems-may-be-habitable]]></url>
      <title><![CDATA[]]></title>
    </item>
  </field_article_url>
  <field_publication>
    <item>
      <value><![CDATA[ undergraduate leadership ]]></value>
    </item>
  </field_publication>
  <field_dateline>
    <item>
      <value>2019-06-26</value>
      <timezone></timezone>
    </item>
  </field_dateline>
  <field_media>
        </field_media>
  <og_groups>
          <item>1278</item>
          <item>126011</item>
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  <og_groups_both>
          <item><![CDATA[College of Sciences]]></item>
          <item><![CDATA[School of Physics]]></item>
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    <field_userdata><![CDATA[]]></field_userdata>
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