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A Klemperer rosette is a gravitational system of (optionally) alternating heavier and lighter bodies orbiting in a symmetrical pattern around a common
barycenter In astronomy, the barycenter (or barycentre; ) is the center of mass of two or more bodies that orbit one another and is the point about which the bodies orbit. A barycenter is a dynamical point, not a physical object. It is an important con ...
. It was first described by W.B. Klemperer in 1962, and is a special case of a
central configuration In celestial mechanics, a central configuration is a system of Point particle, point masses with the property that each mass is pulled by the combined gravity, gravitational force of the system directly towards the center of mass, with acceleration ...
. Klemperer described rosette systems as follows: The simplest rosette would be a series of four alternating heavier and lighter bodies, 90 degrees from one another, in a rhombic configuration eavy, Light, Heavy, Light where the two larger bodies have the same mass, and likewise the two smaller bodies have the same mass, all orbiting their (empty) geometric center. The more general trojan system has unequal masses for the two heavier bodies, which Klemperer also calls a "rhombic" system, and is the only version that is not symmetric around the gravitational center. The number of "mass types" can be increased, so long as the arrangement is symmetrical and cyclic pattern: e.g. 1,2,3 ... 1,2,3 1,2,3,4,5 ... 1,2,3,4,5 1,2,3,3,2,1 ... 1,2,3,3,2,1 etc. Klemperer's article specifically analyzes regular polygons with 2–9 corners – dumbbell-shaped through
nonagon In geometry, a nonagon () or enneagon () is a nine-sided polygon or 9-gon. The name ''nonagon'' is a prefix Hybrid word, hybrid formation, from Latin (''nonus'', "ninth" + ''gonon''), used equivalently, attested already in the 16th century in Fre ...
– and non-centrally symmetric " rhombic rosettes" with three orbiting bodies, the outer two stationed at the middle orbiting body's triangular points (L4 and L5), which had already been described and studied by
Lagrange Joseph-Louis Lagrange (born Giuseppe Luigi Lagrangiahexagon In geometry, a hexagon (from Greek , , meaning "six", and , , meaning "corner, angle") is a six-sided polygon. The total of the internal angles of any simple (non-self-intersecting) hexagon is 720°. Regular hexagon A regular hexagon is de ...
al rosette is the most nearly stable because the "planets" sit in each other's semi-stable triangular Lagrangian points, L4 and L5. The regular polygonal configurations ("rosettes") do not require a central mass (a "sun" at the center is optional, and if present it may bobble above and below the orbital plane), although a Lagrange-type rhombus does. If a central body is present, its mass constrains the ranges for the mass-ratio between the orbiting bodies.


Misuse and misspelling

The term "Klemperer rosette" (often misspelled "''Kemplerer'' rosette") is used to mean a configuration of three or more equal masses, set at the points of an
equilateral An equilateral triangle is a triangle in which all three sides have the same length, and all three angles are equal. Because of these properties, the equilateral triangle is a regular polygon, occasionally known as the regular triangle. It is the ...
polygon In geometry, a polygon () is a plane figure made up of line segments connected to form a closed polygonal chain. The segments of a closed polygonal chain are called its '' edges'' or ''sides''. The points where two edges meet are the polygon ...
and given an equal
angular velocity In physics, angular velocity (symbol or \vec, the lowercase Greek letter omega), also known as the angular frequency vector,(UP1) is a pseudovector representation of how the angular position or orientation of an object changes with time, i ...
about their
center of mass In physics, the center of mass of a distribution of mass in space (sometimes referred to as the barycenter or balance point) is the unique point at any given time where the weight function, weighted relative position (vector), position of the d ...
. Klemperer does indeed mention this configuration at the start of his article, but only as an already known set of equilibrium systems before introducing the actual rosettes. In
Larry Niven Laurence van Cott Niven (; born April 30, 1938) is an American science fiction writer. His 1970 novel ''Ringworld'' won the Hugo Award for Best Novel, Hugo, Locus Award, Locus, Ditmar Award, Ditmar, and Nebula Award for Best Novel, Nebula award ...
's novel '' Fleet of Worlds'' in the ''Ringworld'' series, the Puppeteers' eponymous "fleet of worlds" is arranged in such a configuration that Niven calls a "Kemplerer rosette"; this (possibly intentional) misspelling is one viable source of the wider confusion. These fictional planets were maintained in position by large engines, in addition to gravitational force.


Instability

Both simple linear perturbation analysis and simulations of rosettes demonstrate that such systems are unstable: Klemperer explains in his original article, any displacement away from the perfectly symmetrical geometry causes a growing oscillation, eventually leading to the disruption of the system. The system is unstable regardless of whether the center of the rosette is in free space, or is in orbit around a central star. The short-form reason for the instability is that any perturbation corrupts the geometric symmetry, which increases the perturbation, and further undermines the geometry, and so on. The longer explanation is that any tangential perturbation brings a body closer to one neighbor and further from another; the gravitational imbalance becomes greater towards the closer neighbor and less for the further neighbor, pulling the perturbed object more towards its closer neighbor, amplifying the perturbation rather than damping it. An inward radial perturbation causes the perturbed body to get closer to ''all'' other objects, increasing the force on the object and increasing its orbital velocity, which leads indirectly to a tangential perturbation and the argument above.


Notes


References


External links

* — Rosette simulations * {{DEFAULTSORT:Klemperer Rosette Concepts in astrophysics Co-orbital objects