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Krypton’s red sun

I was thinking about the possibility of planets existing around a red star…

Eldirao, TheSun of Krypton

Krypton’s sun, Eldriao, is a red star. This is a major plot point in the Superman comics. Kryptonians have evolved under the weak solar spectrum from their red sun and on their own world they’re no more super and a normal human is on Earth. However, under a yellow sun a Kryptonian gains vast superpowers. Knowing the star’s colour we can fairly accurately determine its other properties.

redsun

The single factor that dominates a star’s life is its mass. A star is essentially a giant ball of hydrogen with a self-sustaining nuclear (fusion) reaction at its centre. The amount of fuel for that reaction is determined by the mass of the star – double the mass of the star and you double the fuel available. The amount of light and power that the star radiates, its luminosity, is determined by the ferocity of that reaction and that ferocity is determined by the mass of the star to the power of 3.5 — if you double the mass you increase its energy output by a factor of 11! As you’ll notice, larger and larger stars burn fuel faster than the amount of available fuel increases. A massive star will be very powerful, but it will have a really short life span – maybe only a few million years. By contrast, a low mass star will be pretty dim, but it will keep shining for billions and billions of years.

Red Dwarf

If Eldriao is normal “main sequence” star – a star that hasn’t just formed and hasn’t run out of its normal fuel – the red colour will indicate that it is relatively low powered and low power output means low mass. These low-mass red dwarf stars last a very long time. One estimate of Eldriao’s age points at it being over 8 billion years old (the Fleischer Superman Encyclopaedia) which is consistent with it being of comparable or lower mass than our own Sun.

Planets can form around such a weak star, but the problem for life is something called the Goldilocks Effect. Life, as we know Jim, needs liquid water on the surface of a planet. Water will boil away on a planet that is too close to a star and it will freeze on a planet that is too far away. The distance of the planet from the star has to be just right (ergo the Goldilocks reference). For a red dwarf this habitable distance from the star is very small as a planet will have to huddle close to the star to stay warm.

Nevertheless, astronomers have found planets around these red dwarf stars. The most famous is Gliese 581, a star just 20 light years away from the Earth. It has a system of planets around it and it looks like one of these is within the habitable zone. Bizarrely, its so close to its sun that this planet only has a “year” that is 14 Earth days long. The case of Gliese 581 certainly means that a Krypton like world exist around a red dwarf star.

Red Giant

The alternative explanation for the red colour would be that Krypton’s star is dying. After the hydrogen runs out of at the centre of a star it starts burning other elements including helium and carbon. The change in the way the fuel is burnt causes  the star’s structure to change. The core contracts and the other layers puff up creating a giant outer envelope. Krypton’s sun could be one of these red giants, but the transition from normal star to red giant causes havoc on a solar system.

As the star swells up to giant size it engulfs the planets closest to it. Its changing luminosity also means that the habitable zone – the part of its solar system that can support life – will also shift. There is certainly a variation of the Superman story that could be told about how life evolved late on Krypton as it shifted into its solar system habitable zone or how the Kryptonians migrated there from another planet to escape the star’s expansion. This latter option could explain an old Kryptonian myth about their world being settled by interstellar travellers 10,000 years ago. The shifting solar system could also explain why the planet Xenon was thrown out of the Kryptonian solar system. The same shifting gravitation patterns could even be invoked to explain Krypton’s own destruction.

Which is it.

Personally I’d have thought that Krypton’s sun was a red dwarf. The idea of a red giant is certainly interesting, but a habitable world surviving the transition to a giant sun seems too improbable.

Superman TAS: The Last Son of Krypton Part One

Screen Shots

Episode Credits

Writer Director Music Voice Director
  • Alan Burnett
  • Paul Dini
Dan Riba Lolita Ritmanis Andrea Romano
Main Cast Guest Cast
Christopher McDonald Jor-El Roger Rose Driver Cop
Finola Hughes Lara Brian George Councilman
Corey Burton Brainiac Jesse Batten Baby Kal-El
Tony Jay Sul-Van Vernee Watson-Johnson Female Worker
Art Director Animation Timing Director Storyboard Character/Prop Design
Glen Murakami Thomas McLaughlin Jr.
  • Curt Geda
  • Jim McLean
  • Tom Nelson
  • Dan Riba
  • Sharon Bridgeman
  • Shane Glines
  • Dexter Smith
  • Jim Stenstrum
  • Tommy Tejeda
  • Bruce Timm
  • James Tucker
  • Jonathan Fisher
  • Robert Fletcher
  • Scott F. Hill
Animation Services Animation Directors
  • Koko Enterprise Co. Ltd.
  • Dong Yang Animation Co. Ltd.
Kim Sae Won
Series Story Editors Series Writers Series Directors Producers
  • Stan Berkowitz
  • Alan Burnett
  • Paul Dini
  • Hilary J. Bader
  • Stan Berkowitz
  • Alan Burnett
  • Paul Dini
  • Robert Goodman
  • Hiroyuki Aoyama
  • Curt Geda
  • Kenji Hachizaki
  • Toshihiko Masuda
  • Dan Riba
  • Yuichiro Yano
  • Alan Burnett
  • Paul Dini
  • Bruce Timm
Associate Producer
Haven Alexander
Executive Producers
Jean MacCurdy
Theme: Shirley Walker

Synopsis

The planet Krypton was home to a scientifically advanced, human-like civilisation, but it was threatened a series of increasingly strong tremors which were shaking the entire world. Krypton was governed by a central Planetary Council, but most of its day-to-day administration was left to an intelligent computer network called Brainiac. It attributes the quakes to a polar shift in Krypton’s orbit, but the independent scientist Jor-El thinks otherwise. Jor-El conducts a five month study into Krypton’s geology and seismic activity. The last survey point is a deep shaft cut into the Krypton’s northern ice fields. He is so intent upon studying the data that he doesn’t notice an approaching ice creature, a 30-foot long semi-transparent amoeba like creature that had been awoken by a recent quake, until it snares him from behind. Jor-El manages to wrestle free from the creature and escapes in his personal flier.

Brainiac contacts Jor-El as soon as he returns to his mobile research base. The scientist is not comfortable that Brainiac is monitoring him so closely, but it protests that the Planetary Council has commanded it to analyse his data as soon as possible. It cuts off their conversation the moment the data is transmitted. Jor-El’s mood improves when his infant son, Kal-El, toddles into the laboratory. The sudden movement of the research base signals that their five month research trip is ending, but Jor-El’s wife, Lara, has mixed feelings. They’ll be back in capital city, but she knows that it means Jor-El will probably spend all his time analysing the data that they’ve collected.

Jor-El believes that the tremors are caused by a chain reaction in Krypton’s core that will eventually destroy the planet. His theories, however, are not widely supported. Lara’s father, Sul-van, is a member of the Planetary Council. He warns her that Jor-El’s predictions of “the end of the world” risks his scientific and political career. Their argument is interrupted by a strong tremor that causes extensive damage across the capital city. Later, in a tense and rowdy session, Jor-El delivers his report to the Planetary Council. They refuse to believe his evidence and blindly trust Brainiac’s conclusion. Jor-El argues that Brainiac is wrong and they must act now to place everybody in the Phantom Zone, but his proposals horrify the Council and they refuse to listen further. Even Sul-van agrees with his fellow Council members.

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