ThinksMarkedly wrote:If it's gravitationally bound and keeping its distance from that star as that star performs its orbit around the galactic centre, it's associated.
tlb wrote:Do we know that is true that the Lynx end is gravitationally bound to the M8 red dwarf? Do we know that a wormhole that is not associated with a star will not move along with galactic rotation? I expect that the best indication of association is a resonance zone that is clearly set by both the wormhole and the star.
munroburton wrote:It's mostly undefined. Galactic rotation allows us to draw a few implications - because if wormholes stayed associated with their respective stars, then there should be vastly longer wormholes cris-crossing the galaxy after billions of years, plus any number of ejected extragalactic stars dragging their associated termini out for true bolthole systems.
The average bridge being approximately 400? light years in length tells us that they must be temporary and/or relatively localised phenomena which expire or change when their host stars move too far apart - after potentially millions of years.
I'm guessing that the Twins anomaly is undergoing that transition, with one of the star's termini gradually losing stability and leading to a second termini forming, which will move further away from the star as its precedessor collapses.
Of course, we really don't know; but for arguments sake say that they start at around 100 LY and prefer to be associated with a star. That would mean that they could start out with nearby connections within a galactic arm (or one connection or none). Any lengthening or shortening after initial creation could be due to the relative movements of the terminal stars. The intense energy bound up in the wormhole might act as a spring, allowing it to stretch to a point where it either breaks (collapsing the wormhole) or decouples from the weaker star and at some point finding another star to form an association (in the meantime terminating into empty space).
However I am not sure why we might think that the Twins are undergoing a transition. But with a time-frame of millions of years, everything is changing and we just don't see that. I read that it takes Sol 220 million years to complete one galactic orbit.
Or artificial? I have read series where some elder race created jump points that now are used by the space-faring people without any idea of how to create a new one. So far the author(s) have not given any indication of something like that.