DeaconBlues wrote:
That data is also useful although not quite directional which I would be intending to do by plotting them on a map, however it is interesting to notice the increase of G-type stars between 40-50 light years out increases by a quantity of 22, prior to which - in concentric shell 30-40 - the increase was merely 1. Afterward the next largest increase is within concentric shell 70-80 which is, by sheer nature of geometry, dispersed throughout a volume of approximately 707906 cubic lightyears as compared to concentric shell 40-50 for which the quantity of G-type stars is dispersed over approximately 255516 cubic light years, a factor of 2.77 less volume for the quantity of G-type stars to be scattered amongst. What would be interesting to me is to determine how far apart they are from each other. The population density of G-type stars in concentric shells is a nice tool for seeing a pattern that doesn't quite go with the increase in volume, however if they were scattered throughout such concentric shells evenly, rather than grouped, such would be logistically useless. Perhaps just dividing it into cubes and seeing which cubes have the most quantity would be better?