| Winter is    coming on the HBO series "Game of Thrones,"    but no one seems to be able to predict when. The planet's last summer    persisted for seven years, while winter has been known to last a generation    on the show. Understanding when the seasons will change is just one of the    many issues plaguing the characters of the fantasy series based on the books    by George R.R. Martin. Although science doesn't    play much of a role in the fictional world — which comes complete with    dragons, magic and a red comet that serves as an omen — planetary science    could help explain the odd seasonal changes on    the three continents in the TV show's universe. "Yes, seasons can    last arbitrarily long times," Geoff Marcy,    a veteran planet hunter at the University of California, Berkeley, wrote in    an email to SPACE.com. Seasons are for the most    part controlled by the way a planet leans toward or away from its sun. For    example, the Earth's axis does not run straight through the planet. Instead,    it has a slight tilt that points the Northern Hemisphere toward the sun during    part of the planet's orbit (causing summer) and away for another part    (causing winter). Other planets experience    similar — and more extreme — seasonal changes.  "The planet Uranus    in our solar system has its North Pole spin axis pointed toward the sun during    some 42 years, and then it points away from the Sun for another 42    years," wrote Marcy. "If you lived anywhere in the northern    hemisphere, summer would last 42 years and then winter would last 42    years.  So the spin axis orientation makes all the difference." Although Uranus' winter    and summer might be extremely long, they are still predictable. On "Game    of Thrones," no one knows when summer will end and winter will begin. It    is possible that a "wobbly" axis could create variable seasonal length,    said Greg Laughlin, an astrophysicist at the    University of California Santa Cruz, but not necessarily on the timeline that    show presents. A wobbly tilt will not    create rapid seasonal changes over the course of years or even decades,    Laughlin said. Variability in the length of season happens after thousands of    years. In other words, the characters on the television show would not be    alive to see a distinct change in the length of any of the seasons. Mars has a wobbly axis,    according to Marcy. However, the Red Planet's seasons don't change from one    year to the next. Instead, it takes thousands of years for the planet's axis    to wobble enough to change the length of a season. Seasons are also    dependent upon the kind of planetary system the exoplanet finds itself in,    Laughlin said. "One situation that    will lead to wildly variable seasons over long periods of time is if the    planet in question is a member of a strongly interacting multiple planet    system," Laughlin said, describing how a planet's orbit could be pulled    out of whack by another planet. These changes would also    happen over the course of thousands or millions of years, Laughlin added. But    this also might be a good explanation for the seasonal issues on the    "Game of Thrones." The books and TV show    make mention of a second moon that disintegrated when it flew too close to    its sun. Of course, in the book's lore that moon was actually an egg full of    dragons … so maybe it would be best not to apply too much real science to    this kind of fiction. The newest season of    "Game of Thrones" premieres Sunday (March 31) at 9 p.m. EDT on HBO.    Check local listings. Copyright    2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This    material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. | 
YOUR COMMENT
