Just a curiosity:
Let $g \in \mathbb{Z}_{>0}$. Is it possible for a planet of topological genus $g$ to exist? For example, is there any contradiction (from the point of view of physics) in assuming the existence of a torus planet ($g=1$)?
Just a curiosity:
Let $g \in \mathbb{Z}_{>0}$. Is it possible for a planet of topological genus $g$ to exist? For example, is there any contradiction (from the point of view of physics) in assuming the existence of a torus planet ($g=1$)?
There is no problem from the point of view of physics for a toroidal planet to exist. There are two problems which are different to existence however
There is no known natural process by which a toroidal planet would form, so to get them you probably need some deliberate "manufacturing" of them by aliens.
Then if you perturb a toroidal planet enough it will gravitationally collapse into a spherical planet (probably rather dramatically). Quite a lot of people have examined the stability of toroidal planets, for example see this paper
Celestial objects such as planets, moons and stars are typically only held together by gravity, which is why they dissolve past the Roche limit, where another nearby gravitational field is stronger. An object held together only by gravity will be a spheroid, since its gravitational field is approximately spherically symmetric.
Smaller objects such as asteroids can consist of one large chunk of ice or rock, and can have any topological genus.