The Webb Deep-Sky Society

An international society of amateur and professional astronomers specialising in the observation of double stars and 'deep sky' objects founded in 1967. Membership is open to anyone who shares the interests of the Society.

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  • January 2014 - Double Star of the Month

    The two stars to be highlighted this month are both systems of higher multiplicity although the closest visual components are at the limit of amateur instrumentation.

    2 Cam (04 39 58.03 +53 28 23.7) is a Struve pair (No 566) which has somehow eluded me for more than 40 years. I first saw it in 2012 with the Cambridge 8-inch Cooke and the companion was quite well seen and measurable. Since it was first measured in 1828 at 312° and 1".5, the two stars have slowly closed and moved in a retrograde manner and last year I obtained 169.7° and 0".89. A preliminary orbit gives a period of 425 years for this unequal (5.6 and 7.5) pair of stars. In 1901, using the Yerkes 40-inch OG, Burnham noted that the primary was a close pair in itself with the new component (V = 7.4) being found at 317° and 0".2. This turned out to be a rapid binary and the currently accepted period is 26.89 years, whilst the separation of the stars never exceeds 0".3. Dembowski adds another pair in the field (D 4) and it can be found about 4 minutes preceding - mags 9.0, 10.3 and separation 5".8. Whilst in this area look at 1 Cam = STF 550, a fine bright pair.

    eta Orionis (05 24 28.62 -02 23 49.7) This fine, bright pair of white stars is a good test for the 20-cm aperture. It was first resolved, when separated by 0".9, by W. R. Dawes who noted 'This close and beautiful object was discovered by me on Jan 15, 1848, with an aperture of only 4.25-in which I happened to be using on my 6.33-in refractor'. It is one of 13 pairs in the WDS under his discovery code. The current separation is around 1".8 and the stars have been slowly separating since discovery. Notwithstanding the fact that they are similarly hot, young and massive stars, the WDS notes that A and B form an optical system; the more distant mag 9.4 star at 114" is also believed to be unconnected with the bright stars. DA 5 was not known to Smyth but Webb notes colours of white and purplish (this may be the observation of Dawes) whilst others see only two white components. The A star is actually a massive triple system. Many years ago it was found to be an eclipsing spectroscopic binary of 7.88 days period with both stars possessing about 12 solar masses. More recently, speckle interferometer observations by H. A. McAlister and colleagues found a third companion with a period of 9.9 years, whose mass is about 1.5 solar.

    Bob Argyle - Double Star Section Director

  • Double Star of the Month - January 2011

    In this series of short articles, a double star in both the northern and southern hemispheres will be highlighted for observation with small telescopes, with new objects being selected for each month.

    Rigel = beta Orionis (05 14 32.27 -08 12 05.9) is perhaps the most intrinsically luminous star in a double star system which can be seen in a small telescope. Whilst the measured luminosity of other bright stars such as Canopus have varied wildly over many years, the advent of the Hipparcos mission has been able to pin down the geometric distance to these objects much more accurately. The current trigonometric parallax for Rigel from Hipparcos is 3.78 milli-arcseconds with an uncertainty of about 10%. This translates to a luminosity of 48,000 times that of the Sun. The faint companion star whose estimated magnitude has also fluctuated over the years might be dominated by the light of the dazzling primary star 9 arc seconds distant but it is an equally interesting object in its own right. In 1871, Burnham, using his 6-inch Clark refractor, suspected an elongation of this star, and having then examined it with the 18.5-inch OG at Dearborn was convinced that there was a `real and measurable' elongation. Around 1900, Aitken, Hussey and Barnard using the 36-inch refractor at Lick all recorded separations in the 0.09 to 0.16 arc second range for BC. Occasional sightings have been reported since then, including as late as 2005 but no orbit exists and in fact the reality of the companion to B must still regard as unproven. Rigel B is known to be a spectroscopic binary but this cannot be BC. It needs a good night to see Rigel B clearly in the glare of the primary. The magnitude is near to 6.8 rather than the 10.4 first assigned to it by Burnham.

    19 Cam (05 22 33.53 +79 13 52.1) is a mag 5.1 late F dwarf star some 68 light years distant. A companion star of mag. 9.2 was first noted, apparently by Piazzi, in the compilation of his Palermo catalogue and later catalogued by Struve as STF 634.This is a good example of an optical double. In 1825, South found star B at 346° and 37", by late 1926 it was at 62°, 9" and by 2008 it had reached 133°, 27". Both stars have significant proper motions (0.18 and 0.16 arc seconds per annum) but almost in opposite directions on the sky. This is an attractive pair for small telescopes although rather difficult to find being in a sparse area near the north celestial pole - the colours were given as light yellow and pale blue by Smyth.

    Bob Argyle - Double Star Section Director

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