This is an addon for the triple star system EBLM J0555-57 (EBLM J0555-57Aa, EBLM J0555-57Ab, EBLM J0555-57B), whose Ab component is the smallest known star.
All three stars (zoomed in from big distance, the distance between the A star sub-system and the B star is atually much greater)
Star Aa and Ab
Star B
Update 1.1: Fixed the spectral type of Ab from F8 to M + added the other catalog designations
EBLM J0555-57 (including the smallest known star)
EBLM J0555-57 (including the smallest known star)
- Attachments
-
- EBLM J0555-57.zip
- (605 Bytes) Downloaded 225 times
Last edited by EarthMoon on 07.10.2023, 09:04, edited 1 time in total.
Crew: "We are orbiting a black hole."
Control Center: "Do not fly too close to the black hole!"
Crew: "OH OOPS..."
Celestia versions:
1.6.3, 1.7.0 sRGB, 1.6.1 ED (plain)
Current projects:
Celestial (a Celestia-like program written in Python)
Control Center: "Do not fly too close to the black hole!"
Crew: "OH OOPS..."
Celestia versions:
1.6.3, 1.7.0 sRGB, 1.6.1 ED (plain)
Current projects:
Celestial (a Celestia-like program written in Python)
- SevenSpheres
- Moderator
- Posts: 826
- Joined: 08.10.2019
- With us: 5 years 1 month
The Wikipedia page of EBLM_J0555-57 says "Spectral Type: F8" for EBLM J0555-57A, so I took that value for both A stars (Aa and Ab). The characteristics section of the table only has temperature values for Aa and B, but not Ab, so I chose F8. I also noticed F8 for such a small star is too hot, but yeah.
Update/fix available in original post.
Update/fix available in original post.
Crew: "We are orbiting a black hole."
Control Center: "Do not fly too close to the black hole!"
Crew: "OH OOPS..."
Celestia versions:
1.6.3, 1.7.0 sRGB, 1.6.1 ED (plain)
Current projects:
Celestial (a Celestia-like program written in Python)
Control Center: "Do not fly too close to the black hole!"
Crew: "OH OOPS..."
Celestia versions:
1.6.3, 1.7.0 sRGB, 1.6.1 ED (plain)
Current projects:
Celestial (a Celestia-like program written in Python)
I just noticed this star actually isn't the smallest known one, stars like Sirius B or neutron stars are even smaller ...
Crew: "We are orbiting a black hole."
Control Center: "Do not fly too close to the black hole!"
Crew: "OH OOPS..."
Celestia versions:
1.6.3, 1.7.0 sRGB, 1.6.1 ED (plain)
Current projects:
Celestial (a Celestia-like program written in Python)
Control Center: "Do not fly too close to the black hole!"
Crew: "OH OOPS..."
Celestia versions:
1.6.3, 1.7.0 sRGB, 1.6.1 ED (plain)
Current projects:
Celestial (a Celestia-like program written in Python)
- TheLostProbe
- Posts: 218
- Joined: 07.05.2020
- Age: 18
- With us: 4 years 6 months
- Location: City of Port Phillip, Melbourne, Australia
well Wikipedia says "EBLM J0555-57Ab, the smallest star in the system, orbits its primary star with a period of 7.8 days, and at the time of discovery, was the smallest known star with a mass sufficient to enable the fusion of hydrogen in its core."
so it's not the smallest star, but it is one of the smallest stars that is able to fuse hydrogen in its core
so it's not the smallest star, but it is one of the smallest stars that is able to fuse hydrogen in its core
"Carbon stars with ancient satellites colonized by sentient fungi. Gas giants inhabited by vast meteorological intelligences. Worlds stretched thin across the membranes where the dimensions intersect... impossible to describe with our limited vocabulary."
- Dr. Wallace Breen
- Dr. Wallace Breen