Spica?
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Topic authorEvil Dr Ganymede
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Spica?
I'm looking for info on the Spica star system, which sounds rather interesting.
I found this: http://www.astro.uiuc.edu/~kaler/sow/spica.html
but is there any more info about the last sentence there:
"Lunar occultaions yeild evidence that Spica is in fact multiple, with three other fainter components."
So we know that Spica consists of two Type B main sequence stars, but is this implying that there could be more? Is anything known about these other companions? Are they spectroscopic or are they beyond the main binary pair?
Also, given that Spica is a strong X-Ray source, would this radiation sterilise the space for a few parsecs around it? I'm wondering (for the scifi RPG that I participate in) if nearby stars could have earthlike planets with life on them, or whether there'd be too much radiation from Spica to allow that to happen.
Can anyone shed any (preferably not UV-rich) light on this?
I found this: http://www.astro.uiuc.edu/~kaler/sow/spica.html
but is there any more info about the last sentence there:
"Lunar occultaions yeild evidence that Spica is in fact multiple, with three other fainter components."
So we know that Spica consists of two Type B main sequence stars, but is this implying that there could be more? Is anything known about these other companions? Are they spectroscopic or are they beyond the main binary pair?
Also, given that Spica is a strong X-Ray source, would this radiation sterilise the space for a few parsecs around it? I'm wondering (for the scifi RPG that I participate in) if nearby stars could have earthlike planets with life on them, or whether there'd be too much radiation from Spica to allow that to happen.
Can anyone shed any (preferably not UV-rich) light on this?
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Re: Spica?
Don't think so. The Sun has an X-ray luminosity of around 1e20 watts. According to Allen's Astrophysical Quantities, even late O or early B supergiants (Zet Ori, Eps Ori) pump out only around 2e25 watts in X-ray wavelengths, and a late B main sequence like Algol only 5e23 watts.Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:Also, given that Spica is a strong X-Ray source, would this radiation sterilise the space for a few parsecs around it?
So even if the Spica pair put out 1e25 watts of X-rays between them (100,000 Suns), you'd only need to back off to 300AU or so before the inverse-square law had you down to an Earth-like level of irradiation. The effect would be trivial in neighbouring solar systems.
Grant
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Topic authorEvil Dr Ganymede
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Topic authorEvil Dr Ganymede
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http://www.alcyone.de/SIT/mainstars/SIT000832.htm
claims it has 5 components. and references
Worley (1978) and "The Washington Visual Double Star Catalog, 1996.0 (Worley+, 1996)". It also includes the vague statement "occultations yield three companions" but no references for that information.
Here are some citations I came across. I dunno if what info they may contain about the total number of members.
LYUBIMKOV, L. S., RACHKOVSKAYA, T. M., ROSTOPCHIN, S. I., TARASOV, A. E.,The
binary system alpha Vir (Spica) : fundamental parameters of the components and
differences in their helium abundance., 1995, AZh, 72, 212
JORDAN, J.; DUKES, R.; MILLS, L., APT Observations of the Former Beta Cephei Star
Spica, 1997, AAS, 190, 2607
(supposedly its Cephid oscillations have increased again since this publication)
claims it has 5 components. and references
Worley (1978) and "The Washington Visual Double Star Catalog, 1996.0 (Worley+, 1996)". It also includes the vague statement "occultations yield three companions" but no references for that information.
Here are some citations I came across. I dunno if what info they may contain about the total number of members.
LYUBIMKOV, L. S., RACHKOVSKAYA, T. M., ROSTOPCHIN, S. I., TARASOV, A. E.,The
binary system alpha Vir (Spica) : fundamental parameters of the components and
differences in their helium abundance., 1995, AZh, 72, 212
JORDAN, J.; DUKES, R.; MILLS, L., APT Observations of the Former Beta Cephei Star
Spica, 1997, AAS, 190, 2607
(supposedly its Cephid oscillations have increased again since this publication)
Selden
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Topic authorEvil Dr Ganymede
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According to http://adc.gsfc.nasa.gov/adc/other_jrl_holdings.html
It's
Astronomicheskij Zhurnal (AZh)
Their home page is at
http://www.maik.ru/cgi-bin/journal.pl?n ... &page=main
It's
Astronomicheskij Zhurnal (AZh)
Their home page is at
http://www.maik.ru/cgi-bin/journal.pl?n ... &page=main
Selden
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Topic authorEvil Dr Ganymede
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Ta... Nuts, although I can actually access that journal online, I can only get to the abstract of the aforementioned paper online... and that doesn't mention other companions.
I'd imagine that these companions must be somewhat distant from the main pair if they're (possibly) only noticed by lunar occultation, right?
I'd imagine that these companions must be somewhat distant from the main pair if they're (possibly) only noticed by lunar occultation, right?
Here may be something:
2432 high resolution optical and infrared observations of 1625 sources, from interferometry and lunar occultation (Richichi & Percheron 2002).
which I haven't located yet, is mentioned in
"Astrophysics in 2002" ( Trimble and Aschwanden)
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/PASP/j ... 03051.html
(subscription required)
Trimble and Aschwanden's writing style, presumably to offset the dryness of the topics, is rather amusing.
2432 high resolution optical and infrared observations of 1625 sources, from interferometry and lunar occultation (Richichi & Percheron 2002).
which I haven't located yet, is mentioned in
"Astrophysics in 2002" ( Trimble and Aschwanden)
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/PASP/j ... 03051.html
(subscription required)
Trimble and Aschwanden's writing style, presumably to offset the dryness of the topics, is rather amusing.
Selden
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Re: Spica?
I think you should put a habitable planet around the distant K dwarf ... its magnitude would make it around K5V.Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:I'm wondering (for the scifi RPG that I participate in) if nearby stars could have earthlike planets with life on them, or whether there'd be too much radiation from Spica to allow that to happen.
It would certainly have an excellent view of the four B stars in the Spica system. If we assume for the moment that the measured plane-of-sky separation reflects real orbital distances, then the inhabitants of a planet around the K dwarf would see:
The central pair and the inner B companion merged into a single brilliant star of magnitude -15: eight times the full moon and easily visible in daylight. About once a year the inner B companion might creep far enough out of the glare to appear as a separate star of magnitude -13, maximum separation about 1.5' ... a fair test for visual acuity. The outer B companion would amble in a 50 year orbit as a -12 mag star, maximum separation from the others of a quarter-degree.
Pretty.
Grant
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Topic authorEvil Dr Ganymede
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So we have a close binary B V pair, a B5 V at 4 AU, a B7 V at 40 AU, and the K V far companion, right?
It would be rather interesting to put the world around the K V, wouldn't it... presumably it's well out of the range of nasty radiation emitted by the B stars. A distant companion might be more likely to be older than the B stars too (and thus have planets around it) - perhaps it's captured. I'd hate to be there in a few million years though, when the B stars started exploding! :0
Given we'd have three - maybe four - stars at below -10 magnitude in the sky, would that pretty much turn night into day on the planet around the K star? That's got to dramatically improve visibility at night, surely.
It's odd that I've still not found any solid confirmation of the existence of these companions anywhere though (other than the quote that Grant added here). Are they actually confirmed or suspected? (I guess I can assume they're confirmed for the purposes I'm after).
I found the PASP paper that Selden linked to - while it doesn't really contain any information on Spica, I must agree that it's written in a refreshingly entertaining manner.
The system would make an interesting addon to Celestia though...
It would be rather interesting to put the world around the K V, wouldn't it... presumably it's well out of the range of nasty radiation emitted by the B stars. A distant companion might be more likely to be older than the B stars too (and thus have planets around it) - perhaps it's captured. I'd hate to be there in a few million years though, when the B stars started exploding! :0
Given we'd have three - maybe four - stars at below -10 magnitude in the sky, would that pretty much turn night into day on the planet around the K star? That's got to dramatically improve visibility at night, surely.
It's odd that I've still not found any solid confirmation of the existence of these companions anywhere though (other than the quote that Grant added here). Are they actually confirmed or suspected? (I guess I can assume they're confirmed for the purposes I'm after).
I found the PASP paper that Selden linked to - while it doesn't really contain any information on Spica, I must agree that it's written in a refreshingly entertaining manner.
The system would make an interesting addon to Celestia though...
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Kaler gives spectral classes of B1V and B4V for the central pair, but sources are very variable. However, if you combine the theoretical absolute mags for B1V+B4V+B5V+B7V, as given by Kaler, it comes out to -3.6, which is pretty much on the nail with the observed -3.55.Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:So we have a close binary B V pair, a B5 V at 4 AU, a B7 V at 40 AU, and the K V far companion, right?
You'll find the B system described and referenced in the data search facility for Alcyone Software (always a handy source of information), with the angular plane-of-sky separations consistent with Kaler's linear measures. VizieR lists the distant K companion as component B, and the multiple B-stars as component A. Again, the angular separation fits with Kaler's information.Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:It's odd that I've still not found any solid confirmation of the existence of these companions anywhere though (other than the quote that Grant added here). Are they actually confirmed or suspected? (I guess I can assume they're confirmed for the purposes I'm after).
Grant
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Topic authorEvil Dr Ganymede
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I'm trying to make an SSC of the Spica system... what's the orbital period of the B5 V companion at 4 AU and the B7 V companion at 40 AU? I'm guessing their radii are a little smaller than the innermost B4 V companion?
I guess I'll make it so that they orbit the B1 V itself, I suppose I can't set it so that everything orbits a common barycentre because the B1 V is fixed?
Here's what I got so far...
And can someone remind me if there's a way to stick a lens flare on a planet? (or in this case, a star that's pretending to be a planet ).
I guess I'll make it so that they orbit the B1 V itself, I suppose I can't set it so that everything orbits a common barycentre because the B1 V is fixed?
Here's what I got so far...
Code: Select all
"SpicaB" "Spica"
{
Texture "bstar.jpg" # B4 V
Radius 2785060 #
Emissive true
EllipticalOrbit {
Period 0.01099 # 4.0145 days
SemiMajorAxis 0.12
Eccentricity 0.0
ArgOfPericenter 0
MeanAnomaly 0
}
RotationPeriod 3
}
"SpicaC" "Spica"
{
Texture "bstar.jpg" # B5 V
Radius 2600000 # ????
Emissive true
EllipticalOrbit {
Period 1 # ????
SemiMajorAxis 4.0
Eccentricity 0.0
ArgOfPericenter 0
MeanAnomaly 0
}
RotationPeriod 3
}
"SpicaD" "Spica"
{
Texture "bstar.jpg" # B7 V
Radius 2200000 # ????
Emissive true
EllipticalOrbit {
Period 50 # ????
SemiMajorAxis 40.0
Eccentricity 0.0
ArgOfPericenter 0
MeanAnomaly 0
}
RotationPeriod 3
}
"SpicaE" "Spica"
{
Texture "gstar.jpg" # K5 V (no K star texture?!)
Radius 417759 # ????
Emissive true
EllipticalOrbit {
Period 1000000 # ????
SemiMajorAxis 10000.0
Eccentricity 0.0
ArgOfPericenter 0
MeanAnomaly 0
}
RotationPeriod 30
}
And can someone remind me if there's a way to stick a lens flare on a planet? (or in this case, a star that's pretending to be a planet ).
Last edited by Evil Dr Ganymede on 24.09.2004, 19:58, edited 3 times in total.
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Topic authorEvil Dr Ganymede
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chaos syndrome wrote:...of course, if the B stars are still in the dwarf stage, everything there is probably still undergoing the heavy bombardment stage, as if the X-rays and stuff aren't bad enough...
I'm assuming the K V star is captured and much older. And it sounds like its out of the range of the nastiest radiation from the B stars.