ZETA (ζ) BOÖTIS
MULTIPLE STAR
Right Ascension:
14h 41m 08s
Best Seen:
4/15 - 8/15
Declination:
13º 43' 42"
Combined
Magnitude:
3.78
Computer File:
zetaboo
Constellation:
Bootes
Apparent
Separation:
1"
Actual
Compared to
Distance
180 l.y.
--
Separation
~ 3.1 billion miles
~ 33 Earth/Sun
Orbital Period
~ 120 years
--
Actual Brightness
--
37 / 36 (Sun)
Magnitude
4.53 / 4.58
--
Mass
Surface Gravity
--
--
Surface Composition (by mass)
74% hydrogen 24% helium 2% everything else
same (Sun)
Spectral Type
A3 IV n / A2 V
G2 V (Sun)
Density (gram/cubic cm)
--
--
WHAT TO LOOK FOR THROUGH THE TELESCOPE:
-
Recommended eyepiece: 24mm or 40 mm.
-
When people look through the telescope they should see two stars next to each other. One star should be slightly brighter than the other.
ZETA BOÖTIS INFORMATION:
- The orbits of these stars could set a record: the orbits are very elongated.
a. At their farthest, the stars are about 60 AU’s apart; at their closest, they’re about 1.5 AU’s apart, about as close as Mars to the Sun.
b. At close passage, the individual stars cannot be resolved – that happened last in 1897, and will happen again in 2021.
c. At their farthest separation, they can be resolved – the best view will be in 2082.
- This large eccentricity could be the result of a violent encounter with another star, but it’s impossible to know.
Item
Updated
Notes
Coordinates
11-08-2002
updated with SIMBAD
Combined Magnitude
11-08-2002
previously: 4.60 – now matches Scott’s The Flamsteed Collection
Apparent Separation
11-08-2002
previously: 7" – NO idea where that came from: coordinates are identical in RA, DEC is only different 1"
Distance
11-08-2002
previously: 88 ly – BUT Flamsteed and SIMBAD say otherwise
Separation
11-08-2002
previously: 50 Earth/Sun – new info from http://www.astro.uiuc.edu/~kaler/sow/zetaboo.html
Orbital Period
11-22-2002
http://www.astro.uiuc.edu/~kaler/sow/zetaboo.html
Actual Brightness
11-08-2002
with Scott’s Flamsteed
Magnitude
11-08-2002
with Flamsteed
Mass
Surface Gravity
Surface Composition
01-06-2003
OK for all stars
Spectral Type
11-08-2002
with Flamsteed
Density
Other Information
11-08-2002
with http://www.astro.uiuc.edu/~kaler/sow/zetaboo.html