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Bellatrix

HIP 25336; Gamma Ori; 24 Ori

HIP 25336; Gamma Ori; 24 Ori DoubleStar Ori Visível Nível 3 Medium telescope (6-8") - Requires steady seeing
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Propriedades Físicas

Magnitude 1.64
Tipo Espectral B2III
Cor da Estrela Azul (B-V -0.22)
Temperatura 22604 K
Raio 5.7 R☉
Distância 239.8 ly

Posição e Identificadores

RA 05h 25m 07.9s
Dec +06° 20' 59.0"
Constelação Ori
HR 1790
HIP 25336
Bayer Gamma
Flamsteed 24 Ori

Visibilidade

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Sistema Estelar Múltiplo

Separação 178.0″
Mag da Companheira 13.1
Ângulo de Posição 144°
Cores das Estrelas A: Azul
Descobridor BUP 78

Vista pela Ocular

32x Dawes: 1.9″ TFOV: 1.6°
Realista = tamanho angular verdadeiro
N E 144° A (1.6) B (13.1)

Sep: 178.0″ · PA: 144° · N cima, L esquerda

Resolvido · Rayleigh: 2.3″ · Dawes: 1.9″ · Eff: 3.1″

Comparação de Tamanho

Ciclo de vida estelar

Classificação Espectral

Diagrama Hertzsprung-Russell

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Espectro de corpo negro

Espectro de absorção estelar

Espectro de absorção simulado com base no tipo espectral. Passe o mouse sobre as linhas para identificar os elementos.

Notas Estelares

Ori OB1.
Expanding circumstellar shell. AEROBEE evidence for mass ejection up to 1600k/s.
BELLATRIX; the Amazon Star.
Diam. = 0.00070 - 0.00072".

Imagem de Levantamento

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Sobre Bellatrix

Descrição

Bellatrix is a blue giant of spectral type B2III, the third brightest star in Orion at magnitude 1.64. Located about 250 light-years from Earth, it marks Orion's left shoulder (as viewed from our perspective). Bellatrix is about 8-9 times the mass of the Sun and roughly 9,200 times more luminous. It is one of the hottest stars easily visible to the naked eye, with a surface temperature of about 22,000 K.

Dicas de Observação

Bellatrix is found at the upper right corner of Orion's rectangle of body stars, opposite the red supergiant Betelgeuse. While not as famous as its fellow shoulder star, Bellatrix's blue-white brilliance contributes to Orion's striking visual impact. The contrast between Bellatrix's blue-white color and Betelgeuse's red-orange across the constellation is beautiful. Best observed from November through March.

História

The name Bellatrix is Latin for 'the female warrior,' sometimes translated as 'the Amazon Star.' In medieval Arabic astronomy, it was known as 'al-Najid' meaning 'the conqueror.' Bellatrix was one of the navigation stars used by European sailors. It has been evolving away from the main sequence and will eventually become an orange giant before ending its life, possibly as a supernova if massive enough.

Curiosidades

Bellatrix is near the mass threshold that separates stars that end as white dwarfs from those that explode as supernovae — its ultimate fate depends on exactly how much mass it retains as it evolves. It is the 26th brightest star in the sky and the third brightest in one of the sky's most iconic constellations.