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Mintaka

Delta Ori (BS1852)

Observable Variable Star Excellent (70/100)

Range: 2.2 - 2.32, Period: 5.7d, Type: EA

HIP 25930; Delta Ori; 34 Ori VariableStar Ori Visible Level 2 Small telescope (4") - Monitor brightness changes
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Physical Properties

Magnitude 2.23
Range 2.2 - 2.32
Period 5.732 days
Variable Type Eclipsing Binary (Algol-type)
Spectral Type O9III
Star Color Blue (B-V -0.22)
Distance 1080.0 ly

Position & Identifiers

RA 05h 32m 00.4s
Dec -00° 17' 57.0"
Constellation Ori
HR 1852
HIP 25930
Bayer Delta
Flamsteed 34 Ori
Variable ID Del Ori
Double Cat 4134

Visibility

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Light Curve

Comparison Stars

Nearby stable stars for estimating brightness (AAVSO)

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Multiple Star System

Components 3
Component IDs AC
Separation 33.4″
Companion Mag 14.2
Companion Sp K
Position Angle 229°
Star Colors A: Blue B: Red
Discoverer BU 558

Eyepiece View

80x Dawes: 1.9″ TFOV: 0.6°
Realistic = true angular size
N E 229° A (2.2) B (14.2)

Sep: 33.4″ · PA: 229° · N up, E left

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

Size Comparison

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Stellar Lifecycle

Spectral Classification

Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram

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Blackbody Spectrum

Stellar Absorption Spectrum

Simulated absorption spectrum based on spectral type. Hover over lines to identify elements.

Stellar Notes

ADS 4134A, EA 2.14 - 2.26V, 1.94 - 2.13B, 5.732476d. Intrinsic variability also possible.
Binary with C = HR 1851. Component B, 14.0v at 33".
ADS 4134A, 5.7324d, K 101.0k/s, V0 +20.1k/s, asini 7.92. The first SB in which stationary lines were observed.
Color excess E(B-V) = +0.07.
Ori OB1b3; Orion belt; cluster CR 70.
Nitrogen deficient. Interstellar Lyman alpha absorption observed by AEROBEE rocket. Also classified B2V, O9.5II, | O9.5II-III + B0III.
Mass ejection at up to 1800k/s.
MINTAKA; Mintika.

Survey Image

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About Mintaka

Description

Mintaka is the westernmost star of Orion's Belt at magnitude 2.23, a blue giant of spectral type O9.5II located about 1,200 light-years from Earth. It is actually a complex multiple star system with at least five components. Mintaka is a slightly variable eclipsing binary, with brightness variations of about 0.2 magnitude over a period of 5.73 days.

Observing Tips

Mintaka is the right (western) star of Orion's Belt. It lies almost exactly on the celestial equator, making it visible from virtually every inhabited location on Earth. A small telescope reveals a fainter companion about 53 arcseconds away. Best observed December through March.

History

The name Mintaka comes from the Arabic 'mintaqa,' meaning 'the belt.' Because it sits almost on the celestial equator (within 0.3°), Mintaka rises almost exactly due east and sets almost exactly due west from any location, making it useful for orientation since ancient times.

Fun Facts

Mintaka's position on the celestial equator means it is the most useful star for determining due east and due west — wherever you are on Earth, Mintaka rises and sets within a fraction of a degree of true east and west.