Procyon
HIP 37279; Alpha CMi; 10 CMi
물리적 특성
위치 & 식별자
가시성
사용자 설정에서 관측지를 설정하세요 가시성 데이터를 확인할 수 있습니다.
다중 항성계
접안렌즈 시야
Sep: 3.8″ · PA: 286° · 위=북, 왼쪽=동
분해됨 · Rayleigh: 2.3″ · Dawes: 1.9″ · Eff: 3.1″
크기 비교
항성의 진화
분광 분류
헤르츠스프룽-러셀 도표
흑체 복사 스펙트럼
항성 흡수 스펙트럼
스펙트럼 유형을 기반으로 한 시뮬레이션 흡수 스펙트럼. 선 위에 마우스를 올려 원소를 식별하세요.
항성 참고사항
서베이 이미지
서베이 이미지 로드 중…
Procyon 소개
설명
Procyon is the brightest star in Canis Minor and the eighth brightest in the night sky at magnitude 0.38. It is a yellow-white subgiant/main-sequence star of spectral type F5IV-V, located only 11.5 light-years from Earth. Procyon is 1.5 times the mass of the Sun and about 7 times more luminous. Like Sirius, it has a white dwarf companion: Procyon B, discovered in 1896, orbits with a period of about 41 years. The white dwarf has about 0.6 solar masses packed into a body the size of Earth.
관측 팁
Procyon is easy to locate as part of the Winter Triangle, along with Sirius and Betelgeuse. Its pale yellow-white color contrasts nicely with the blue-white of Sirius. The white dwarf companion Procyon B (magnitude 10.7) is even more challenging to observe than Sirius B, as it lies very close to the primary — typically only 4-5 arcseconds away. Resolving it requires an excellent telescope of at least 300mm and superb seeing conditions. Best observed from January through April.
역사
The name Procyon comes from the Greek 'Prokyon' meaning 'before the dog,' because it rises shortly before the Dog Star Sirius when observed from most northern latitudes. Friedrich Bessel predicted the existence of the white dwarf companion in 1844, but it wasn't visually confirmed until John Martin Schaeberle observed it in 1896 using the Lick Observatory 36-inch refractor.
재미있는 사실
Procyon is one of the few stars bright enough that the tidal effects of its white dwarf companion could be predicted before the companion was seen. Along with Sirius and the Sun, it is one of only three star systems within 12 light-years that include a white dwarf. Procyon is expected to swell into a red giant within the next 10 to 100 million years.