Menu

Regulus

HIP 49669; Alpha Leo; 32 Leo

HIP 49669; Alpha Leo; 32 Leo DoubleStar Leo Visível Nível 3 Medium telescope (6-8") - Requires steady seeing
Mapa Estelar Adicionar à Lista Adicionar ao Plano
Voltar ao Catálogo

Propriedades Físicas

Magnitude 1.35
Tipo Espectral B8IVn
Cor da Estrela Azul-branco (B-V -0.11)
Temperatura 12433 K
Raio 3.1 R☉
Distância 78.6 ly

Posição e Identificadores

RA 10h 08m 22.3s
Dec +11° 58' 02.0"
Constelação Leo
HR 3982
HIP 49669
Bayer Alpha
Flamsteed 32 Leo
Double Cat 7654

Visibilidade

Defina um local nas Configurações do Usuário para ver dados de visibilidade.

Sistema Estelar Múltiplo

Componentes 4
IDs dos Componentes AB
Separação 175.9″
Mag da Companheira 8.2
Ângulo de Posição 308°
Cores das Estrelas A: Azul-branco
Descobridor STFB 6

Vista pela Ocular

32x Dawes: 1.9″ TFOV: 1.6°
Realista = tamanho angular verdadeiro
N E 308° A (1.4) B (8.2)

Sep: 175.9″ · PA: 308° · 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

Carregando diagrama HR…

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

AB binary, B, 8.13V, +0.86(B-V), +0.51(U-B), K1V. BC, 7.6, 13.1v, 2000y, a = 4.163".
Color excess E(B-V) = +0.01.
C1 neutral carbon continuum shows discontinuities in UV. Excess IR emission.
REGULUS; Cor Leonis; Rex; Al Kalb al Asad; Kabeleced.
Diam. = 0.00132 - 0.00137".

Imagem de Levantamento

Carregando imagem de levantamento…

Sobre Regulus

Descrição

Regulus is the brightest star in the constellation Leo at magnitude 1.35 and the 21st brightest in the night sky. It is a blue-white main-sequence star of spectral type B7V, located about 79 light-years from Earth. Regulus is about 3.5 times the mass of the Sun and roughly 288 times more luminous. It rotates extremely rapidly — once every 15.9 hours — giving it a significantly oblate shape. Regulus is actually a quadruple star system with two widely separated pairs.

Dicas de Observação

Regulus sits at the base of the distinctive Sickle asterism in Leo, making it easy to find. It lies almost exactly on the ecliptic, so the Moon and planets frequently pass very close to it or even occult it — watching for these conjunctions is rewarding. The wide companion Regulus B/C (magnitudes 8.1 and 13.5) lies about 177 arcseconds away and is an easy target for small telescopes. Best observed from February through June.

História

Regulus means 'little king' in Latin, a name given by Copernicus. Earlier names include 'Cor Leonis' (Heart of the Lion) in Latin and 'Basiliskos' (little king) in Greek. It was one of the four Royal Stars of ancient Persia, marking the summer solstice around 3000 BC. Regulus was important in ancient astrology and was associated with royalty and power across many cultures.

Curiosidades

Regulus spins so fast that it is about 32% wider at its equator than at its poles. If it rotated just 16% faster, it would tear itself apart. Because it lies almost exactly on the ecliptic, Regulus is regularly occulted by the Moon and occasionally by planets — Venus occulted Regulus in 1959, and the next Venus occultation will occur in 2044.