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Acrux

HIP 60718; Alpha1 Cru

Beobachtbarer Doppelstern Prunkstück (75/100)

Sep: 3.5", Companion: mag 1.6

HIP 60718; Alpha1 Cru DoubleStar Cru Sichtbar Stufe 3 Medium telescope (6-8") - Requires steady seeing
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Physikalische Eigenschaften

Helligkeit 1.33
Spektraltyp B0.5IV
Sternfarbe Blau (B-V -0.24)
Temperatur 28027 K
Radius 8.3 R☉
Entfernung 320.8 ly

Position & Bezeichnungen

RA 12h 26m 35.9s
Dec -63° 05' 57.0"
Sternbild Cru
HR 4730
HIP 60718
Bayer Alpha1

Sichtbarkeit

Standort in den Benutzereinstellungen festlegen um Sichtbarkeitsdaten zu sehen.

Mehrfachsternsystem

Komponenten 3
Komponenten-IDs AB
Abstand 3.5″
Begleiter-Mag 1.6
Begleiter-Sp B1V
Positionswinkel 111°
Sternfarben A: Blau B: Blau
Entdecker DUN 252

Okularansicht

80x Dawes: 1.9″ TFOV: 0.6°
Realistisch = wahrer Winkelabstand
N E 111° A (1.3) B (1.6)

Sep: 3.5″ · PA: 111° · N oben, O links

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

Größenvergleich

Sternentwicklung

Spektralklassifikation

Hertzsprung-Russell-Diagramm

HR-Diagramm wird geladen…

Schwarzkörperspektrum

Stellares Absorptionsspektrum

Simuliertes Absorptionsspektrum basierend auf dem Spektraltyp. Bewegen Sie die Maus über die Linien, um die Elemente zu identifizieren.

Sternanmerkungen

AB 1.35 B0.5IV, 1.75 B3n or B0.5Vn, q = 0.916". Mag. and colors for blend of HR 4730-31, 0.76V, -0.25(B-V), -1.00(U-B), | -0.24(R-I). Masses 14 and 10 solar for hyperbolic orbit with periastron distance 61 AU.
Primary of visual double, 75.769d, K 32.8k/s, V0 +7.5, asini 30.0.
HII region. Although there is disagreement in the RV of HR 4730, 4731, they are both members of the Sco-Cen assoc.
ACRUX.

Durchmusterungsbild

Durchmusterungsbild wird geladen…

Über Acrux

Beschreibung

Acrux is the brightest star in the Sternbild Crux (das Kreuz des Südens) at a combined magnitude of 0.76. It is a Mehrfachsternsystem located about 320 Lichtjahre von der Erde entfernt. The two brightest components, Alpha1 Crucis (magnitude 1.33, Spektraltyp B0.5IV) and Alpha2 Crucis (magnitude 1.73, Spektraltyp B1V), are separated by about 4 Bogensekunden. Both are hot, massive blue stars. Alpha1 is itself a spektroskopischer Doppelstern, making Acrux at least a triple system.

Beobachtungstipps

Acrux marks the foot (southern point) of das Kreuz des Südens and is visible only from latitudes south of about 27°N. A kleines Teleskop easily splits the two main components, which present a beautiful pair of nearly matched blue-white stars — one of the finest Doppelsterns in the sky. The color contrast with the reddish Gacrux at the top of the Cross adds to the spectacle. Acrux, together with Gacrux, points roughly toward the südlicher Himmelspol. Best observed from März through Juli from südlichen Breiten.

Geschichte

The name Acrux is a modern contraction of 'Alpha Crucis,' coined in the 19th century. The Kreuz des Südens was known to ancient Greeks (it was visible from the Mediterranean due to Präzession) but gradually sank below their horizon over millennia. European explorers rediscovered it in the Age of Exploration. The Portuguese navigator João Faras made the first known European observation of the Cross in 1500.

Wissenswertes

Acrux is the southernmost first-magnitude star and is depicted on the flags of five nations. The two main components of Acrux orbit each other with a period of approximately 75,000 years. Both stars are hot enough and massive enough that they will eventually explode as supernovae — a rare case of a visual double where both components are destined for the same spectacular fate.