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Becrux

HIP 62434; Beta Cru

HIP 62434; Beta Cru DoubleStar Cru Visível Nível 3 Medium telescope (6-8") - Requires steady seeing
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Propriedades Físicas

Magnitude 1.25
Tipo de Variável Beta Cephei (Pulsating)
Tipo Espectral B1IV
Cor da Estrela Azul (B-V -0.23)
Distância 350.0 ly

Posição e Identificadores

RA 12h 47m 43.2s
Dec -59° 41' 19.0"
Constelação Cru
HR 4853
HIP 62434
Bayer Beta
Variable ID Bet Cru

Visibilidade

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Sistema Estelar Múltiplo

Componentes 3
IDs dos Componentes AC
Separação 42.6″
Mag da Companheira 11.4
Ângulo de Posição 326°
Cores das Estrelas A: Azul
Descobridor I 362

Vista pela Ocular

80x Dawes: 1.9″ TFOV: 0.6°
Realista = tamanho angular verdadeiro
N E 326° A (1.2) B (11.4)

Sep: 42.6″ · PA: 326° · N cima, L esquerda

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

Comparação de Tamanho

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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

Beta C 1.23 - 1.31V, multiple periods, 0.2365072d, 0.160474d, 0.121383d, 6d, 7 - 8y and others.
Interferometer measures indicate close double or multiple star. Component B, 11.4v, F8V, optical; C, 7.5v, B8.
0.1604d, and 7 - 8y.
Probable member of Sco-Cen cluster; member of Sco-Cen assoc.; member of Pleiades group.
Becrux; MIMOSA.
Diam. = 0.000702 - 0.000722".

Imagem de Levantamento

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Sobre Becrux

Descrição

Becrux (also known as Mimosa) is the second brightest star in the constellation Crux (the Southern Cross) at magnitude 1.25. It is a blue giant of spectral type B0.5III, located about 280 light-years from Earth. Becrux is about 16 times the mass of the Sun and roughly 34,000 times more luminous. It is a Beta Cephei-type variable star, pulsating with multiple periods between 4 and 6 hours, causing small brightness fluctuations of a few hundredths of a magnitude.

Dicas de Observação

Becrux marks the eastern (left) arm of the Southern Cross and is visible only from latitudes south of about 20°N. The Cross is best located by using the Southern Pointers (Alpha and Beta Centauri), which point toward it. Becrux's blue-white color contrasts beautifully with the reddish Gacrux (Gamma Crucis) at the top of the Cross. The famous Jewel Box Cluster (NGC 4755) lies just 1 degree southeast of Becrux. Best observed from March through July from southern latitudes.

História

The name Mimosa may derive from the flower, though its origin is uncertain. The alternative name Becrux is a modern contraction of 'Beta Crucis.' The Southern Cross has been used for navigation by sailors in the Southern Hemisphere for centuries, and it appears on the national flags of Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, Papua New Guinea, and Samoa.

Curiosidades

Becrux's pulsation was one of the first confirmed cases of non-radial pulsation in a star — the surface oscillates in complex patterns rather than simply expanding and contracting uniformly. At its distance, if it were as close as Sirius, Becrux would be almost as bright as the full Moon.