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Altair

HIP 97649; Alpha Aql; 53 Aql

HIP 97649; Alpha Aql; 53 Aql DoubleStar Aql Visible Level 3 Medium telescope (6-8") - Requires steady seeing
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Physical Properties

Magnitude 0.77
Spectral Type A7Vn
Star Color Yellow-white (B-V 0.22)
Temperature 7555 K
Radius 1.6 R☉
Distance 17.1 ly

Position & Identifiers

RA 19h 50m 47.0s
Dec +08° 52' 06.0"
Constellation Aql
HR 7557
HIP 97649
Bayer Alpha
Flamsteed 53 Aql
Double Cat 13009

Visibility

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Multiple Star System

Components 3
Component IDs AB
Separation 195.8″
Companion Mag 9.8
Position Angle 286°
Star Colors A: Yellow-white
Discoverer STFB 10

Eyepiece View

32x Dawes: 1.9″ TFOV: 1.6°
Realistic = true angular size
N E 286° A (0.8) B (9.8)

Sep: 195.8″ · PA: 286° · N up, E left

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

Size Comparison

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

Component B optical.
ALTAIR; Atair.
Diam. = 0.00278 - 0.00298".

Survey Image

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About Altair

Description

Altair is the brightest star in the constellation Aquila and the 12th brightest in the night sky at magnitude 0.77. It is a white main-sequence star of spectral type A7V, only 16.7 light-years from Earth. Altair rotates extremely rapidly — once every 8.9 hours — causing it to be noticeably oblate, with its equatorial diameter about 22% larger than its polar diameter. It is about 1.8 times the mass of the Sun and roughly 11 times more luminous.

Observing Tips

Altair is one of the three vertices of the Summer Triangle, along with Vega and Deneb. It is flanked by two dimmer stars — Tarazed (Gamma Aquilae, magnitude 2.7) to the northwest and Alshain (Beta Aquilae, magnitude 3.7) to the southeast — creating a distinctive compact line. Altair is visible from virtually all inhabited latitudes. Best observed from June through November when the Summer Triangle dominates the evening sky.

History

The name Altair comes from the Arabic 'al-Nasr al-Ta'ir' meaning 'the flying eagle.' In Chinese and Japanese mythology, Altair represents the Cowherd (Niulang/Hikoboshi), separated from the Weaver Girl (Vega) by the celestial river of the Milky Way, reunited once a year on the seventh day of the seventh month — celebrated as the Qixi/Tanabata festival. Altair's rapid rotation and oblateness were directly confirmed by interferometric imaging in 2007.

Fun Facts

Altair was one of the first stars to have its surface directly imaged — in 2007, optical interferometry produced an image showing its oblate shape and gravity darkening at the equator. A day on Altair lasts only about 9 hours, compared to the Sun's 25-day rotation period. At Altair's equatorial rotation speed of about 286 km/s, it is spinning at a significant fraction of its breakup velocity.