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Alcyone — Double Star in Taurus

HIP 17702; Eta Tauri; 25 Tauri

Observable Double Star Good (52/100)

Sep: 117.6", Companion: mag 6.3

Magnitude 2.9m DoubleStar Taurus (Tau) Visible
Star Map
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About Alcyone

Description

Alcyone is a blue-white giant of spectral type B7IIIe at magnitude 2.87, the brightest star in the Pleiades star cluster (M45) in Taurus. Located about 440 light-years from Earth, it has a luminosity of roughly 2,400 times solar. Alcyone is a Be star, surrounded by a gaseous disk from rapid rotation.

Observing Tips

Alcyone is the most prominent member of the Pleiades, the bright star at the center of the cluster's distinctive pattern. In binoculars, the Pleiades cluster is a stunning sight with Alcyone as its jewel. Best observed October through March.

History

Named after one of the seven daughters of Atlas and Pleione in Greek mythology. The Pleiades cluster and Alcyone in particular have been culturally significant worldwide — referenced in the Bible, Homer, and the astronomical traditions of dozens of cultures. The Japanese name 'Subaru' for the cluster is used by the car manufacturer.

Fun Facts

Alcyone is surrounded by a gas disk and a reflection nebula — the blue haze visible in long-exposure photographs of the Pleiades is starlight scattered by interstellar dust that the cluster happens to be moving through.

Observe

1Physical Properties

Magnitude 2.87
Spectral Type B7III giant
Star Color Blue-white (B-V -0.09)
Distance 408 ly

2Position & Identifiers

RA 03h 47m 29.1s
Dec +24° 06' 18.0"
Constellation Taurus (Tau)
HR 1165
HIP 17702
HD 23630
SAO 76199
Bayer Eta
Flamsteed 25 Tau

3How easy to split?

Primary 2.9 mag Companion 6.3 mag Separation 117.6″
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Telescope Bortle 3 Bortle 4 Bortle 5
80mm refr. Easy Easy Easy
150mm Newt. Easy Easy Easy
C8 203mm Easy Easy Easy
Easy Medium Hard Very hard Impossible

Bortle 3 = rural · 4 = outer suburbs · 5 = suburbs

4Visibility

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Best season Oct – Dec (peak: Nov)

5Multiple Star System Quintuple D,E,F,G,H: optical

Components 5 (quintuple)
Component IDs O
Separation 117.6″
Companion Mag 6.3
Companion Sp A4V
Position Angle 291°
Star Colors A: Blue-white B: White
Discoverer STFA 8
Component A is occultation double, sep. 0.031". B, C, D, 8.1 A0V, 8.1 Am(A5/F0/F2) and 8.7v F2V at 117" to 190". | Possibly second occultation companion at 0.001", unresolved by speckle interferometry. vsini of B 155k/s. Numerous | photometric determinations yield 6.3 for B component. The HD gives 8.1 for 23629 and the IDS indicates 8.1. Burnham, | Double Stars, gave 7.0 vis.

Separation over time

Measured 1836 → 2016 (180 y)
Separation drift 117.1" → 117.6" (+0.50")
Rate +0.0028" / y
PA drift 289° → 291° (+2°, +0.011°/y)

Essentially fixed on human timescales — the same view your grandchildren will see.

Measured from the WDS observational archive. No orbital solution has been derived — most likely the period is too long to fit an orbit to the available measurement arc.

Eyepiece View

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80x Dawes: 1.9″ TFOV: 0.6°
Realistic = true angular size
N E 291°

A: 2.9 · B: 6.3 · Sep: 117.6″ · PA: 291° · N up, E right

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

Explore

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Size Comparison

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Compare Stars

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Spectral Classification

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Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram

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Stellar Lifecycle

12

Blackbody Spectrum

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Stellar Absorption Spectrum

Simulated absorption spectrum based on spectral type. Hover over lines to identify elements.

14

Stellar Fusion

Discover

15Stellar Notes

Color excess E(B-V) = +0.03.
Pleiades cluster; Mel 22 #1432; in reflection nebula; Pleiades nebula; member assoc. Tau R1 at 110 pc.
Rotationally unstable Be shell star.
ALCYONE. The brightest of the Pleiades.
Angular diameter = 0.0016".
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Light Travel Time Machine

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Relativistic Travel

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