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Mebsuta — Double Star in Gemini

Epsilon Gem

Magnitude 3.0m DoubleStar Gemini (Gem) Visible
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About Mebsuta

Description

Mebsuta, Epsilon Geminorum, is a luminous yellow supergiant of spectral type G9 Ib lying approximately 840 light-years from Earth in the constellation Gemini. With an estimated radius of 140 times the Sun's and a luminosity around 8,500 times greater, it is one of the intrinsically brightest stars visible in the northern winter sky — it only appears modest (magnitude 2.98) because of its great distance. Its surface temperature is roughly 4,660 K, giving it a warm amber tint at the eyepiece.

Observing Tips

Mebsuta sits on the leading (western) foot of the Gemini twins, south of Castor and east of Mu Geminorum. An easy naked-eye star from all but the most light-polluted cities, it is also an excellent binocular target and shares the field of view with several Milky Way clusters, including M35 just two degrees to its northwest. In the telescope Mebsuta shows a delicate pale-yellow hue typical of intermediate-temperature supergiants. Best observed from December through April.

History

The name comes from the Arabic "mabsūṭah," meaning "the outstretched paw," referring to the mythical paw of a lion that pre-Islamic Arabic astronomy placed here. The Greek name Epsilon Geminorum is a later Bayer designation. Mebsuta was famously occulted by Mars on April 8, 1976, giving astronomers rare timing data on its angular diameter.

Fun Facts

Mebsuta is a notable example of a yellow supergiant caught in a brief transitional phase between being a blue main-sequence star and a red supergiant — this whole stage lasts only a few tens of thousands of years. Its stellar wind is about a hundred thousand times stronger than the Sun's, and the star will eventually end its life as a core-collapse supernova.

Observe

1Physical Properties

Magnitude 2.98
Range 2.97 - 3.05
Variable Type LC
Spectral Type G9Ib supergiant
Star Color Red (B-V 1.40)
Distance 843 ly

2Position & Identifiers

RA 06h 43m 55.9s
Dec +25° 07' 52.0"
Constellation Gemini (Gem)
HR 2473
HIP 32246
HD 48329
SAO 78682
Bayer Epsilon
Flamsteed 27 Gem
Double Cat 5381

3How easy to split?

Primary 3.0 mag Companion 9.6 mag Separation 109.9″
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Telescope Bortle 3 Bortle 4 Bortle 5
80mm refr. Medium+ Medium+ Medium
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 Nov – Jan (peak: Dec)

5Multiple Star System

Separation 109.9″
Companion Mag 9.6
Position Angle 95°
Star Colors A: Red
Discoverer S 533
Companion 9.22V, +1.13(B-V), +0.91(U-B), K0III-IV.

Separation over time

Measured 1825 → 2017 (192 y)
Separation drift 111.6" → 109.9" (-1.70")
Rate -0.0089" / y
PA drift 93° → 95° (+2°, +0.010°/y)

Slow change over generations — observable in lifetime comparisons.

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 95°

A: 3.0 · B: 9.6 · Sep: 109.9″ · PA: 95° · 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

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Blackbody Spectrum

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Stellar Absorption Spectrum

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

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Stellar Fusion

Discover

15Stellar Notes

Red star Pleiades group.
Strong He 10830 emission and absorption.
Mebsuta; Melucta; Meboula.
Occultation diam. = 0.0018 - 0.0056".
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Light Travel Time Machine

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Relativistic Travel

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