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Meissa — Double Star in Orion

Lambda Ori (BS1879)

Observable Double Star Excellent (64/100)

Sep: 4.1", Companion: mag 5.5

Magnitude 3.5m DoubleStar Orion (Ori) Visible
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About Meissa

Description

Meissa, Lambda Orionis, is an O-type giant star of spectral class O8 III about 466 light-years away — the head of Orion. Meissa anchors a young star-forming region known as the Lambda Orionis Association (or Collinder 69), illuminating a large H-alpha emission ring. Meissa itself is a close binary with a B-type companion. Combined magnitude is 3.54.

Observing Tips

Meissa marks the head of Orion, a small triangle of stars just north of the more obvious belt-and-shoulders region. In a telescope Meissa reveals its close B-type companion at about 4.4 arcseconds — a fine double for any small scope at 100x. The surrounding Lambda Ori ring is visible in long-exposure H-alpha imagery. Best observed November through March.

History

The name Meissa comes from the Arabic "al-maysa'," meaning "the shining one." The head of Orion is distinct from the more-famous belt and shoulder stars, but pre-Islamic astronomy traced the full figure of a celestial hunter or giant through this region.

Fun Facts

The Meissa association (Collinder 69) includes hundreds of young stars in various evolutionary stages, making it one of the closest well-studied examples of a recent star-forming region. Meissa's O-type primary is only about 5 million years old — a mere blink in stellar time. The star will explode as a supernova within a few million years.

Observe

1Physical Properties

Magnitude 3.54
Range 3.39 - 3.40
Period 10.3 hours
Variable Type BCEP:
Spectral Type O8III((f)) giant
Star Color Blue (B-V -0.18)
Distance 466 ly

2Position & Identifiers

RA 05h 35m 08.3s
Dec +09° 56' 03.0"
Constellation Orion (Ori)
HR 1879
HIP 26207
HD 36861
SAO 112921
Bayer Lambda
Flamsteed 39 Ori
Double Cat 4179

3How easy to split?

Primary 3.5 mag Companion 5.5 mag Separation 4.1″
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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)

5Light Curve

6Multiple Star System Quadruple F: optical

Components 4 (quadruple)
Component IDs AB
Separation 4.1″
Companion Mag 5.5
Companion Sp B0V
Position Angle 43°
Star Colors A: Blue B: Blue
Discoverer STF 738
A,B,C fixed. B is HR 1880. Colors for combined light. Blended mag., 3.39V. C is 11.2v at 29", optical; D, 11.2 | at 78".

Separation over time

Measured 1779 → 2021 (242 y)
Separation drift 5.8" → 4.1" (-1.70")
Rate -0.0070" / y
PA drift 45° → 43° (-2°, -0.008°/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 43°

A: 3.5 · B: 5.5 · Sep: 4.1″ · PA: 43° · 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

13

Blackbody Spectrum

14

Stellar Absorption Spectrum

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

15

Stellar Fusion

Discover

16Stellar Notes

Uncertain which of HR 1879 or 1880 is the variable suspect.
Color excess E(B-V) = +0.12.
In cluster Collinder 69; exciting star of HII region S264; in Lambda Ori assoc. Lambda Ori and surroundings are at | same distance as Ori OB1 assoc. but are not members. Lambda Ori member surrounded by expanding HII region.
0.001".
Meissa; Heka.
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Light Travel Time Machine

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Relativistic Travel

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