Menu

Almaak

HIP 9640; Gamma1 And; 57 And

DoubleStar And Mag 2.26

Dados do Objeto

Designação do Catálogo
HIP 9640; Gamma1 And; 57 And
Tipo
DoubleStar
Constelação
And
Magnitude
2.26
Ascensão Reta
02h 03m 54.0s
Declinação
+42° 19' 47.0"
Distância
251 anos-luz
HR
603
HIP
9640
Bayer
Gamma1
Mostrar no Mapa Estelar

Imagem de Levantamento

Carregando imagem de levantamento…

Sobre Almaak

Descrição

Almach is one of the finest double stars in the sky at magnitude 2.26 in Andromeda. A small telescope reveals a gorgeous pair — a golden-orange giant (K3IIb, magnitude 2.3) and a blue-white companion (magnitude 5.0) separated by about 10 arcseconds. Located about 355 light-years from Earth, the fainter companion is itself a triple star, making Almach a quadruple system.

Dicas de Observação

Almach lies at the eastern end of the main chain of Andromeda stars. It is one of the showpiece double stars of the autumn sky — even a small telescope reveals the striking color contrast between the golden primary and blue secondary. The pair is reminiscent of a miniature Albireo. Best observed September through February.

História

The name Almach (or Almaak) comes from the Arabic 'al-'anaq al-ard,' meaning 'the caracal' (a type of lynx). The double star nature was first noted by Johann Tobias Mayer in 1778. Almach has been a favorite target of visual double star observers for over two centuries.

Curiosidades

Almach rivals Albireo as the most beautiful color-contrast double star in the sky. The warm orange and cool blue pairing is immediately striking, and many observers consider it even finer than Albireo due to the smaller separation and greater brightness of the primary.