Castor
HIP 36850; Alpha Gem; 66 Gem
Objektdaten
- Katalogbezeichnung
- HIP 36850; Alpha Gem; 66 Gem
- Typ
- DoubleStar
- Sternbild
- Gem
- Helligkeit
- 1.98
- Rektaszension
- 07h 34m 36.0s
- Deklination
- +31° 53' 18.0"
- Entfernung
- 52 Lichtjahre
- HR
- 2891
- HIP
- 36850
- Bayer
- Alpha
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Über Castor
Beschreibung
Castor is one of the most remarkable Mehrfachsternsystems in the sky, appearing as a single star of magnitude 1.98 im Sternbild Zwillinge. A Teleskop reveals two bright components (A and B) orbiting each other, and each of those is itself a spektroskopischer Doppelstern. A third, fainter bedeckungsveränderlicher Doppelstern (C) orbits the inner pair, making Castor a sextuple star system — six stars gravitationally bound together. Located about 51 Lichtjahre von der Erde entfernt.
Beobachtungstipps
Castor is the more northerly of the twin heads im Sternbild Zwillinge, slightly fainter and whiter than the orange Pollux below it. A kleines Teleskop at 100x easily splits the A and B components (currently about 5 Bogensekunden apart), revealing a lovely pair of white stars. The faint C component is visible nearby in larger Teleskops. Best observed Januar through Mai.
Geschichte
Named after one of the Dioscuri twins of griechische Mythologie — Castor was the mortal twin, a skilled horseman, while Pollux was the immortal boxer. Despite being the fainter twin, Castor received the Alpha designation, likely because Bayer considered it the 'first' twin positionally. William Herschel studied the orbital motion of Castor A and B, helping establish that Doppelsterns are gravitationally bound.
Wissenswertes
Castor is one of the finest visual Doppelsterns in the northern sky and one of the few sextuple star systems known. All six stars are gravitationally bound, making it a remarkable celestial clockwork. The A-B pair has an Umlaufzeit of about 445 years.