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Al Anz — Star in Auriga

HIP 23416; Epsilon Aurigae; 7 Aurigae

Magnitude 2.9–3.8m Star Auriga (Aur) Visible
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About Al Anz

Description

Al Anz (also known as Almaaz), Epsilon Aurigae, is one of the most mysterious stars in the sky — an F0 Ia yellow-white supergiant locked in an eclipsing binary with a huge, dust-shrouded companion. Every 27.1 years the system dims by about one magnitude for nearly two years as the companion's enormous dusty disk transits across the supergiant. The primary lies roughly 2,000 light-years away, shines intrinsically at some 37,000 solar luminosities, and has a radius perhaps 175 times that of the Sun.

Observing Tips

Epsilon Aurigae is a naked-eye star just south of Capella, forming one of the "Kids" asterism inside the pentagon of Auriga. Normally magnitude 3.0, it fades to 3.8 during eclipses — the last full eclipse ran from August 2009 to May 2011, and the next will begin around 2036. Any small telescope reveals its warm creamy color. This is a terrific variable-star project: comparing it to nearby Eta Aur and Zeta Aur around eclipse times reveals a change any observer can follow by eye.

History

Al Anz, or "al-'Anz" (the she-goat), comes from the Arabic tradition that grouped this star with neighboring Zeta Aur and Eta Aur as the "kids" of the goat Capella. The star's long-period variability was discovered by Pastor Johann Heinrich Fritsch in 1821, but the eclipsing nature only became clear after Hans Ludendorff's detailed 1904 monograph. The nature of the companion's disk remained unsolved for over a century.

Fun Facts

Epsilon Aurigae's eclipses are caused by a thick disk of opaque dust orbiting a hidden single or double B-type star, with the disk lying nearly edge-on to our line of sight. The eclipse lasts almost two years — the longest known of any eclipsing binary. During the 2009-2011 event, the Citizen Sky project mobilized thousands of amateur observers worldwide to monitor the dimming, producing the most complete light curve of any Epsilon Aurigae eclipse ever recorded.

Observe

1Physical Properties

Magnitude 2.99
Range 2.9 - 3.8
Period 9890 days
Variable Type E-DO/GS+SRD
Spectral Type F0Ia supergiant
Star Color Yellow (B-V 0.54)
Distance 2,038 ly

2Position & Identifiers

RA 05h 01m 58.1s
Dec +43° 49' 24.0"
Constellation Auriga (Aur)
HR 1605
HIP 23416
HD 31964
SAO 39955
Bayer Epsilon
Flamsteed 7 Aur
Variable ID Eps Aur
Double Cat 3605

3How easy to spot?

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Equipment Bortle 3 Bortle 4 Bortle 5
Naked eye Easy Easy Easy
50mm finder Easy Easy Easy
150mm scope 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)

5Survey Image

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Explore

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Size Comparison

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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

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15Stellar Notes

ADS 3605A, EA 2.94 - 3.83V, 9892d. Spectrum var. even outside eclipse. RV and light fluctuations about 110d.
ADS 3605A. A* 2.98 var. A8Iap. Five visual and one astrometric components. AB visual binary, B, 14v at 29"; C, | 11.26V, +1.83(B-V), +1.31(U-B), at 43"; D, 12.0v at 46".
ADS 3605A, 9890d, K 15.0k/s, V0 -1.4k/s, msin3i 16.8, asini 2000. Unresolved by speckle interferometry.
Shell star. Also classified A8Ia-F2epIa + B.
Al Anz; Almaaz.
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Light Travel Time Machine

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Relativistic Travel

Nearby in the Sky

Other targets within a few degrees — pan your scope a little and keep exploring.

Visibility scores assume a 150 mm Newton at Bortle 4.

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