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Sheliak — Stella variabile in Lira

HIP 92420; Beta Lyrae; 10 Lyrae

Stella doppia osservabile

Sep: 45.5", Companion: mag 6.7

Stella variabile osservabile Eccezionale (76/100)

Range: 3.3 - 4.35, Period: 12.9d, Type: DPV:/EB

Magnitudine 3.2–4.4m VariableStar Lira (Lyr) Visibile
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Descrizione

Sheliak, Beta Lyrae, is the prototype of an entire class of eclipsing binary stars — the Beta Lyrae variables. The system consists of two massive stars so close that they have warped into teardrop shapes by mutual tidal forces, with a stream of gas flowing from one component onto the other through an accretion disk. The primary is a B7 bright giant and the unseen secondary is a more massive early-B star buried in a thick disk. Total mass is about 15 Suns, distance roughly 960 light-years, and the orbital period is 12.94 days.

Consigli per l'osservazione

Sheliak's total brightness varies continuously between magnitudes 3.3 and 4.4 on the 12.94-day cycle — a change anyone can follow with the naked eye over two weeks. Compare it to nearby Gamma Lyr (magnitude 3.3) and Zeta Lyr (4.3). Sheliak lies right next to the famous Ring Nebula (M57) — they fit together in the same low-power telescope field, making this one of the sky's great photo opportunities. Best observed June through October.

Storia

The name Sheliak comes from the Arabic "al-shiliyāq," meaning "the harp" or "the lyre." The variability was discovered by John Goodricke in 1784 — only five years after his discovery of Algol's variability. Goodricke died at age 21, just days after his election to the Royal Society. The orbital geometry was worked out in the 20th century through extensive spectroscopic and photometric analyses.

Curiosità

Sheliak is a textbook example of mass transfer in a close binary: the originally more massive star has already dumped roughly 2/3 of its matter onto its companion, creating the disk that hides the present primary. The system is still so compact that if you placed it at the distance of the Earth-Sun distance, the two stars would nearly touch. The orbital period is lengthening by about 19 seconds per year — direct evidence of ongoing mass transfer.

Osservare

1Proprietà fisiche

Magnitudine 3.45
Intervallo 3.3 - 4.35
Periodo 12.9 giorni
Tipo variabile DPV:/EB
Tipo spettrale A8. :V COMP,SB
Colore della stella Bianco-giallo (B-V 0.00)
Distanza 959 ly

2Posizione e identificatori

RA 18h 50m 04.8s
Dec +33° 21' 46.0"
Costellazione Lira (Lyr)
HR 7106
HIP 92420
HD 174639
Bayer Beta
Flamsteed 10 Lyr
Variable ID Bet Lyr
Double Cat 11745

3Facilità di monitoraggio

Magnitudine 3.3 – 4.4 mag Ampiezza 1.1 mag Periodo 12.94 d Tipo DPV:/EB
Accedi e configura la tua attrezzatura e località predefinita per vedere una riga personalizzata.
Attrezzatura Bortle 3 Bortle 4 Bortle 5
Occhio nudo Medio Medio Diff.+
Cercatore 50mm Facile Facile Facile
150mm telesc. Facile Facile Facile
Facile Medio Difficile Molto difficile Impossibile

Bortle 3 = rurale · 4 = periferia · 5 = suburbano

4Visibilità

Imposta una località nelle impostazioni per vedere i dati di visibilità.

Periodo migliore May – Jul (peak: Jun)

5Immagine survey

Caricamento immagine survey…

6Curva di luce

7Stelle di confronto

Stelle stabili vicine per stimare la luminosità (AAVSO)

Loading comparison stars…

Esplorare

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Confronto dimensioni

Interrogazione VizieR per dati stellari…
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Confronta stelle

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Classificazione spettrale

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Diagramma Hertzsprung-Russell

Caricamento diagramma HR…
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Ciclo di vita stellare

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Spettro del corpo nero

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Spettro di assorbimento stellare

Spettro di assorbimento simulato basato sul tipo spettrale. Passa il mouse sulle righe per identificare gli elementi.

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Fusione Stellare

Scoprire

17Note stellari

ADS 11745A, EB 3.25 - 4.36V, 12.913834d. Period varies. Presumed disk around secondary. Also radio flare activity. | Prototype Beta Lyrae type, discovered by Goodricke in 1874.
AB fixed. B is 8.6v, B7v; may be collapsed star; vsini 120k/s. E, 9.9v A8pSr or B9V at 67" optical? F, 9.9v A8-9V or | or B9V at 86". A, B, E and F are CPM.
ADS 11745A, 12.9349d, K 184.0k/s, V0 -17.8k/s, asini 32.7. Also 4.2y. Possible radio binary. ADS 11745B also SB, | 4.34d, K 12.0k/s, V0 -29.4k/s, asini 0.695.
Large infrared excess.
Member of the local association (Pleiades group).
Shell star. Far UV COPERNICUS spectrum shows many emission lines, some with P Cygni profiles, presumably originating | from a hotter source than the visual primary. Helium I line 10830 arises in outermost envelope which surrounds the | Beta Lyrae system as a whole. Radio and X-ray source.
Sheliak; Shelyak; Shiliak.
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Macchina del tempo della luce

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Viaggio Relativistico

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