Puneet Varma (Editor)

Eta Andromedae

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Luminosity (bolometric)
  
65 ± 3 L☉

Magnitude
  
11.5

Luminosity (bolometric)
  
39 ± 3 L☉

Constellation
  
Eta Andromedae httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Epsilon Andromedae, Mu Andromedae, Nu Andromedae, Zeta Andromedae

Eta Andromedae (Eta And, η Andromedae, η And) is a spectroscopic binary star in the constellation of Andromeda. It consists of two G-type subgiant or giant stars orbiting each other with a period of 115.7 days and has an overall apparent visual magnitude of approximately 4.403.

Contents

History

Eta Andromedae was discovered to be a double-lined spectroscopic binary in a series of spectra taken in 1899 and 1900. Its orbit was computed in 1946 from spectroscopic observations. Because spectroscopy only reveals the radial velocity of a star towards or away from the viewer, such a computation does not determine all orbital elements. In observations made from 1990 to 1992, Eta Andromedae was resolved interferometrically by the Mark III Stellar Interferometer at Mount Wilson Observatory, California, United States. This allowed a more complete orbit to be computed and, in 1993, published.

Location

This star's location in the constellation Andromeda can be seen in the following diagram:

Naming

In Chinese, 奎宿 (Kuí Sù), meaning Legs (asterism), refers to an asterism consisting of η Andromedae, 65 Piscium, ζ Andromedae, ε Andromedae, δ Andromedae, π Andromedae, ν Andromedae, μ Andromedae, β Andromedae, σ Piscium, τ Piscium, 91 Piscium, υ Piscium, φ Piscium, χ Piscium and ψ¹ Piscium. Consequently, η Andromedae itself is known as 奎宿一 (Kuí Sù yī, English: the First Star of Legs.)

Visual companion

The star has a visual companion star of apparent visual magnitude 11.5, BD+22°153B, visible 129.2 arcseconds away.

References

Eta Andromedae Wikipedia


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