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Hub AI
26 Aurigae AI simulator
(@26 Aurigae_simulator)
Hub AI
26 Aurigae AI simulator
(@26 Aurigae_simulator)
26 Aurigae
26 Aurigae is a binary star system in the northern constellation of Auriga. It is visible to the naked eye as a faint star with an apparent visual magnitude of 5.41.
The distance to this system remains poorly constrained. The new Hipparcos reduction gives a parallax of 5.76±6.42. The original Hipparcos parallax was given as 7.29±0.96, leading to a distance of 137.2+20.8
−16.0 pc being assumed in many texts. A distance of 163 pc has been derived from fitting the spectrum.
26 Aurigae is a visual binary system, and the two stars orbit each other every 52.735 years with an ellipticity of 0.653 and an angular separation 0.154″. The system is made of a magnitude 6.29 G-type red giant, and a hotter magnitude 6.21 star that has been classified as an early B-type main-sequence star to an A-type subgiant star. Component A is the cool giant star, the brighter but less massive of the pair. The hotter star is sometimes listed as the primary on the basis of its stronger showing in the blended spectrum.
26 Aurigae
26 Aurigae is a binary star system in the northern constellation of Auriga. It is visible to the naked eye as a faint star with an apparent visual magnitude of 5.41.
The distance to this system remains poorly constrained. The new Hipparcos reduction gives a parallax of 5.76±6.42. The original Hipparcos parallax was given as 7.29±0.96, leading to a distance of 137.2+20.8
−16.0 pc being assumed in many texts. A distance of 163 pc has been derived from fitting the spectrum.
26 Aurigae is a visual binary system, and the two stars orbit each other every 52.735 years with an ellipticity of 0.653 and an angular separation 0.154″. The system is made of a magnitude 6.29 G-type red giant, and a hotter magnitude 6.21 star that has been classified as an early B-type main-sequence star to an A-type subgiant star. Component A is the cool giant star, the brighter but less massive of the pair. The hotter star is sometimes listed as the primary on the basis of its stronger showing in the blended spectrum.
