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Post Info TOPIC: Yellow supergiant eclipsing binary


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Yellow supergiant eclipsing binary.kmz

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Position(2000): R.A. = 09h57m37s.2, Dec. = 69°02'08.26"

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Astronomers have spied a faraway star system that is so unusual, it was one of a kind -- until its discovery helped them pinpoint a second one that was much closer to home.
In a paper published in a recent issue of the Astrophysical Journal Letters, Ohio State University astronomers and their colleagues suggest that these star systems are the progenitors of a rare type of supernova.
They discovered the first star system 13 million light years away, tucked inside Holmberg IX, a small galaxy that is orbiting the larger galaxy M81. They studied it between January and October 2007 with the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) on Mt. Graham in Arizona.
The star system is unusual, because its what the astronomers have called a yellow supergiant eclipsing binary -- it contains two very bright, massive yellow stars that are very closely orbiting each other. In fact, the stars are so close together that a large amount of stellar material is shared between them, so that the shape of the system resembles a peanut.

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-- Edited by Blobrana at 02:30, 2008-04-01

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