Template:Short description Template:Starbox begin Template:Starbox image Template:Starbox observe Template:Starbox character Template:Starbox astrometry Template:Starbox orbit Template:Starbox detail Template:Starbox catalog Template:Starbox reference Template:Starbox end

Alpha Ophiuchi (α Ophiuchi, abbreviated Alpha Oph, α Oph), also named Rasalhague Template:IPAc-en,<ref>also Template:IPAc-en or Template:IPAc-en.
Template:MW</ref><ref name=Kunitzsch>Template:Cite book</ref> is a binary star and the brightest star in the constellation of Ophiuchus.

NomenclatureEdit

The name Alpha Ophiuchi is a Romanisation of the star's Bayer designation, α Ophiuchi. It is also known by the traditional name Rasalhague, from the Arabic رأس الحواء raʼs al-ḥawwāʼ "the head of the serpent collector".<ref name=Kunitzsch/> In 2016, the International Astronomical Union organized a Working Group on Star Names (WGSN)<ref name="WGSN">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> to catalog and standardize proper names for stars. The WGSN's first bulletin of July 2016<ref name="WGSN1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> included a table of the first two collections of approved names, formally listing Alpha Ophiuchi as Rasalhague.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

PropertiesEdit

Alpha Ophiuchi is a binary star system with an orbital period of about 8.62 years. The orbital parameters were only poorly known until 2011 when observations using adaptive optics produced a better orbital fit, allowing the individual masses of the two components to be determined.<ref name=apj726_2_104/> The orbital elements and masses were further improved in a 2021 study.<ref name=Gardner2021/> The primary component, Alpha Ophiuchi A, has a mass of about 2.2 times the mass of the Sun, while the secondary, Alpha Ophiuchi B, has 0.82 solar masses.<ref name=Gardner2021/> Estimates of the mass of the primary by other means range from a low of 1.92 to 2.10 solar masses, up to 2.84 or even 4.8 solar masses.<ref name=apj701_1_209/> The mass of the secondary suggests that it has a stellar classification in the range K5V to K7V, which indicates it is a main sequence star that is still generating energy by the thermonuclear fusion of hydrogen at its core. The pair reached periastron passage, or closest approach, around April 19, 2012, when they had an angular separation of 50 milliarcseconds.<ref name=apj726_2_104/>

This star system has a combined apparent magnitude of +2.08 and is located at a distance of about Template:Convert from the Earth. The stellar classification of A5IVnn indicates that the primary is a bluish-white subgiant star that has evolved away from the main sequence after consuming the hydrogen at its core.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It is radiating about 25 times the luminosity of the Sun and has an effective temperature of about 8,000 K, giving it the characteristic white hue of an A-type star.<ref name=apj742_1_9/><ref name=csiro/>

The spectrum of Alpha Ophiuchi shows an anomalously high level of absorption of the lines for singly-ionized calcium (Ca II). However, this is likely the result of interstellar matter between the Earth and the star, rather than a property of the star or circumstellar dust.<ref name=apj661_2_944/>

RotationEdit

File:Eso0316c.tif
A rapidly-rotating star is distorted into an oblate spheroid bulging at the equator and hotter at the poles.

Alpha Ophiuchi A is a rapidly rotating star with a projected rotational velocity of 240 km s−1.<ref name=apj742_1_9/> It is spinning at about 88.5% of the rate that would cause the star to break up.<ref name=rmaa38_117/> This gives it an oblate spheroid shape with an equatorial bulge about 20% larger than the polar radius.<ref name=apj701_1_209/> The polar radius is calculated to be Template:Solar radius and the equatorial radius Template:Solar radius.<ref name=monnier/>

Because of the oblateness and rapid spin, the surface gravity at the pole is higher than at the equator. An effect known as gravity darkening means that the temperature at the poles is also higher than at the equator. The polar temperature is calculated to be Template:Val and the equatorial temperature Template:Val.<ref name=monnier/>

The energy radiated by an oblate star is higher along its axis of rotation because of the larger projected area and the Stefan–Boltzmann law. The axis of rotation of α Ophiuchi is inclined about Template:Nowrap to the line of sight from the Earth, so that it is being observed from nearly equator-on.<ref name=rmaa38_117/> The apparent bolometric luminosity seen at this angle is Template:Solar luminosity, but the true luminosity of the star is thought to be Template:Solar luminosity. Since a star's effective temperature is simply the temperature which would produce its total energy output from a black body, the true effective temperature of Template:Val is different from the apparent effective temperature of Template:Val.<ref name=monnier/>

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

External linksEdit

Template:Sky Template:Stars of Ophiuchus