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

Beta Aurigae is a binary star<ref name=mnras389_2_869/> system in the northern constellation of Auriga. Its identifier is a Bayer designation that is Latinized from β Aurigae, and abbreviated Beta Aur or β Aur. This star has the official name Menkalinan, pronounced Template:IPAc-en.<ref name=Kunitzsch/><ref name="IAU-CSN"/> The combined apparent visual magnitude of the system is 1.9,<ref name=clpl4_99/> making it the second-brightest member of the constellation after Capella. Using the parallax measurements made during the Hipparcos mission, the distance to this star system can be estimated as Template:Convert, give or take a half-light-year margin of error.<ref name=aaa474_2_653/> It is drifting closer to the Sun with a radial velocity of −18 km/s.<ref name=gcsrv/>

Along their respective orbits around the Milky Way, Beta Aurigae and the Sun are closing in on each other, so that in around one million years it will become the brightest star in the night sky.<ref name=tomkin1998/> It is predicted to come as close as Template:Cvt in 1.31 million years.<ref name=Bailer-Jones_2015/>

NomenclatureEdit

File:Astronomer Edward Charles Pickering's Harvard computers.jpg
Women computers at the Harvard College Observatory; on the wall is a graph of β Aurigae's varying brightness in December 1889.

β Aurigae is the star system's Bayer designation. The traditional name Menkalinan is derived from the Arabic منكب ذي العنان mankib ðī-l-‘inān "shoulder of the rein-holder". In 2016, the International Astronomical Union organized a Working Group on Star Names (WGSN)<ref name="WGSN"/> 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 batches of names approved by the WGSN; which included Menkalinan for this star.

It is known as 五車三 (the Third Star of the Five Chariots) in traditional Chinese astronomy.

PropertiesEdit

File:BetaAurLightCurve.png
A light curve for Beta Aurigae, plotted from data published by Southworth et al. (2007)<ref name=aaa467_3_1215/>

Beta Aurigae is a binary star system, but it appears as a single star in the night sky. The two stars are metallic-lined subgiant stars belonging to the A-type stellar classification;<ref name=aaa467_3_1215/> they have roughly the same mass and radius. A-type entities are hot stars that release a white hued light; these two stars burn brighter and with more heat than the Sun, which is a G2-type main sequence star. The pair constitute an eclipsing spectroscopic binary; the combined apparent magnitude varies over a period of 3.96 days between +1.89 and +1.94, as every 47.5 hours one of the stars partially eclipses the other from Earth's perspective.<ref name=aaa446_2_785/> The two stars are designated Aa and Ab in modern catalogues,<ref name=wds/><ref name=Piccotti2020/> but have also been referred to as components 1 and 2 or A and B.<ref name=aj142_1_6/><ref name="Nordstrom" />

There is an 11th magnitude optical companion with a separation of Template:Val as of 2011, but increasing. It is also an A-class subgiant, but is an unrelated background star.<ref name=wds/>

At an angular separation of Template:Val along a position angle of 155° is a companion star that is 8.5 magnitudes fainter than the primary. It may be the source of the X-ray emission from the vicinity.<ref name=mnras415_1_854/> The Beta Aurigae system is believed to be a stream member of the Ursa Major Moving Group.<ref name=aaa77_1_214/> Template:Clear left

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

External linksEdit

Template:Stars of Auriga