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Altair
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===Rotational effects=== [[Image:Altair_PR_image6_(white).jpg|thumb|left|Direct image of Altair, taken with the [[CHARA array]]]] The angular diameter of Altair was measured [[interferometrically]] by [[R. Hanbury Brown]] and his co-workers at [[Narrabri Stellar Intensity Interferometer|Narrabri Observatory]] in the 1960s. They found a diameter of 3{{nbsp}}[[milliarcseconds]].<ref>{{cite journal |bibcode=1967MNRAS.137..393H |title=The stellar interferometer at Narrabri Observatory-II. The angular diameters of 15 stars |last1=Hanbury Brown |first1=R. |last2=Davis |first2=J. |last3=Allen |first3=L. R. |last4=Rome |first4=J. M. |journal=Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society |year=1967 |volume=137 |issue=4 |page=393 |doi=10.1093/mnras/137.4.393 |doi-access=free }}</ref> Although Hanbury Brown et al. realized that Altair would be rotationally flattened, they had insufficient data to experimentally observe its oblateness. Later, using [[infrared]] interferometric measurements made by the [[Palomar Testbed Interferometer]] in 1999 and 2000, Altair was found to be flattened. This work was published by [[Gerard van Belle|G. T. van Belle]], [[David Ciardi|David R. Ciardi]] and their co-authors in 2001.<ref name=pti2001/> Theory predicts that, owing to Altair's rapid rotation, its [[surface gravity]] and [[effective temperature]] should be lower at the equator, making the equator less luminous than the poles. This phenomenon, known as [[gravity darkening]] or the [[von Zeipel effect]], was confirmed for Altair by measurements made by the [[Navy Precision Optical Interferometer]] in 2001, and analyzed by Ohishi et al. (2004) and Peterson et al. (2006).<ref name=peterson06/><ref>{{cite journal | doi = 10.1086/422422| title = Asymmetric Surface Brightness Distribution of Altair Observed with the Navy Prototype Optical Interferometer| year = 2004| last1 = Ohishi| first1 = Naoko| last2 = Nordgren| first2 = Tyler E.| last3 = Hutter| first3 = Donald J.| journal = The Astrophysical Journal| volume = 612| issue = 1| pages = 463β471| arxiv = astro-ph/0405301| bibcode = 2004ApJ...612..463O| s2cid = 15857535}}</ref> Also, A. Domiciano de Souza et al. (2005) verified gravity darkening using the measurements made by the Palomar and Navy interferometers, together with new measurements made by the VINCI instrument at the [[VLTI]].<ref>{{cite journal | doi = 10.1051/0004-6361:20042476| title = Gravitational-darkening of Altair from interferometry| year = 2005| last1 = Domiciano de Souza| first1 = A. | last2 = Kervella| first2 = P.| last3 = Jankov| first3 = S.| last4 = Vakili| first4 = F.| last5 = Ohishi| first5 = N.| last6 = Nordgren| first6 = T. E.| last7 = Abe| first7 = L.| journal = Astronomy & Astrophysics| volume = 442| issue = 2| pages = 567β578| bibcode = 2005A&A...442..567D| doi-access = free}}</ref> Altair is one of the few [[List of stars with resolved images|stars for which a resolved image]] has been obtained.<ref name=nsf>{{cite press release |url=https://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=109612 |title=Gazing up at the Man in the Star? |publisher=[[National Science Foundation]] |date=May 31, 2007 |access-date=2022-08-03 }}</ref> In 2006 and 2007, J. D. Monnier and his coworkers produced an image of Altair's surface from 2006 infrared observations made with the [[Michigan Infrared Combiner|MIRC]] instrument on the [[CHARA array]] interferometer; this was the first time the surface of any [[main-sequence star]], apart from the Sun, had been imaged.<ref name=nsf/> The false-color image was published in 2007. The equatorial radius of the star was estimated to be 2.03 [[solar radii]], and the polar radius 1.63 solar radiiβa 25% increase of the stellar radius from pole to equator.<ref name=monnier07/> The polar axis is inclined by about 60Β° to the line of sight from the Earth.<ref name=robrade2009/> {{clear left}}
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