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Alpha centauri system

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See Alpha Centauri (disambiguation) for other uses
|- style="vertical-align: top;" | B-V color index | |- style="vertical-align: top;" | U-B color index | |- style="vertical-align: top;" | Variable type |

|- ! style="background-color: #FFFFC0;" colspan="2" | Details |- |style="vertical-align: baseline;" | Mass | M |- |style="vertical-align: baseline;" | Radius | R |- |style="vertical-align: baseline;" | Luminosity | L |- |style="vertical-align: baseline;" | Temperature | K |- |style="vertical-align: baseline;" | Metallicity | |- |style="vertical-align: baseline;" | Rotation | |- |style="vertical-align: baseline;" | Age | })<()or(}})=()and(}})<())}}} years

|- ! style="background-color: #FFFFC0;" colspan="2" | Visual binary orbit |- style="vertical-align: top;" | Companion | Alpha Centauri B |- style="vertical-align: top;" | Period (P) | 79.24 years |- style="vertical-align: top;" | Semimajor axis (a) | 17.59" |- style="vertical-align: top;" | Eccentricity (e) | 0.516 |- style="vertical-align: top;" | Inclination (i) | 79.24° |- style="vertical-align: top;" | Node (Ω) | 204.87° |- style="vertical-align: top;" | Periastron epoch (T) | 1955.56

|- ! style="background-color: #FFFFC0;" colspan="2" | Other designations |- | colspan="2" |

Rigil Kentaurus, Rigil Kent, Toliman, Bungula, FK5 538, CP(D)−60°5483, GC 19728, CCDM J14396-6050

Alf Cen A

Gl 559 A, HR 5459, HD 128620, GCTP 3309.00, LHS 50, SAO 252838, HIP 71683

Alf Cen B

Gl 559 B, HR 5460, HD 128621, LHS 51, HIP 71681

Proxima Cen

LHS 49, HIP 70890

|} Alpha Centauri (α Cen / α Centauri) is the brightest star in the southern constellation of Centaurus. Although it appears as a single point to the naked eye, Alpha Centauri is actually a system of three stars, one of which is the fourth brightest star in the night sky. Alpha Centauri is famous in the Southern Hemisphere as the outermost “pointer” to the Southern Cross, but it is too far south to be visible in most of the northern hemisphere. The two brightest components of the system are too close to be resolved as separate stars by the naked eye and so are perceived as a single source of light with a total visual magnitude of about −0.27 (brighter than the third brightest star in the night sky, Arcturus).

Alpha Centauri is the closest star system beyond our own solar system, being 4.2 to 4.4 light-years distant (about 25 trillion miles). This makes it a logical choice as "first port of call" for speculative fiction about space travel, which often assumes eventual human exploration of the system or even colonization of possible planets within it. Such themes are found in said speculative works of fiction such as novels and video games.

Names

It bears the proper name Rigil Kentaurus (often shortened to Rigil Kent), derived from the Arabic phrase Al Rijl al Kentaurus, meaning "foot of the centaur," but is nonetheless usually referred to by its Bayer designation Alpha Centauri. Another alternative name is Toliman. It is also sometimes known as Bungula, possibly from the Latin word ungula meaning "hoof". It and Beta Centauri (which is close to Alpha Centauri in angular distance as seen from the Earth, but is actually many light-years away) are the "Pointers" to the Southern Cross. Alpha and Beta Centauri are the second closest pair of first magnitude stars as seen from the Earth, and due to the effects of proper motion, they will become the closest pair in around 2166, overtaking Acrux and Becrux.

Alpha Centauri A is also known as HD 128620, HR 5459, CP-60°5483, GCTP 3309.00A, and LHS 50. Alpha Centauri B is also known as HD 128621, HR 5460, GCTP 3309.00B, and LHS 51.

System components

Size and color of the Sun compared to the stars in the Alpha Centauri system
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Size and color of the Sun compared to the stars in the Alpha Centauri system

Alpha Centauri is a triple star system. It consists of two main stars, Alpha Centauri A and Alpha Centauri B (which form a binary system together) at a distance of 4.36 ly, and a dimmer red dwarf named Proxima Centauri at a distance of 4.22 ly (Hipparcos distances). Both of the two main stars are rather similar to the Sun. The larger member of the binary star, Alpha Centauri A, is the most similar to the Sun, but a little larger and brighter. Like the Sun, its spectral type is G2 V, and, like the sun, shines in a yellowish-white light. The smaller of the two, Alpha Centauri B, is dimmer, with a spectral type of K1 V, somewhat smaller and dimmer than the sun, but astronomically similar enough, shining with more of an orangish-yellow-white light. The two orbit one another elliptically (e=0.52), approaching as close as 11.2 astronomical units (2×10−4 ly) and receding to 35.6 AU (6×10−4 ly), with a period of just under 80 years.[[Citing sources citation needed]] Hence the sum of the two masses is [23.4^3/80^2=2.0] times that of the Sun (see formula).

These two stars are about 5 to 6 billion years old. The red dwarf Proxima Centauri is about 13,000 astronomical units away from Alpha Centauri (1 ly = 63,241 AU, hence this is 0.21 ly, about 1/20 of the distance between Alpha Centauri and the Sun) and may be in orbit about it, with a period on the order of 500,000 years or more.[[Citing sources citation needed]] For this reason, Proxima is sometimes referred to as Alpha Centauri C. However, it is not clear if it really is in orbit, although the association is unlikely to be entirely accidental as it shares approximately the same motion through space as the larger star system.

Seen from Earth, Proxima is separated by 2 degrees from Alpha Centauri A and B (about 4 times the angular diameter of the full Moon), and the latter are at an angular distance of up to 40" from each other.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Apparent and real trajectory of B component relative to A component
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Apparent and real trajectory of B component relative to A component

The closest neighbours to the Alpha Centauri system are the Sun and Barnard's star (1.98 pc or 6.47 ly), which is also the next nearest star from Earth, at a distance of 5.96 ly.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Possibility of planet formation

Computer models of planetary formation suggest that terrestrial planets would be able to form close to both Alpha Centauri A and B, but that gas giant planets similar to our Jupiter and Saturn would not be able to form because of the binary stars' gravitational effects. Given the similarities in star type, age and stability of the orbits it has been suggested that this solar system may hold one of the best possibilities for extraterrestrial life. However, some astronomers have speculated that any terrestrial planets in the Alpha Centauri system may be dry because it is believed that Jupiter and Saturn were crucial at directing comets into the inner solar system and providing the inner planets with a source of water. This would not be a problem, however, if Alpha Centauri B happened to play a similar role for Alpha Centauri A that the gas giants do for the Sun, and vice versa. Both stars are of the right spectral type to harbor life on a potential planet (most astronomers believe that stars of spectral types from about F5 to K5 are hot enough, but long-lived and stable enough, to support potential Earthlike worlds).

A planet around Alpha Centauri A would be about 1.25 AU away from the star if it were to have Earthlike temperatures, or about halfway between the distances of Earth's orbit and Mars' orbit in our own solar system. For dimmer, cooler Alpha Centauri B, the distance would be about 0.7 AU, or about the distance of Venus from the Sun.

Sky appearance from the Alpha Centauri system

Viewed from near the Alpha Centauri system, the sky (other than the Alpha Centauri stars) would appear very much as it does to observers on Earth, with most of the constellations such as Ursa Major and Orion being almost unchanged. However, Centaurus would be missing its brightest star and our Sun would appear as a 0.5-magnitude star in Cassiopeia. Roughly speaking, the \/\/ of Cassiopeia would become a /\/\/, with the Sun at the leftmost end, closest to ε Cassiopeiae. The position can easily be plotted as RA 02h39m35s, dec +60°50', or antipodal to Alpha Centauri's position as seen from Earth.

Nearby very bright stars such as Sirius and Procyon would appear to be in very different positions, as would Altair to a lesser extent. Sirius would become part of the constellation of Orion, appearing 2 degrees to the west of Betelgeuse, slightly dimmer than from here (-1.2). The stars Fomalhaut and Vega, although further away, would appear somewhat displaced as well. Proxima Centauri would be an inconspicuous 4.5 magnitude star, which considering it would only be a quarter of a light-year away shows just how dim Proxima really is.

A hypothetical planet around either α Centauri A or B would see the other star as a very bright secondary. For example, an Earth-like planet at 1.25 Astronomical Units from α Cen A (with an orbital period of 1.34 a) would get Sun-like illumination from its primary, and α Cen B would appear 5.7 to 8.6 magnitudes dimmer (−21.0 to −18.2), 190 to 2700 times dimmer than α Cen A but still 170 to 2300 times brighter than the full Moon. Conversely, an Earth-like planet at 0.71 AUs from α Cen B (with a revolution period of 0.63 a) would get Sun-like illumination from its primary, and α Cen A would appear 4.6 to 7.3 magnitudes dimmer (−22.1 to −19.4), 70 to 840 times dimmer than α Cen B but still 520 to 6300 times brighter than the full Moon. In both cases the secondary sun would, in the course of the planet's year, appear to circle the sky. It would start off right beside the primary and end up, half a period later, opposite it in the sky (a "midnight sun"). After another half period, it would complete the cycle. For a hypothetical Earthlike planet around either star, the secondary sun would not be bright enough to adversely affect climate or plant photosynthesis (being as far away as Saturn is from our Sun), but would mean that for about half the year, the night sky, instead of a pitch black would appear a dark blue, and one could walk around rather easily without artificial light.

The discovery of planets in binary star systems such as Gamma Cephei, the high metallicity of the Alpha Centauri system, and the mere existence of the extensive satellite systems around all the giant planets in our own Solar System suggest that the existence of rocky Earthlike planets around the two stars in the system is not unlikely. Radial velocity methods by various planet-hunting teams have failed to find any giant planets or brown dwarfs in the system, which would disrupt the orbits of terrestrial planets if they orbited in or near the stars' habitable zones. Certainly, if technology advances enough for humans to start sending interstellar robotic probes, Alpha Centauri will be at the top of the list for exploration.

Apparent movement

In about 4000 years, the proper motion of Alpha Centauri will mean that from the point of view of Earth it will appear close enough to Beta Centauri to form an optical double star. Beta Centauri is in reality far more distant than Alpha Centauri.
Apparent motion of Alpha Centauri relative to Beta Centauri.
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Apparent motion of Alpha Centauri relative to Beta Centauri.

Alpha Centauri in fiction

Because of its status as our star's nearest galactic neighbor, Alpha Centauri has frequently been referred to in science fiction stories involving interstellar travel.

In Isaac Asimov's Foundation and Earth, Foundation councillor Golan Trevize and his traveling companions find the last survivors of a radioactive Earth on a largely marine planet, Alpha. The name of the settlement is New Earth.

In The Centauri Device (1975) by M. John Harrison the native Centaurians (humanoid aliens able to interbreed with humans) have been wiped out in a genocidal attack by expanding Earth colonisation of the galaxy. The novel's main character, whose mother was Centauran, is one of the few people in the cosmos able to operate the 'device' of the book's title; a weapon of enormous power.

Alpha Centauri is mentioned at the beginning of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams. Shortly before the Vogons demolish the Earth to make way for a hyperspace bypass, they inform the planet that "All the planning charts and demolition orders have been on display in your local planning department on Alpha Centauri for fifty of your Earth years, so you've had plenty of time to lodge any formal complaint and it's far too late to start making a fuss about it now." When someone objects to this, Protstetnic Vogon Jeltz replies, "What do you mean you've never been to Alpha Centauri? For heaven's sake mankind, it's only four light years away you know. I'm sorry, but if you can't be bothered to take an interest in local affairs that's your own lookout." This scene appears in every incarnation of the story except the movie version. The story and television show also mentions that in the old days of the Universe, "men were real men, women were real women, and small furry creatures from Alpha Centauri were real small furry creatures from Alpha Centauri." Alpha Centauri's main space port, Port Brasta, has a massive duty-free shopping mall, the motto of which is apparently, "BE LIKE THE TWENTY-SECOND ELEPHANT WITH HEATED VALUE IN SPACE -- BARK!" This slogan contains an ingenious pun in Centaurian that the natives find hilarious.

In Poul Anderson's book, Harvest of Stars, a ficticious planet of Alpha Centauri is colonized for the single millenium before the planet's destruction by a rogue planet.

In the Lost In Space TV series, Alpha Centauri is the intended destination of the United States spacecraft Jupiter 2 launched October 16, 1997 and crewed by the Robinson family and Major Don West. Stowaway Dr. Zachary Smith sabotages the mission on behalf of a foreign government, sending the ship off course.

In the 1991 computer game Civilization and its sequels, one of the ways to achieve victory is to successfully launch an expedition to colonize Alpha Centauri. Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri, a spiritual sequel, involves seven ideological factions competing to colonize the Earth-like planet Chiron that orbits Alpha Centauri. The name of this planet in a game in itself is a homage to James P. Hogan's 1982 space opera novel Voyage from Yesteryear, where a human colony is artificially created at Alpha Centauri by automatic probe on a planet later named by colonists as Chiron.

In an episode of ', Zefram Cochrane, the inventor of the warp drive, is said to be from Alpha Centauri, though there is considerable debate as to whether this was intended to identify his place of origin or of residence. However, he cannot be from AC, as seen in ', the 8th film in the series, as he is found by the Enterprise-E crew on Earth in the late 21st century. The novel Federation by Garfield and Judith Reeves-Stevens (co-writers on ), though superseded by the movie First Contact, postulates that Cochrane grew up on Earth, developed warp drive with the backing of Micah Brack, then led the settlement at Alpha Centauri that safeguarded humanity just a few short years later when a terrible war devastated Earth; Cochrane subsequently lived most of his remaining pre-Companion life at Alpha Centauri, thus accounting for his being "of" Alpha Centauri. Episodes of Enterprise would later establish that Alpha Centauri is a colony established by humans from Earth, and that Cochrane did live on Alpha Centauri for a time before his mysterious disappearance.

Alpha Centauri was also mentioned in several episodes. In In the Pale Moonlight, Kira Nerys theorises that it could be threatened with a Dominion invasion.

In the DC Comics universe, the planet Rann originated in the Alpha Centauri system. Rannians are so close to normal Earth-based humans that Adam Strange was brought to the planet to act as a sort of breeding stud. This was before Rann was teleported out of the Alpha Centauri system, into a parallel pocket universe, and then to the Polaris system.

In Larry Niven's Known Space Universe Wunderland is an inhabitable planet circling Alpha Centauri, and was the earliest extra-solar colony in human history. Later it is a stage of long occupation by catlike sentient species Kzinti after human's First Contact which turned to several interstellar wars.

In Frank Herbert's Dune universe, the planet Ecaz is the fourth planet that orbits Alpha Centauri B. Ecaz is ruled by the feudal noble family of House Ecaz, and is known for its famous fogwood.

In the first issue of the original Marvel comic book Transformers (1984-1990), it is said that Cybertron orbited Alpha Centauri. After repeated millennia of explosive wars waged on the planet by its inhabitants the Autobots and the Decepticons, the planet was knocked loose from its orbit and sent it wandering into interstellar space.

In Space Patrol (1962 TV series) episode Message From A Star - Signals from Alpha Centauri suggest intelligent life but it would take a Galasphere 3,000 years to cross the immense distance. Irya, a being from the planet Delta, teleports himself to Earth to fit a special power unit to the Galasphere, enabling it to travel as faster-than-light speeds. Professor Haggerty, however, has reservations about making the trip.

In , the description for one of the multiplayer maps is : Chiron TL34, 'Spartan Clone Training Complex'.

See also

References

External links

 


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