Delta Scorpii
Encyclopedia : D : DE : DEL : Delta Scorpii
|- 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" | Other designations |- | colspan="2" |
Because Delta Scorpii is near the ecliptic it is occasionally occulted by the Moon, or (extremely rarely) by planets.
Variability
In June 2000, Delta Scorpii was observed by Sebastian Otero to be 0.1 magnitudes brighter than normal. Its brightness has varied since then and has reached as high as magnitude 1.6 or 1.7, altering the familiar appearance of Scorpius. Spectra taken after the outburst began have shown that Delta Sco is throwing off luminous gasses from its equatorial region. As of 2005, the flare up is still continuing. Although the brightness varies, it remains well above its previous constant magnitude.Companion stars
Dschubba is accompanied by a class B star that orbits the primary every 20 days at a distance comparable to the distance from the Sun to Mercury. Furthermore, there is a star that takes about 10 years to orbit Dschubba in a highly eccentric orbit that takes it close in to the primary once a decade. The last close encounter of these two stars happened in mid-2000 and it may have triggered the outburst of the primary star. A possible fourth companion star lies at about twice the distance again from the main star.External links
- [Dschubba]
- [Delta Scorpii brighter than ever] (Sky and Telescope, February 4, 2002)
- [Delta Scorpii still showing off] (Sky and Telescope, June 25, 2003)
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
