Thread: Star Trivia....
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Old 29-02-2008, 01:13 AM
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ngcles
The Observologist

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Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Billimari, NSW Central West
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Brightest/Most easily seen White Dwarf?

Hi Solanum & All,

I'm pretty sure that the brightest white dwarf is Sirius B with an apparent visual magnitude of 8.44 --it is also the closest to the Sun at only 8.4ly.

The third brightest and 2nd closest is Procyon B at 11.4 ly and with an apparent visual magnitude of 10.82.

Both of these white dwarfs are quite/very hard to observe visually because of their close proximity to their brilliant companion stars. Procyon B in particular is very, very nasty (I believe, I've never seen it or even suspected seeing it). The seperation _at very best_ is 5 arc-seconds, and the magnitude difference between it and Procyon A is 10.5 magnitudes. It is near imposible to observe unless it is at periastron and the telescope is both very large and high quality and with superb seeing and an experienced observer at the business end of the 'scope. There are very, very few reliable amateur observations of Procyon B.

From memory, probably the "easiest to see" white dwarf is in the Omicron2 Eridani (40 Eridani) system, which is otherwise known as "Keid".

It is a local triple-star only 16.4ly distant consisting of a magnitude 4.4 K-type main-sequence dwarf that is one of the few stars of its class that is visible to the naked eye.

I can presently think of only 5 (well, 6 technically) other K-type main sequence dwarfs that are visible to the unaided eye. Only two of them are in a single star system -- and one of those (I believe) is intrinsically the dimmest single star that is visible to the naked eye. Hmmm ...

The other two members of the Omicron2 Eridani system are a distant 83 arc-seconds away. They consist of a magnitude 9.5 white dwarf (the 3rd closest white dwarf to the Sun -- and most easily seen) which is in turn circled by an easily resolved magnitude 11.5 M-class red dwarf, as it is a wide 8 arc-seconds distant. The three are plain as plain in an 8" newtonian at low power.

You can read all about Omicron2 Eridani here:

http://www.astro.uiuc.edu/~kaler/sow/keid.html

So, in one naked eye system, the smallest 'scope can show three very interesting (and visually infrequently seen/noted) stars!

The intrinsically brightest white dwarf? Hmmm ... that is a real toughie. I really haven't got the foggiest (Yet)!

Best,

Les D
Contributing Editor
AS&T

Last edited by ngcles; 29-02-2008 at 01:43 AM. Reason: Correction
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