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Aldebaran

Aldebaran (Arabic: “The Follower”, "الدبران"), a red giant star, is the brightest star in the zodiac constellation of Taurus. It has the Bayer designation α Tauri, which is Latinized to Alpha Tauri and abbreviated Alpha Tau or α Tau. Aldebaran varies in brightness from an apparent visual magnitude 0.75 down to 0.95, making it (typically) the fourteenth-brightest star in the night sky. It is located at a distance of approximately 65 light-years from the Sun. The star lies along the line of sight to the nearby Hyades cluster.

Aldebaran
Location of Aldebaran (circled)
Observation data
Epoch J2000.0      Equinox J2000.0
Constellation Taurus
Pronunciation /ælˈdɛbərən/[1][2]
Right ascension 04h 35m 55.23907s[3]
Declination +16° 30′ 33.4885″[3]
Apparent magnitude (V) 0.86 (0.75–0.95[4])
Characteristics
Evolutionary stage Red giant branch[5]
Spectral type K5+ III[6]
Apparent magnitude (J) −2.095[7]
U−B color index +1.92[8]
B−V color index +1.44[8]
Variable type LB[4]
Astrometry
Radial velocity (Rv)+54.26±0.03[9] km/s
Proper motion (μ) RA: 63.45±0.84[3] mas/yr
Dec.: −188.94±0.65[3] mas/yr
Parallax (π)49.97 ± 0.75 mas[10]
Distance65.3 ± 1.0 ly
(20.0 ± 0.3 pc)
Absolute magnitude (MV)−0.641±0.034[10]
Details
Mass1.16±0.07[11] M
Radius45.1±0.1[12] R
Luminosity439±17[13] L
Surface gravity (log g)1.45±0.3[14] cgs
Temperature3,900±50[14] K
Metallicity [Fe/H]−0.33±0.1[14] dex
Rotation520 days[12]
Rotational velocity (v sin i)3.5±1.5[14] km/s
Age6.4+1.4
−1.1
[11] Gyr
Other designations
Alpha Tau, α Tau, 87 Tauri, BD+16°629, GJ 171.1, 9159, HD 29139, HIP 21421, HR 1457, SAO 94027
Database references
SIMBADdata
ARICNSdata

Aldebaran is a giant star that is cooler than the Sun with a surface temperature of 3,900 K, but its radius is about 44 times the Sun's, so it is over 400 times as luminous. It spins slowly and takes 520 days to complete a rotation. Aldebaran is believed to host a planet several times the mass of Jupiter, named Aldebaran b. The planetary exploration probe Pioneer 10 is heading in the general direction of the star and should make its closest approach in about two million years.

Nomenclature

 
Aldebaran is the brightest star in the constellation of Taurus (center).

The traditional name Aldebaran derives from the Arabic al Dabarān ("الدبران"), meaning "the follower", because it seems to follow the Pleiades.[15][16] In 2016, the International Astronomical Union Working Group on Star Names (WGSN) approved the proper name Aldebaran for this star.[17][18]

Aldebaran is the brightest star in the constellation Taurus and so has the Bayer designation α Tauri, Latinised as Alpha Tauri. It has the Flamsteed designation 87 Tauri as the 87th star in the constellation of approximately 7th magnitude or brighter, ordered by right ascension. It also has the Bright Star Catalogue number 1457, the HD number 29139, and the Hipparcos catalogue number 21421, mostly seen in scientific publications.

It is a variable star listed in the General Catalogue of Variable Stars, but it is listed using its Bayer designation and does not have a separate variable star designation.[4]

Aldebaran and several nearby stars are included in double star catalogues such as the Washington Double Star Catalog as WDS 04359+1631 and the Aitken Double Star Catalogue as ADS 3321. It was included with an 11th-magnitude companion as a double star as H IV 66 in the Herschel Catalogue of Double Stars and Σ II 2 in the Struve Double Star Catalog, and together with a 14th-magnitude star as β 550 in the Burnham Double Star Catalogue.[19][20]

Observation

 
Aldebaran in the Hyades

Aldebaran is one of the easiest stars to find in the night sky, partly due to its brightness and partly due to being near one of the more noticeable asterisms in the sky. Following the three stars of Orion's belt in the opposite direction to Sirius, the first bright star encountered is Aldebaran.[21] It is best seen at midnight late November / early December.

The star is, by chance, in the line of sight between the Earth and the Hyades, so it has the appearance of being the brightest member of the open cluster, but the cluster that forms the bull's-head-shaped asterism is more than twice as far away, at about 150 light years.[22]

Aldebaran is 5.47 degrees south of the ecliptic and so can be occulted by the Moon. Such occultations occur when the Moon's ascending node is near the autumnal equinox.[23] A series of 49 occultations occurred starting on 29 January 2015 and ending at 3 September 2018.[24] Each event was visible from points in the northern hemisphere or close to the equator; people in e.g. Australia or South Africa can never observe an Aldebaran occultation since it is too far south of the ecliptic. A reasonably accurate estimate for the diameter of Aldebaran was obtained during the occultation of 22 September 1978.[25] In the 2020s, Aldebaran is in conjunction in ecliptic longitude with the sun around May 30 of each year.[26]

With a near-infrared J band magnitude of −2.1, only Betelgeuse (−2.9), R Doradus (−2.6), and Arcturus (−2.2) are brighter at that wavelength.[7]

Observational history

 
Occultation of Aldebaran by the Moon. Aldebaran is the red dot to the right, barely visible in the thumbnail.

On 11 March AD 509, a lunar occultation of Aldebaran was observed in Athens, Greece.[27] English astronomer Edmund Halley studied the timing of this event, and in 1718 concluded that Aldebaran must have changed position since that time, moving several minutes of arc further to the north. This, as well as observations of the changing positions of stars Sirius and Arcturus, led to the discovery of proper motion. Based on present day observations, the position of Aldebaran has shifted 7′ in the last 2000 years; roughly a quarter the diameter of the full moon.[28][29] Due to precession of the equinoxes, 5,000 years ago the vernal equinox was close to Aldebaran.[30] Between 420,000 and 210,000 years ago, Alderbaran was the brightest star in the night sky,[31] peaking in brightness 320,000 years ago with an apparent magnitude of -1.54.[31]

English astronomer William Herschel discovered a faint companion to Aldebaran in 1782;[32] an 11th-magnitude star at an angular separation of 117. This star was shown to be itself a close double star by S. W. Burnham in 1888, and he discovered an additional 14th-magnitude companion at an angular separation of 31″. Follow on measurements of proper motion showed that Herschel's companion was diverging from Aldebaran, and hence they were not physically connected. However, the companion discovered by Burnham had almost exactly the same proper motion as Aldebaran, suggesting that the two formed a wide binary star system.[33]

Working at his private observatory in Tulse Hill, England, in 1864 William Huggins performed the first studies of the spectrum of Aldebaran, where he was able to identify the lines of nine elements, including iron, sodium, calcium, and magnesium. In 1886, Edward C. Pickering at the Harvard College Observatory used a photographic plate to capture fifty absorption lines in the spectrum of Aldebaran. This became part of the Draper Catalogue, published in 1890. By 1887, the photographic technique had improved to the point that it was possible to measure a star's radial velocity from the amount of Doppler shift in the spectrum. By this means, the recession velocity of Aldebaran was estimated as 30 miles per second (48 km/s), using measurements performed at Potsdam Observatory by Hermann C. Vogel and his assistant Julius Scheiner.[34]

Aldebaran was observed using an interferometer attached to the Hooker Telescope at the Mount Wilson Observatory in 1921 in order to measure its angular diameter, but it was not resolved in these observations.[35]

The extensive history of observations of Aldebaran led to it being included in the list of 33 stars chosen as benchmarks for the Gaia mission to calibrate derived stellar parameters.[36] It had previously been used to calibrate instruments on board the Hubble Space Telescope.[13]

Physical characteristics

 
Size comparison between Aldebaran and the Sun

Aldebaran is listed as the spectral standard for type K5+ III stars.[6] Its spectrum shows that it is a giant star that has evolved off the main sequence band of the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram after exhausting the hydrogen at its core. The collapse of the centre of the star into a degenerate helium core has ignited a shell of hydrogen outside the core and Aldebaran is now on the red giant branch (RGB).[5]

The effective temperature of Aldebaran's photosphere is 3,910 K. It has a surface gravity of 1.59 cgs, typical for a giant star, but around 25 times lower than the Earth's and 700 times lower than the Sun's. Its metallicity is about 30% lower than the Sun's.

Measurements by the Hipparcos satellite and other sources put Aldebaran around 65.3 light-years (20.0 parsecs) away.[10] Asteroseismology has determined that it is about 16% more massive than the Sun,[11] yet it shines with 518 times the Sun's luminosity due to the expanded radius. The angular diameter of Aldebaran has been measured many times. The value adopted as part of the Gaia benchmark calibration is 20.580±0.030 mas.[13] It is 44 times the diameter of the Sun, approximately 61 million kilometres.[37]

Aldebaran is a slightly variable star, assigned to the slow irregular type LB. The General Catalogue of Variable Stars indicates variation between apparent magnitude 0.75 and 0.95 from historical reports.[4] Modern studies show a smaller amplitude, with some showing almost no variation.[38] Hipparcos photometry shows an amplitude of only about 0.02 magnitudes and a possible period around 18 days.[39] Intensive ground-based photometry showed variations of up to 0.03 magnitudes and a possible period around 91 days.[38] Analysis of observations over a much longer period still find a total amplitude likely to be less than 0.1 magnitudes, and the variation is considered to be irregular.[40]

The photosphere shows abundances of carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen that suggest the giant has gone through its first dredge-up stage—a normal step in the evolution of a star into a red giant during which material from deep within the star is brought up to the surface by convection.[41] With its slow rotation, Aldebaran lacks a dynamo needed to generate a corona and hence is not a source of hard X-ray emission. However, small scale magnetic fields may still be present in the lower atmosphere, resulting from convection turbulence near the surface. The measured strength of the magnetic field on Aldebaran is 0.22 Gauss.[42] Any resulting soft X-ray emissions from this region may be attenuated by the chromosphere, although ultraviolet emission has been detected in the spectrum.[43] The star is currently losing mass at a rate of (1–1.6) × 10−11 M yr−1 (about one Earth mass in 300,000 years) with a velocity of 30 km s−1.[41] This stellar wind may be generated by the weak magnetic fields in the lower atmosphere.[43]

Beyond the chromosphere of Aldebaran is an extended molecular outer atmosphere (MOLsphere) where the temperature is cool enough for molecules of gas to form. This region lies at about 2.5 times the radius of the star and has a temperature of about 1,500 K. The spectrum reveals lines of carbon monoxide, water, and titanium oxide.[41] Outside the MOLSphere, the stellar wind continues to expand until it reaches the termination shock boundary with the hot, ionized interstellar medium that dominates the Local Bubble, forming a roughly spherical astrosphere with a radius of around 1,000 AU, centered on Aldebaran.[44]

Visual companions

Five faint stars appear close to Aldebaran in the sky. These double star components were given upper-case Latin letter designations more or less in the order of their discovery, with the letter A reserved for the primary star. Some characteristics of these components, including their position relative to Aldebaran, are shown in the table.

WDS 04359+1631 Catalogue Entry[20]
α Tau Apparent
Magnitude
Angular
Separation
(″)
Position
Angle
(°)
Year Parallax (mas)
B 13.60 31.60 113 2007 47.3417±0.1055[45]
C 11.30 129.50 32 2011 19.1267±0.4274[46]
D 13.70
E 12.00 36.10 323 2000
F 13.60 255.70 121 2000 0.1626±0.0369[47]

Some surveys, for example Gaia Data Release 2,[45] have indicated that Alpha Tauri B may have about the same proper motion and parallax as Aldebaran and thus may be a physical binary system. These measurements are difficult, since the dim B component appears so close to the bright primary star, and the margin of error is too large to establish (or exclude) a physical relationship between the two. So far neither the B component, nor anything else, has been unambiguously shown to be physically associated with Aldebaran.[48] A spectral type of M2.5 has been published for Alpha Tauri B.[49]

Alpha Tauri CD is a binary system with the C and D component stars gravitationally bound to and co-orbiting each other. These co-orbiting stars have been shown to be located far beyond Aldebaran and are members of the Hyades star cluster. As with the rest of the stars in the cluster they do not physically interact with Aldebaran in any way.[32]

Planetary system

In 1993 radial velocity measurements of Aldebaran, Arcturus and Pollux showed that Aldebaran exhibited a long-period radial velocity oscillation, which could be interpreted as a substellar companion. The measurements for Aldebaran implied a companion with a minimum mass 11.4 times that of Jupiter in a 643-day orbit at a separation of 2.0 AU (300 Gm) in a mildly eccentric orbit. However, all three stars surveyed showed similar oscillations yielding similar companion masses, and the authors concluded that the variation was likely to be intrinsic to the star rather than due to the gravitational effect of a companion.[50]

 
Big dipper as seen from Aldebaran

In 2015 a study showed stable long-term evidence for both a planetary companion and stellar activity.[12] An asteroseismic analysis of the residuals to the planet fit has determined that Aldebaran b has a minimum mass of 5.8±0.7 Jupiter masses, and that when the star was on the main sequence it would have given this planet Earth-like levels of illumination and therefore, potentially, temperature.[11] This would place it and any of its moons in the habitable zone. Follow-up study in 2019 have found the evidence for planetary existence inconclusive though.[51]

The planetary system[52]
Companion
(in order from star)
Mass Semimajor axis
(AU)
Orbital period
(days)
Eccentricity Inclination Radius
Aldebaran b (disputed[51]) 5.8 MJ 1.46±0.27 628.96±0.9 0.1±0.05

Etymology and mythology

Aldebaran was originally نَيِّر اَلدَّبَرَان (Nayyir al-Dabarān in Arabic), meaning "the bright one of the follower", since it follows the Pleiades; in fact, the Arabs sometimes also ‍applied ‍‍the ‍name al-Dabarān to the Hyades ‍as ‍a whole.[53] A variety of transliterated spellings have been used, with the current Aldebaran becoming standard relatively recently.[16]

Mythology

This easily seen and striking star in its suggestive asterism is a popular subject for ancient and modern myths.

  • Mexican culture: For the Seris of northwestern Mexico, this star provides light for the seven women giving birth (Pleiades). It has three names: Hant Caalajc Ipápjö, Queeto, and Azoj Yeen oo Caap ("star that goes ahead"). The lunar month corresponding to October is called Queeto yaao "Aldebaran's path".[54]
  • Australian Aboriginal culture: amongst indigenous people of the Clarence River, in north-eastern New South Wales, this star is the ancestor Karambal, who stole another man's wife. The woman's husband tracked him down and burned the tree in which he was hiding. It is believed that he rose to the sky as smoke and became the star Aldebaran.[55]

Names in other languages

In modern culture

As the brightest star in a Zodiac constellation, it is given great significance within astrology.[59]

The name Aldebaran or Alpha Tauri has been adopted many times, including

The star also appears in works of fiction such as Far From the Madding Crowd (1874) and Down and Out in Paris and London (1933). It is frequently seen in science fiction, including the Lensman series (1948-1954) and Fallen Dragon (2001).

Aldebaran regularly features in conspiracy theories as one of the origins of extraterrestrial aliens,[60] often linked to Nazi UFOs.[61] A well-known example is the German conspiracy theorist Axel Stoll, who considered the star the home of the Aryan race and the target of expeditions by the Wehrmacht.[62]

The planetary exploration probe Pioneer 10 is no longer powered or in contact with Earth, but its trajectory is taking it in the general direction of Aldebaran. It is expected to make its closest approach in about two million years.[63]

The Austrian chemist Carl Auer von Welsbach proposed the name aldebaranium (chemical symbol Ad) for a rare earth element that he (among others) had found. Today, it is called ytterbium (symbol Yb).[64][65][66]

See also

References

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External links

  • "Aldebaran 2". SolStation. from the original on 25 November 2005. Retrieved 14 November 2005.
  • Daytime occultation of Aldebaran by the Moon (Moscow, Russia) YouTube video


aldebaran, confused, with, alderamin, alderaan, tauri, other, uses, disambiguation, alpha, tauri, redirects, here, other, uses, alphatauri, disambiguation, arabic, follower, الدبران, giant, star, brightest, star, zodiac, constellation, taurus, bayer, designati. Not to be confused with Alderamin Alderaan or A Tauri For other uses see Aldebaran disambiguation Alpha Tauri redirects here For other uses see AlphaTauri disambiguation Aldebaran Arabic The Follower الدبران a red giant star is the brightest star in the zodiac constellation of Taurus It has the Bayer designation a Tauri which is Latinized to Alpha Tauri and abbreviated Alpha Tau or a Tau Aldebaran varies in brightness from an apparent visual magnitude 0 75 down to 0 95 making it typically the fourteenth brightest star in the night sky It is located at a distance of approximately 65 light years from the Sun The star lies along the line of sight to the nearby Hyades cluster AldebaranLocation of Aldebaran circled Observation dataEpoch J2000 0 Equinox J2000 0Constellation TaurusPronunciation ae l ˈ d ɛ b er e n 1 2 Right ascension 04h 35m 55 23907s 3 Declination 16 30 33 4885 3 Apparent magnitude V 0 86 0 75 0 95 4 CharacteristicsEvolutionary stage Red giant branch 5 Spectral type K5 III 6 Apparent magnitude J 2 095 7 U B color index 1 92 8 B V color index 1 44 8 Variable type LB 4 AstrometryRadial velocity Rv 54 26 0 03 9 km sProper motion m RA 63 45 0 84 3 mas yr Dec 188 94 0 65 3 mas yrParallax p 49 97 0 75 mas 10 Distance65 3 1 0 ly 20 0 0 3 pc Absolute magnitude MV 0 641 0 034 10 DetailsMass1 16 0 07 11 M Radius45 1 0 1 12 R Luminosity439 17 13 L Surface gravity log g 1 45 0 3 14 cgsTemperature3 900 50 14 KMetallicity Fe H 0 33 0 1 14 dexRotation520 days 12 Rotational velocity v sin i 3 5 1 5 14 km sAge6 4 1 4 1 1 11 GyrOther designationsAlpha Tau a Tau 87 Tauri BD 16 629 GJ 171 1 9159 HD 29139 HIP 21421 HR 1457 SAO 94027Database referencesSIMBADdataARICNSdataAldebaran is a giant star that is cooler than the Sun with a surface temperature of 3 900 K but its radius is about 44 times the Sun s so it is over 400 times as luminous It spins slowly and takes 520 days to complete a rotation Aldebaran is believed to host a planet several times the mass of Jupiter named Aldebaran b The planetary exploration probe Pioneer 10 is heading in the general direction of the star and should make its closest approach in about two million years Contents 1 Nomenclature 2 Observation 3 Observational history 4 Physical characteristics 5 Visual companions 6 Planetary system 7 Etymology and mythology 7 1 Mythology 7 2 Names in other languages 7 3 In modern culture 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksNomenclature Edit Aldebaran is the brightest star in the constellation of Taurus center The traditional name Aldebaran derives from the Arabic al Dabaran الدبران meaning the follower because it seems to follow the Pleiades 15 16 In 2016 the International Astronomical Union Working Group on Star Names WGSN approved the proper name Aldebaran for this star 17 18 Aldebaran is the brightest star in the constellation Taurus and so has the Bayer designation a Tauri Latinised as Alpha Tauri It has the Flamsteed designation 87 Tauri as the 87th star in the constellation of approximately 7th magnitude or brighter ordered by right ascension It also has the Bright Star Catalogue number 1457 the HD number 29139 and the Hipparcos catalogue number 21421 mostly seen in scientific publications It is a variable star listed in the General Catalogue of Variable Stars but it is listed using its Bayer designation and does not have a separate variable star designation 4 Aldebaran and several nearby stars are included in double star catalogues such as the Washington Double Star Catalog as WDS 04359 1631 and the Aitken Double Star Catalogue as ADS 3321 It was included with an 11th magnitude companion as a double star as H IV 66 in the Herschel Catalogue of Double Stars and S II 2 in the Struve Double Star Catalog and together with a 14th magnitude star as b 550 in the Burnham Double Star Catalogue 19 20 Observation Edit Aldebaran in the Hyades Aldebaran is one of the easiest stars to find in the night sky partly due to its brightness and partly due to being near one of the more noticeable asterisms in the sky Following the three stars of Orion s belt in the opposite direction to Sirius the first bright star encountered is Aldebaran 21 It is best seen at midnight late November early December The star is by chance in the line of sight between the Earth and the Hyades so it has the appearance of being the brightest member of the open cluster but the cluster that forms the bull s head shaped asterism is more than twice as far away at about 150 light years 22 Aldebaran is 5 47 degrees south of the ecliptic and so can be occulted by the Moon Such occultations occur when the Moon s ascending node is near the autumnal equinox 23 A series of 49 occultations occurred starting on 29 January 2015 and ending at 3 September 2018 24 Each event was visible from points in the northern hemisphere or close to the equator people in e g Australia or South Africa can never observe an Aldebaran occultation since it is too far south of the ecliptic A reasonably accurate estimate for the diameter of Aldebaran was obtained during the occultation of 22 September 1978 25 In the 2020s Aldebaran is in conjunction in ecliptic longitude with the sun around May 30 of each year 26 With a near infrared J band magnitude of 2 1 only Betelgeuse 2 9 R Doradus 2 6 and Arcturus 2 2 are brighter at that wavelength 7 Observational history Edit Occultation of Aldebaran by the Moon Aldebaran is the red dot to the right barely visible in the thumbnail On 11 March AD 509 a lunar occultation of Aldebaran was observed in Athens Greece 27 English astronomer Edmund Halley studied the timing of this event and in 1718 concluded that Aldebaran must have changed position since that time moving several minutes of arc further to the north This as well as observations of the changing positions of stars Sirius and Arcturus led to the discovery of proper motion Based on present day observations the position of Aldebaran has shifted 7 in the last 2000 years roughly a quarter the diameter of the full moon 28 29 Due to precession of the equinoxes 5 000 years ago the vernal equinox was close to Aldebaran 30 Between 420 000 and 210 000 years ago Alderbaran was the brightest star in the night sky 31 peaking in brightness 320 000 years ago with an apparent magnitude of 1 54 31 English astronomer William Herschel discovered a faint companion to Aldebaran in 1782 32 an 11th magnitude star at an angular separation of 117 This star was shown to be itself a close double star by S W Burnham in 1888 and he discovered an additional 14th magnitude companion at an angular separation of 31 Follow on measurements of proper motion showed that Herschel s companion was diverging from Aldebaran and hence they were not physically connected However the companion discovered by Burnham had almost exactly the same proper motion as Aldebaran suggesting that the two formed a wide binary star system 33 Working at his private observatory in Tulse Hill England in 1864 William Huggins performed the first studies of the spectrum of Aldebaran where he was able to identify the lines of nine elements including iron sodium calcium and magnesium In 1886 Edward C Pickering at the Harvard College Observatory used a photographic plate to capture fifty absorption lines in the spectrum of Aldebaran This became part of the Draper Catalogue published in 1890 By 1887 the photographic technique had improved to the point that it was possible to measure a star s radial velocity from the amount of Doppler shift in the spectrum By this means the recession velocity of Aldebaran was estimated as 30 miles per second 48 km s using measurements performed at Potsdam Observatory by Hermann C Vogel and his assistant Julius Scheiner 34 Aldebaran was observed using an interferometer attached to the Hooker Telescope at the Mount Wilson Observatory in 1921 in order to measure its angular diameter but it was not resolved in these observations 35 The extensive history of observations of Aldebaran led to it being included in the list of 33 stars chosen as benchmarks for the Gaia mission to calibrate derived stellar parameters 36 It had previously been used to calibrate instruments on board the Hubble Space Telescope 13 Physical characteristics Edit Size comparison between Aldebaran and the Sun Aldebaran is listed as the spectral standard for type K5 III stars 6 Its spectrum shows that it is a giant star that has evolved off the main sequence band of the Hertzsprung Russell diagram after exhausting the hydrogen at its core The collapse of the centre of the star into a degenerate helium core has ignited a shell of hydrogen outside the core and Aldebaran is now on the red giant branch RGB 5 The effective temperature of Aldebaran s photosphere is 3 910 K It has a surface gravity of 1 59 cgs typical for a giant star but around 25 times lower than the Earth s and 700 times lower than the Sun s Its metallicity is about 30 lower than the Sun s Measurements by the Hipparcos satellite and other sources put Aldebaran around 65 3 light years 20 0 parsecs away 10 Asteroseismology has determined that it is about 16 more massive than the Sun 11 yet it shines with 518 times the Sun s luminosity due to the expanded radius The angular diameter of Aldebaran has been measured many times The value adopted as part of the Gaia benchmark calibration is 20 580 0 030 mas 13 It is 44 times the diameter of the Sun approximately 61 million kilometres 37 Aldebaran is a slightly variable star assigned to the slow irregular type LB The General Catalogue of Variable Stars indicates variation between apparent magnitude 0 75 and 0 95 from historical reports 4 Modern studies show a smaller amplitude with some showing almost no variation 38 Hipparcos photometry shows an amplitude of only about 0 02 magnitudes and a possible period around 18 days 39 Intensive ground based photometry showed variations of up to 0 03 magnitudes and a possible period around 91 days 38 Analysis of observations over a much longer period still find a total amplitude likely to be less than 0 1 magnitudes and the variation is considered to be irregular 40 The photosphere shows abundances of carbon oxygen and nitrogen that suggest the giant has gone through its first dredge up stage a normal step in the evolution of a star into a red giant during which material from deep within the star is brought up to the surface by convection 41 With its slow rotation Aldebaran lacks a dynamo needed to generate a corona and hence is not a source of hard X ray emission However small scale magnetic fields may still be present in the lower atmosphere resulting from convection turbulence near the surface The measured strength of the magnetic field on Aldebaran is 0 22 Gauss 42 Any resulting soft X ray emissions from this region may be attenuated by the chromosphere although ultraviolet emission has been detected in the spectrum 43 The star is currently losing mass at a rate of 1 1 6 10 11 M yr 1 about one Earth mass in 300 000 years with a velocity of 30 km s 1 41 This stellar wind may be generated by the weak magnetic fields in the lower atmosphere 43 Beyond the chromosphere of Aldebaran is an extended molecular outer atmosphere MOLsphere where the temperature is cool enough for molecules of gas to form This region lies at about 2 5 times the radius of the star and has a temperature of about 1 500 K The spectrum reveals lines of carbon monoxide water and titanium oxide 41 Outside the MOLSphere the stellar wind continues to expand until it reaches the termination shock boundary with the hot ionized interstellar medium that dominates the Local Bubble forming a roughly spherical astrosphere with a radius of around 1 000 AU centered on Aldebaran 44 Visual companions EditFive faint stars appear close to Aldebaran in the sky These double star components were given upper case Latin letter designations more or less in the order of their discovery with the letter A reserved for the primary star Some characteristics of these components including their position relative to Aldebaran are shown in the table WDS 04359 1631 Catalogue Entry 20 a Tau ApparentMagnitude AngularSeparation PositionAngle Year Parallax mas B 13 60 31 60 113 2007 47 3417 0 1055 45 C 11 30 129 50 32 2011 19 1267 0 4274 46 D 13 70 E 12 00 36 10 323 2000F 13 60 255 70 121 2000 0 1626 0 0369 47 Some surveys for example Gaia Data Release 2 45 have indicated that Alpha Tauri B may have about the same proper motion and parallax as Aldebaran and thus may be a physical binary system These measurements are difficult since the dim B component appears so close to the bright primary star and the margin of error is too large to establish or exclude a physical relationship between the two So far neither the B component nor anything else has been unambiguously shown to be physically associated with Aldebaran 48 A spectral type of M2 5 has been published for Alpha Tauri B 49 Alpha Tauri CD is a binary system with the C and D component stars gravitationally bound to and co orbiting each other These co orbiting stars have been shown to be located far beyond Aldebaran and are members of the Hyades star cluster As with the rest of the stars in the cluster they do not physically interact with Aldebaran in any way 32 Planetary system EditMain article Aldebaran b In 1993 radial velocity measurements of Aldebaran Arcturus and Pollux showed that Aldebaran exhibited a long period radial velocity oscillation which could be interpreted as a substellar companion The measurements for Aldebaran implied a companion with a minimum mass 11 4 times that of Jupiter in a 643 day orbit at a separation of 2 0 AU 300 Gm in a mildly eccentric orbit However all three stars surveyed showed similar oscillations yielding similar companion masses and the authors concluded that the variation was likely to be intrinsic to the star rather than due to the gravitational effect of a companion 50 Big dipper as seen from Aldebaran In 2015 a study showed stable long term evidence for both a planetary companion and stellar activity 12 An asteroseismic analysis of the residuals to the planet fit has determined that Aldebaran b has a minimum mass of 5 8 0 7 Jupiter masses and that when the star was on the main sequence it would have given this planet Earth like levels of illumination and therefore potentially temperature 11 This would place it and any of its moons in the habitable zone Follow up study in 2019 have found the evidence for planetary existence inconclusive though 51 The planetary system 52 Companion in order from star Mass Semimajor axis AU Orbital period days Eccentricity Inclination RadiusAldebaran b disputed 51 5 8 MJ 1 46 0 27 628 96 0 9 0 1 0 05 Etymology and mythology EditAldebaran was originally ن ي ر ا لد ب ر ان Nayyir al Dabaran in Arabic meaning the bright one of the follower since it follows the Pleiades in fact the Arabs sometimes also applied the name al Dabaran to the Hyades as a whole 53 A variety of transliterated spellings have been used with the current Aldebaran becoming standard relatively recently 16 Mythology Edit This easily seen and striking star in its suggestive asterism is a popular subject for ancient and modern myths Mexican culture For the Seris of northwestern Mexico this star provides light for the seven women giving birth Pleiades It has three names Hant Caalajc Ipapjo Queeto and Azoj Yeen oo Caap star that goes ahead The lunar month corresponding to October is called Queeto yaao Aldebaran s path 54 Australian Aboriginal culture amongst indigenous people of the Clarence River in north eastern New South Wales this star is the ancestor Karambal who stole another man s wife The woman s husband tracked him down and burned the tree in which he was hiding It is believed that he rose to the sky as smoke and became the star Aldebaran 55 Names in other languages Edit In Hindu astronomy it is identified as the lunar mansion Rohini the red one and as one of the twenty seven daughters of Daksha and the wife of the god Chandra Moon In Ancient Greek it has been called Lampadias Lampadias literally torch like or bearer 56 In Chinese 畢宿 Bi Xiu meaning Net refers to an asterism consisting Aldebaran e Tauri d3 Tauri d1 Tauri g Tauri 71 Tauri and l Tauri 57 Consequently the Chinese name for Aldebaran itself is 畢宿五 Bi Xiu wǔ the Fifth Star of Net 58 In modern culture Edit See also Aldebaran in fiction Italian frigate Aldebaran F 590 As the brightest star in a Zodiac constellation it is given great significance within astrology 59 The name Aldebaran or Alpha Tauri has been adopted many times including Aldebaran Rock in Antarctica United States Navy stores ship USS Aldebaran AF 10 and Italian frigate Aldebaran F 590 proposed micro satellite launch vehicle Aldebaran French company Aldebaran Robotics fashion brand AlphaTauri Formula 1 team Scuderia AlphaTauri previously known as Toro RossoThe star also appears in works of fiction such as Far From the Madding Crowd 1874 and Down and Out in Paris and London 1933 It is frequently seen in science fiction including the Lensman series 1948 1954 and Fallen Dragon 2001 Aldebaran regularly features in conspiracy theories as one of the origins of extraterrestrial aliens 60 often linked to Nazi UFOs 61 A well known example is the German conspiracy theorist Axel Stoll who considered the star the home of the Aryan race and the target of expeditions by the Wehrmacht 62 The planetary exploration probe Pioneer 10 is no longer powered or in contact with Earth but its trajectory is taking it in the general direction of Aldebaran It is expected to make its closest approach in about two million years 63 The Austrian chemist Carl Auer von Welsbach proposed the name aldebaranium chemical symbol Ad for a rare earth element that he among others had found Today it is called ytterbium symbol Yb 64 65 66 See also EditLists of stars List of brightest stars List of nearest bright stars Historical brightest stars Taurus 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Bibcode 1989ApJS 71 245K doi 10 1086 191373 a b Cutri Roc M Skrutskie Michael F Van Dyk Schuyler D Beichman Charles A Carpenter John M Chester Thomas Cambresy Laurent Evans Tracey E Fowler John W Gizis John E Howard Elizabeth V Huchra John P Jarrett Thomas H Kopan Eugene L Kirkpatrick J Davy Light Robert M Marsh Kenneth A McCallon Howard L Schneider Stephen E Stiening Rae Sykes Matthew J Weinberg Martin D Wheaton William A Wheelock Sherry L Zacarias N 2003 VizieR Online Data Catalog 2MASS All Sky Catalog of Point Sources Cutri 2003 CDS ADC Collection of Electronic Catalogues 2246 II 246 Bibcode 2003yCat 2246 0C S2CID 115529446 a b Ducati J R 2002 VizieR Online Data Catalog Catalogue of Stellar Photometry in Johnson s 11 color system CDS ADC Collection of Electronic Catalogues 2237 0 Bibcode 2002yCat 2237 0D Famaey B Jorissen A Luri X Mayor M Udry S Dejonghe H Turon C 2005 Local kinematics of K and M giants from CORAVEL Hipparcos Tycho 2 data Revisiting the concept of superclusters 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