by Ann » Sat Oct 28, 2023 7:16 am
The Ghosts of Gamma Cas.
Image Credit & Copyright: Guillaume Gruntz, Jean-François Bax
Nice!!! Lovely blue Gamma Cas is one of my favorite stars!
Gamma Cas is massive, sizzling, azure, brilliant and octuple!
Wikipedia wrote:
Together with its common-proper-motion companion, HD 5408, the system could contain a total of eight stars.
Gamma Cas is an eruptive variable that throws off mass along its equator.
Gamma Cassiopeiae is a rapidly spinning star with a projected rotational velocity of 472 km s−1, giving it a pronounced equatorial bulge. When combined with the star's high luminosity, the result is the ejection of matter that forms a hot circumstellar disk of gas. The emissions and brightness variations are apparently caused by this "decretion disk".
Right, Gamma Cas hasn't got an accretion disk, but a "decretion" disk! Not a disk where mass is spiraling in, but a disk where mass is cascading out!
Gamma Cas also emits X-rays! Watch out for the fireworks!
Wikipedia wrote:
Gamma Cassiopeiae is the prototype of a small group of stellar sources of X-ray radiation that is about 10 times stronger than emitted from other B or Be stars.
You dont' trifle with Gamma Cas, the blue jewel in the crown of
Queen Cas! Hey, the stories of Queen Cas are ugly. Let's just enjoy her cosmic W-shaped beauty, shall we?
Finally, let's enjoy another picture of Gamma Cas and its small entourage of ghostly nebulas and a star:
So all hail Gamma Cas, royal blue-blooded star of the majestic constellation, Cassiopeia! ♕
Ann
[float=left][attachment=0]IC63_GruntzBax1024[1].jpg[/attachment][c][size=85][color=#0040FF]The Ghosts of Gamma Cas.
Image Credit & Copyright: Guillaume Gruntz, Jean-François Bax[/color][/size][/c][/float]
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Nice!!! Lovely blue Gamma Cas is one of my favorite stars! :D
Gamma Cas is massive, sizzling, azure, brilliant and octuple!
[quote][url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamma_Cassiopeiae]Wikipedia[/url] wrote:
Together with its common-proper-motion companion, HD 5408, the system could contain a total of eight stars.[/quote]
[img3="One star for every finger! That's a lot!"]https://previews.123rf.com/images/poramesstock/poramesstock1412/poramesstock141200030/34766676-behind-of-palm-with-eight-fingers-show-isolated-white-background.jpg[/img3]
Gamma Cas is an eruptive variable that throws off mass along its equator.
[quote]Gamma Cassiopeiae is a rapidly spinning star with a projected rotational velocity of 472 km s−1, giving it a pronounced equatorial bulge. When combined with the star's high luminosity, the result is the ejection of matter that forms a hot circumstellar disk of gas. The emissions and brightness variations are apparently caused by this "decretion disk".[/quote]
Right, Gamma Cas hasn't got an accretion disk, but a "decretion" disk! Not a disk where mass is spiraling in, but a disk where mass is cascading out!
Gamma Cas also emits X-rays! Watch out for the fireworks!
[img3=""]https://s3.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com/media.techniquest.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/06090015/Fireworks.jpg[/img3]
[quote][url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamma_Cassiopeiae#X-ray_emission]Wikipedia[/url] wrote:
Gamma Cassiopeiae is the prototype of a small group of stellar sources of X-ray radiation that is about 10 times stronger than emitted from other B or Be stars.[/quote]
You dont' trifle with Gamma Cas, the blue jewel in the crown of [url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassiopeia_(mother_of_Andromeda)]Queen Cas[/url]! Hey, the stories of Queen Cas are ugly. Let's just enjoy her cosmic W-shaped beauty, shall we?
[img3="Queen Cassiopeia in her cosmic glory, with Gamma Cas at top. Note the fantastic long red arc of nebulosity, almost reminiscent of Barnard's Loop but on a much smaller scale, surrounding this majestic B0.5IVpe star. As a bonus, you get the Pacman Nebula as well. Credit: Rogelio Bernal Andreo."]https://www.universetoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/RBA_Cassiopeia_1024_Labeled.jpg[/img3]
Finally, let's enjoy another picture of Gamma Cas and its small entourage of ghostly nebulas and a star:
[img3="Gamma Cas with red-rimmed IC 63 at 10 o'clock and ghostly blue IC 59 at 12 o'clock. The small blue star just below Gamma Cas is HD 5408, a common proper motion companion of Gamma Cas. Credit: Neil Michael Wyatt"]https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7d/Gamma_Cassiopeiae_and_its_associated_nebulosity.jpg/1280px-Gamma_Cassiopeiae_and_its_associated_nebulosity.jpg[/img3]
So all hail Gamma Cas, royal blue-blooded star of the majestic constellation, Cassiopeia! ♕
Ann