smitty wrote:Can't help being curious about the bright pair (perhaps a binary star pair?) to the right and slightly above center in the image. The leftmost member of the pair appears to have a slightly yellowish tint, whereas the other has a bluer tint. I'm assuming this pair is unrelated to Seyfert's Sextet, but if anyone can say more regarding what's known about the pair it would be appreciated. Thanks in advance for any enlightenment! What an exciting universe we inhabit! Never a dull moment.
Very interesting, smitty. I checked out my software, which provides a grayscale around galaxies at high magnification. Because of the grayscale, it is usually possible to say if there is supposed to be something there which is too faint to be "clickable" in the graphics provided.
Well, here's the deal: there is a distant red galaxy to the lower left of the interesting "double star". My software shows a very definite brightening at the position of the galaxy. But at the position of the double star, there is nothing. On the other hand, there is another brightening, just a little brighter and a bit elongated, to the right (not the upper right) of the position of the galaxy.
I can think of a few possibilities. But first, let's try to consider what the "real" color of the double star might be. (Or let's call it the "real apparent color", or the B-V index that we would measure is we were able to measure it.)
The double star looks quite bluish to me. But then, the galaxies in Seyfert's Sextet look quite bluish, too. However, these galaxies are certainly intrinsically yellow, since they are clearly evolved (except the "vertical" elongated one that looks grainy because it is full of young clusters, and also apart from the face-on spiral galaxy). The upper two galaxies, in particular, lack any sign of star formation, and the one on the right lacks any sign of dust. Both the upper galaxies are certainly intrinsically yellow, and yet they look quite blue. Is that a criticism? No, it is an observation, and it means that the double star, which appears to be about the same color as the galaxies, is likely also yellow.
We might possibly narrow the color index of the double star down a bit more. James D Wray provided a photo of Seyfert's Sextet in his book,
The Color Atlas of Galaxies. In that book, he said that the B-V index of the entire Seyfert's Sextet is 0.91, and its U-B index is 0.32. Both values are relatively red. If we toy with the possibility that the double star is about the same color as the galaxies, then we might hazard a guess that the star is a pair of K-type dwarfs. If their color index is about 1.0, then they can hardly be M-type dwarfs, and then they can't be
terribly faint. But an interesting possibility is that they might be low-metal stars, in which case they could be as faint as an M-type dwarf, yet as yellow as a K-type dwarf.
So I would like to hazard a guess that this is a wide pair of small yellow-orange stars. They are sufficiently near and sufficiently fast-moving to have moved from the position they had in the picture that was used to produce the grayscale for my software to the position they have in today's APOD.
Ann