Australian Sky & Telescope - April 2018

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42 AUSTRALIAN SKY & TELESCOPE April 2018


BINOCULAR HIGHLIGHT by Jonathan Nally

Theta’s hot, blue


radiance


I


s there anything better than grabbing your binoculars and scanning
through the star clouds of Carina? Doing so takes me back to
my youth, when all I had to guide me was the famous National
Geographic map of the whole sky and my mother’s 8×30 binoculars.
I remember being dazzled by the seemingly endless variety of star
groupings, with sparkling gems galore in every field of view.
One of the prettiest of those groups is IC 2602, also known as the
Southern Pleiades, located about four degrees south of Eta (η) Carinae.
Described by Abbe Lacaille in the 18th century from South Africa, it’s
one of the closest open clusters, around 480 light-years from Earth. Its
70-or-so stars have an average age of about 40 to 50 million years.
We’ve mentioned IC 2602 a number of times in these pages, but it’s
the binary star at its centre that draws my attention this issue. Hardly
anything is known about the secondary star of the Theta (θ) Carinae
pair, but the primary is a magnitude 2.7, hot, blue star (spectral class
B0). Its diameter is a whopping 5.5 times that of our Sun, its mass is 13
times, and its luminosity is a staggering 16,600 times that of our star.
Scientists think it might be a ‘blue straggler,’ a type of giant star formed
when two smaller stars merge. Being the mass that it is, Theta will some
day explode as a supernova.
Just five arcminutes from Theta lies the variable star V518 Carinae,
another member of IC 2602. It too is a B-type star and also possibly a
blue straggler. At magnitude 4.8 it is quite easy to find. It’s brightness
varies by about 0.2 magnitudes with what seem to be two periods,
around 100 days and 970 days.

■ JONATHAN NALLY has progressed from 8×30s to 10×50s, but still loves
starhopping through Carina.

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Star
magnitudes

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USING THE
STAR CHART

WHEN
Early March 10pm
Late March 9pm
Early April 8pm
Late April 7pm

These are standard times —
add Daylight Savings if it applies
to your location.

HOW: Go outside within an hour
or so of a time listed above. Hold
the map above your head with
the bottom of the page facing
south. The chart now matches
the stars in your sky, with the
circular perimeter representing
the horizon and the centre of the
chart being the point directly over
your head (known as the zenith).

FOR EXAMPLE: Look at
the chart, and you’ll see that the
bright star Achernar at the end
of the constellation Eridanus
(The River) is about one-third of
the way from the southwestern
horizon and the middle of the
chart. So if you look to the
southwest, you’ll find Achernar
about one-third of the way up
from the horizon.

NOTE: The map is plotted for
35° south latitude (for example,
Sydney, Buenos Aires, Cape
Town). If you’re much further north
of there, stars in the northern part
of the sky will be higher and stars
in the south lower. If you’re further
south, the reverse is true.

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ONLINE
You can get a real-time sky chart
for your location at
skychart.skyandtelescope.com/
skychart.php

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Free download pdf