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Navi [1]

Gamma Cassiopeia is a busy star system. The main star is surrounding itself with a disk of gas and dust. The star is interacting with an invisible companion. And it’s building up to an impressive demise.

Gamma Cass is the middle point of the letter M or W formed by the stars of Cassiopeia, which is high in the northern sky at nightfall. Gamma Cass is the most distant member of that pattern, at 550 light-years. The main star — the one visible to the eye alone — is between 15 and 20 times the mass of the Sun. And it’s about 35,000 times brighter than the Sun.

The star spins at about a million miles an hour at its equator. That causes it to bulge outward, so it’s shaped more like a lozenge than a ball. That high speed causes the star to fling gas from its surface, forming a disk around the star.

Its companion probably is the corpse of a once-mighty star. Some of the gas from the main star may fall onto this dead companion. As it does so it heats up and produces X-rays.

Gamma Cas is only about eight million years old, yet it’s nearing its end. In a few million years more, it’s likely to explode as a supernova — ending the life of this busy star.

Incidentally, Gamma Cas has a nickname: Navi. It was bestowed in the 1960s by the crew of Apollo 1. It’s the middle name of commander Virgil Ivan Grissom spelled backward. After the crew died in a launchpad fire, NASA placed Navi on the starcharts used by later crews to navigate to the Moon.


Script by Damond Benningfield

Keywords:

  • Apollo Project [2]
  • Binary and Multi-Star Systems [3]
  • Cassiopeia, the Queen [4]
  • Naming and Classification of Stars [5]
  • Supergiant Stars [6]
  • Supernova [7]
StarDate: 
Monday, January 21, 2019
Teaser: 
A bright, busy star system
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Source URL:https://legacy.stardate.org/radio/program/2019-01-21

Links
[1] https://legacy.stardate.org/radio/program/2019-01-21 [2] https://legacy.stardate.org/astro-guide/apollo-project [3] https://legacy.stardate.org/astro-guide/binary-and-multi-star-systems [4] https://legacy.stardate.org/astro-guide/cassiopeia-queen-0 [5] https://legacy.stardate.org/astro-guide/naming-and-classification-stars [6] https://legacy.stardate.org/astro-guide/supergiant-stars [7] https://legacy.stardate.org/astro-guide/supernova