SO 025300.5+165258 |
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NASA -- larger image
SO 025300.5+165258 is a dim red dwarf star, that
is dimmer than even Gliese 623 B (M5.8Ve) at
lower right.
System Summary
In February 2003, a team of astronomers (including
Bonnard
J. Teegarden,
Steven H.
Pravdo, Michael Hicks,
Stuart B. Shaklan,
Kevin Covey,
Oliver Fraser,
Suzanne
L. Hawley,
Thomas
A. McGlynn, and
I. Neill
Reid) announced the discovery of a nearby star using
data collected by the NASA-funded, Near Earth Asteroid
Tracking (NEAT)
program from November 26, 1997 to August 11, 2001, during
a search of nearby white dwarfs. Designated
SO025300.5+165258, the star has a very large proper motion
of 5.06 +/- 0.03 arcseconds per year
(Teegarden
et al, 2003), which was detected in
SkyMorph's
database of NEAT observations that astronomers have found
to be useful for finding stars with high proper motions
(Pravdo
et al, 1999). Some astronomers have begun referring
to SO 025300.5+165258 as "Teegarden's Star," after its
discoverer
Bonnard
J. Teegarden. Astronomers currently know of only
six other stars with proper motions greater than five
arcsecconds per year, from the perspective of an
observer in the Solar System.
Teegarden
et al, 2003,
SkyMorph,
Palomar
Sky Surveys
Larger collage image.
Teegarden's Star has been found
in astronomical images taken
more than 50 years ago.
The star was initially thought to be located only around 7.6
(+ 3.3 / -1.8) light-years (ly) away from Sol, based on a
preliminary trigonometric parallax of 0.43 +/- 0.13 arcseconds
(") or 2.3 +1.0 / -0.54 parsecs. Its unusual dimness and
relative metal abundance indicated, however, that the star was
probably further away, perhaps around 11.7 ly or more based on
an inferred, spectrophotometric parallax of 3.6 +/- 0.4" --
see discussion below and at
RECONS).
According to Sky
and Telescope (April 2004), Todd J. Henry, the director
of RECONS,
reported a recent distance estimate of 3.82 parsecs (or 12.5
ly). In June 2004, George Gatewood, the director of the
Allegheny Observatory,
also reported a similar, initial parallax estimate of 0.259 +/- 0.004
arcseconds (AAS
204th Meeting session abstract), for a distance of 3.86 +/-
0.06 parsecs (12.6 +/- 0.2 ly), a distance modulus of 2.067+/- 0.034 magnitudes,
and an absolute visual magnitude of 17.47 +/- 0.04
(A.O.
summary)
-- "in excellent agreement with those of the
U.S Naval Observatory
(Conrad Dahn, private communications)." In 2006, a new
estimate of 12.52 +/- 0.13 ly was reported by
RECONS
(Henry
et al, 2006b; and
(Henry
et al, 2006a), but a revised estimate of 12.59 light-years (based on 0.2593 arc-seconds was reported in 2009
(Gatewood and Coban, 2009)
Walt Feimer,
GSFC,
NASA
Larger map.
Teegarden's Star was initially
estimated to lie only around 6.5
to 10.1 light-years from the Solar
System (more from
GSFC).
Teegarden's Star is located in the southwest corner (2:55:10.6+16:17:1, J2000; or 2:53:0.5+16:52:58, ICRS) of Constellation Aries, the Ram. It can be found southeast of Hamal (Alpha Arietis), Sheratan (Beta Arietis), Mesarthim (Gamma Arietis), and spiral galaxy M 74; northeast of Alrescha (Alpha Piscium); and northwest of Lamda, Mu, Xi2, and Nu Ceti, and Menkar (Alpha Ceti) and Kaffaljidhma (Gamma Ceti). If the initial distance estimate had been confirmed, the star would have become the new third-closest system to Sol after Alpha Centauri 3 and Barnard's Star. Like all red dwarf stars, however, Teegarden's Star is too faint to be seen with the unaided Human eyes from Earth.
The Star
Walt Feimer,
GSFC,
NASA
Larger illustration.
Teegarden's Star appears to
be a very dim, red dwarf star
of spectral and luminosity
type M6.5 V
(more).
Initial measurements of the spectrum of Teegarden's Star and its tangential velocity (of 52.9 +/- 11.7 kilometers per second) suggest it is a main-sequence dwarf star of spectral and luminosity type M6.5-7.0 V. Such a cool red dwarf star is substantially smaller and dimmer than Sol, currently estimated to have only around eight percent of Sol's mass, around one-seventh of its diameter, and 1/300,000th of its visual luminosity. If the preliminary distance measurement had been correct, then the star would be underluminous by a magnitude of 1.2 +/- 0.7 (three times dimmer than similar stars of its type), although the relative strengths of the star's spectral bands of Calcium Hydride (CaH2) and Titanium Oxide (TiO5) provide no evidence that it is metal-poor.
Walt Feimer,
GSFC,
NASA
Larger illustration.
Teegarden's Star has around
eight percent of Sol's mass
and is 300,000 times fainter,
which is why it was not found
until September 2002 despite
its proximity to the Solar
System (more from
GSFC).
The star's relative distance to Sol has been revised as initial estimates of magnitude and distance indicated that the star had an unreasonably small diameter of 68 percent of Jupiter. Subsequent measurements of magnitude and metallicity suggested that the star is actuallyed located around 11.7 ly away, based on an inferred, spectrophotometric parallax of 3.6 +/- 0.4 arcseconds (Teegarden et al, 2003) -- more discussion at RECONS. A more precise measurement of the star position to improve the determination of its trigonometric parallax distance was launched by the U.S. Naval Observatory. In June 2004, George Gatewood (Director of the Allegheny Observatory) also reported a similar, initial parallax estimate of 0.259 +/- 0.004 arcseconds (AAS 204th Meeting session summary), for a distance of 3.86 +/- 0.06 parsecs (12.6 +/- 0.2 ly), a distance modulus of 2.067+/- 0.034 magnitudes, and an absolute visual magnitude of 17.47 +/- 0.04 (A.O. abstract) -- "in excellent agreement with those of the U.S Naval Observatory (Conrad Dahn, private communications." Useful catalogue numbers for this star include: SO025300.5+165258, SO25300.5+165258, SO J025300.5+165258, 2MASS J02530084+1652532, APM EO0425-0315372, LSPM J0253+1652, and USNO-B1.0 1068-00028941 or USNO-A2.0 1050-00774305.
Closest Neighbors
The following star systems are probably located within 10 light-years of Teegarden's Star.
------------------------------------- [Guide] -- [Full Near Star Map] -------------------------------------
Star System | Spectra & Luminosity | Distance (light-years) |
L 1159-16 | M4.5 Ve | ~4.0 |
Epsilon Eridani | K2 V | ~5.8 |
Hip 15689 | ? | ~7.2 |
Tau Ceti | G8 Vp | ~7.7 |
Van Maanen's Star | DF-G/VII | ~7.8 |
Luyten 726-8 A UV Ceti | M4.6 Ve M6.0 V | ~8.0 |
Omicron2 Eridani 3 (Keid) | K1 Ve DA4/VII M4.5 Ve | ~8.7 |
YZ Ceti | M4.5 Ve | ~8.8 |
Groombridge 34 Aab,B | M1.3 V ? M3.8 Ve | ~8.9 |
Ross 248 | M4.9-5.5 Ve | ~9.7 |
Other Information
Up-to-date technical summaries on this star may become available at: NASA's ADS Abstract Service for the Astrophysics Data System; and the SIMBAD Astronomical Database mirrored from CDS, which may require an account to access.
Around 1800 BCE, the relatively dim stars of Constellation Aries, marked the coming of Spring for Humans of Earth's northern hemisphere. One myth of the Ancient Greeks associated with Aries, the Ram, involved the God Hermes who sent Aries to save the life of Prince Phrixus. The Ram carried Phrixus to a land near the Black Sea called Colchis (the capital of which was Aea) and asked to be sacrificed to the Gods and to have his Golden Fleece be given to King Aeetes. For more information about the stars and objects in this constellation, go to Christine Kronberg's Aries. For another illustration, see David Haworth's Aries.
For more information about stars including spectral and luminosity class codes, go to ChView's webpage on The Stars of the Milky Way.
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