Part 23 (1/2)
Many novae have recently been found in the spiral nebulae, especially in the great nebula of Andromeda.
CHAPTER LIII
THE DOUBLE STARS
Examining individual stars of the heavens more in detail, thousands of them are found to be double; not the stars that appear double to the naked eye, as Theta Tauri, Mizar, Epsilon Lyrae, and others; but pairs of stars much closer together, and requiring the power of the telescope to divide or separate them. Only a very few seconds apart they are or, in many cases, only the merest fraction of a second of arc. Some of them, called binaries, are found to be revolving around a common center, sometimes in only a few years, sometimes in stately periods of hundreds of years. Many such binary systems are now known, and the number is constantly increasing. Castor is one, Gamma Virginis another, Sirius also is one of these binaries, and a most interesting one, having a period of revolution of about 52 years.
Aitken, of the Lick Observatory, in his work on binary stars, directs special attention to the correlation between the elements of known binary orbits and the star's spectral type, and presents a statistical study of the distribution of 54,000 visual double stars, of which the spectra of 3919 are known. That the ma.s.ses of binary systems average about twice that of the sun's ma.s.s has long been known, and this fact can be employed with confidence in estimates of the probable parallax of these systems. Aitken applies the test to fourteen visual systems for which the necessary data are available, and deduces for them a mean ma.s.s of 1.76 times that of the sun. For the spectroscopic binaries the ma.s.ses are much greater.
Triple, quadruple and multiple stars are less frequent; but many exceedingly interesting objects of this cla.s.s exist. Epsilon Lyrae is one, a double-double, or four stars as seen with slender telescopic power, and six or seven stars with larger instruments. Sigma Orionis and 12 Lyncis, also Theta Cancri and Mu Bootis are good examples of triple stars.
CHAPTER LIV
THE STAR Cl.u.s.tERS
From multiple stars the transition is natural to star cl.u.s.ters although the gap between these types of stellar objects is very broad. The familiar group of the winter sky known as the Pleiades is a loose cl.u.s.ter, showing relatively very few stars even in telescopes or on photographic plates. The ”Beehive,” or cl.u.s.ter known as Praesepe in Cancer, and a double group in the sword-handle of Perseus, both just visible to the naked eye, are excellent examples of star cl.u.s.ters of the average type. When the moon is absent, they are easily recognized without a telescope as little patches of nebulous light; but every increase of optical power adds to their magnificence.
Then we come in regular succession to the truly marvelous globular cl.u.s.ters, that for instance in Hercules. Messier 13, a recent photograph of which, taken by Ritchey with the 60-inch reflector on Mount Wilson, reveals an aggregation of more than 50,000 stars. But the finest specimens are in the southern hemisphere. Sir John Herschel spent much time investigating them nearly a century ago at the Cape of Good Hope.
His description of the cl.u.s.ter in the constellation of Centaurus is as follows: ”The n.o.ble globular cl.u.s.ter Omega Centauri is beyond all comparison the richest and largest object of the kind in the heavens.
The stars are literally innumerable, and as their total light when received by the naked eye affects it hardly more than a star of the fifth or fourth to fifth magnitude, the minuteness of each star may be imagined.”
Others of these cl.u.s.ters are so remote that the separate stars are not distinguishable, especially at the center, and their distances are entirely beyond our present powers of direct measurement, although methods of estimating them are in process of development. If gravitation is regnant among the uncounted components of stellar cl.u.s.ters, as doubtless it is, these stars must be in rapid motion, although our photographs of measurements have been made too recently for us to detect even the slightest motion in any of the component stars of a cl.u.s.ter.
The only variations are changes of apparent magnitude, of a type first detected in a large number of stars in Omega Centauri, by Bailey of Harvard, who by comparison of photographs of the globular cl.u.s.ters was the first to find variable stars quite numerous in these objects. Their unexplained variations of magnitude take place with great rapidity, often within a few hours.
There are about a hundred of these globular cl.u.s.ters, and the radial velocities of ten of them have been measured by Slipher and found to range from a recession of 410 to an approach of 225 kilometers per second. These excessive velocities are comparable with those found for the spiral nebulae. Shapley has estimated the distances of many of these bodies, which contain a large number of variable stars of the Cepheid type. By a.s.suming their absolute magnitudes equal to those of similar Cepheids at known distances, he finds their distance represented by the inconceivably minute parallax of 0”.00012, corresponding to 30,000 light-years. This research also places the globular cl.u.s.ters far outside and independent of our Galactic system of stars. The distribution of the globular cl.u.s.ters has also been investigated, and these interesting objects are found almost exclusively in but one hemisphere of the sky. Its center lies in the rich star clouds of Scorpio and Sagittarius. Success in finding the distances of these objects has made it possible to form a general idea of their distribution in three-dimensional s.p.a.ce.
The numerous variable stars in any one cl.u.s.ter are remarkable for their uniformity. Accepting variables of this type as a constant standard of absolute brightness, and a.s.suming that the differences of average magnitude of the variables in different cl.u.s.ters are entirely due to differences of distance, the relative distances of many cl.u.s.ters were ascertained with considerable accuracy. Then it was found that the average absolute magnitude of the twenty-five brightest stars in a cl.u.s.ter is also a uniform standard, or about 1.3 magnitudes brighter than the mean magnitude of the variables. This new standard was employed in ascertaining the distances of other cl.u.s.ters not containing many variables.
Shapley further shows that the linear dimensions of the cl.u.s.ters are nearly uniform, and the proper relative positions in s.p.a.ce are charted for sixty-nine of these objects. We can determine the scale of the charts, if we know the absolute brightness of our primary standard--the variable stars; and this is deduced from a knowledge of the distances of variables of the same type in our immediate stellar system.
The most striking of all the globular cl.u.s.ters, Omega Centauri, comes out the nearest; nevertheless it is distant 6.5 kilopa.r.s.ecs. A kilopa.r.s.ec is a thousand pa.r.s.ecs, and is the equivalent of 3,256 light-years. At the inconceivable distance of sixty-seven kilopa.r.s.ecs, or more than 200,000 light-years, is the most remote of the globular cl.u.s.ters, known to astronomers as N.G.C. 7006, from its number in the catalogue which records its position in the sky, the New General Catalogue of nebulae by Dreyer of Armagh.
The cl.u.s.ters are widely scattered, and their center of diffusion is about twenty kilopa.r.s.ecs on the Galactic plane toward the region of Scorpio-Sagittarius. Marked symmetry with reference to this plane makes it evident that the entire system of globular cl.u.s.ters is a.s.sociated with the Galaxy itself. But to conceive of this it is necessary to extend our ideas of the actual dimensions of the Galactic system. Almost on the circ.u.mference of the great system of globular cl.u.s.ters our local stellar system is found, and it contains probably all the naked-eye stars, with millions of fainter ones. Its size seems almost diminutive, only about one kilopa.r.s.ec in diameter. The relative location of our local stellar system shows why the globular cl.u.s.ters appear to be crowded into one hemisphere only.
Shapley suggests that globular cl.u.s.ters can exist only in empty s.p.a.ce, and that when they enter the regions of s.p.a.ce tenanted by stars, they dissolve into the well-known loose cl.u.s.ters and the star clouds of the Milky Way. Strangely the radial velocities of the cl.u.s.ters already observed show that most of them are traveling toward this region, and that some will enter the stellar regions within a period of the order of a hundred million years.
The actual dimensions of globular cl.u.s.ters are not easy to determine, because the outer stars are much scattered. To a typical cl.u.s.ter, Messier 3, Shapley a.s.signs a diameter of 150 pa.r.s.ecs, which makes it comparable with the size of the stellar cl.u.s.ter to which the sun belongs. Also on certain likely a.s.sumptions, he finds that the diameter of the great cl.u.s.ter in Hercules, the finest one in our northern sky, is about 350 pa.r.s.ecs, and its distance no less than 30,000 pa.r.s.ecs; in other words, the staggering distance that light would require 9,750,000 years to travel over. While these distances can never be verified by direct measurement, it lends great weight to the three methods of indirect measurement, or estimation, (1) from the diameter of the image of the cl.u.s.ters, (2) from the mean magnitude of the twenty-five brightest stars, and (3) from the mean magnitude of the short period variables, that they are in excellent agreement.
CHAPTER LV
MOVING Cl.u.s.tERS