Showing posts with label Pleiades. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pleiades. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Data for Pleiades Has Been Updated
With some new information I found, I'm glad because I fought with one guy long ago when he said it can't be this and that. I let him go. I always bet that one day more truth will come out of it.
This open star cluster is, of course, "young", whatever they called it, but they need to know that aliens with their spaceships that are capable of travel in space. Right? And some of them are capable of settling down on new planets. So... Where did they get name from? Why did they call themselves Pleiadians? Personally, I believed that in the beginning all Pleiadians were originally Lyrans (aliens from Lyra star system). Who knows.
Please, not feline humanoids! Pleiadians ARE humans, period.
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Alcyone Star in Pleiades

Today, I decided to look up what they has on Alcyone and found this:
Alcyone (eta Tauri) is a significant example of a nearby multiple star. It is a giant star of more than 10 Solar masses and is almost a thousand times more luminous than the Sun. It is orbited by 3 faint companion stars. The entire cluster contains numerous double stars and a few triples.
Also found this part:
Alycone is actually a multiple star system. The primary, Alcyone A, is an eclipsing binary, consisting of two giant B stars with a separation of about 0.031 arc-seconds (roughly the distance of Jupiter from the Sun). The high rotational speed of Alcyone A – over 200 km/s (more than 100 times faster than the Sun) – has caused gas to spin from its equator into a surrounding light-emitting disk. This makes Alcyone A a Be star but with a disk thicker than usual. The binary Alcyone A is orbited by three companions. Alcyone B and Alcyone C are both 8th magnitude white, main sequence A stars and are separated from A by 117 and 181 arcseconds, respectively. Alcyone C is a Delta Scuti star whose brightness varies from magnitude +8.25 to +8.30 with a period of 1.13 hours. Alcyone D is a yellow-white main sequence F star, with an apparent magnitude of +8.7, separated by 191 arcseconds from the primary.
I always knew but I have no way of explaining what it is like. That is not only thing... I also knew of brown dwarf in there too. I somehow found out about it few years ago. I wasn't imagine things. It is a fact.
I thought why not find an old photo of Pleiades to compare with currently photo.
I found few things... very few stars seemly moved. Mmm... 100 years has passed. I thought it is so interesting!
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