Difference between revisions of "16 Aurigae"

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(New page: A golden-orange K-type star (K3, possibly IIIb) 95 times more luminous than the Sun, and 21 times its diameter. Also sometimes referred to as Demesiv after its single inhabited world (...)
 
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A golden-orange K-type star (K3, possibly IIIb) 95 times more luminous than the Sun, and 21 times its diameter. Also sometimes referred to as [[Demesiv]] after its single inhabited world (the seventh planet out) and the species that inhabits it.
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A golden-orange K-type star (K3, possibly IIIb) 95 times more luminous than the Sun, and 21 times its diameter. Also sometimes referred to as [[Demisiv]] after its single inhabited world (the seventh planet out) and the species that inhabits it.
  
 
16 Aur is a spectroscopic binary, its smaller companion taking about a year to orbit it; and it also travels in company with several other stars that are gravitationally associated. (For more info see the [http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/full/2008Obs...128...21G SAO / Nasa Astrophysics] article.)
 
16 Aur is a spectroscopic binary, its smaller companion taking about a year to orbit it; and it also travels in company with several other stars that are gravitationally associated. (For more info see the [http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/full/2008Obs...128...21G SAO / Nasa Astrophysics] article.)

Latest revision as of 09:44, 30 January 2021

A golden-orange K-type star (K3, possibly IIIb) 95 times more luminous than the Sun, and 21 times its diameter. Also sometimes referred to as Demisiv after its single inhabited world (the seventh planet out) and the species that inhabits it.

16 Aur is a spectroscopic binary, its smaller companion taking about a year to orbit it; and it also travels in company with several other stars that are gravitationally associated. (For more info see the SAO / Nasa Astrophysics article.)