Many of the stars are variable in their light, and several hundred of these curious and interesting objects are now known to astronomers. In a few of these the light changes may be followed with the naked eye. It is an interesting question whether any of the lucid stars have disappeared or changed in brightness since the early ages of astronomical observations. Al-Sûfi failed to find seven of Ptolemy’s stars, and Ulug Bekh, comparing his observations with the catalogues of Ptolemy and Al-Sûfi, announced[68] twelve cases of supposed disappearance. Some of these may, however, be due to errors of observation. Montanari, writing in 1672, mentions two stars as having disappeared, namely β and γ of the constellation Argo, but these stars are now visible in the positions originally assigned to them.
Many of the lucid stars are double, that is, consist of two components, but most of these are only visible in powerful telescopes. There are, however, a few objects visible to the naked eye as double, and these have been called “naked-eye doubles,” although not strictly double in the correct sense of the term.
Ptolemy applied the term double to the star ν Sagittarii, which consists of two stars separated by a distance of fourteen minutes of arc, or about half the apparent diameter of the moon. According to Riccioli, Van der Hove saw two naked-eye doubles, one in Capricornus, 5 to 5½ minutes distant, and the other in the Hyades, 4½ or 5 minutes apart. The one in Capricornus was probably α, and the one in the Hyades θ Tauri. The middle star in the tail of the Great Bear, or handle of the Plow, has near it a small star, Alcor, which to many eyes is distinctly visible without optical aid. The famous Belgian astronomer, Houzeau, who seems to have had excellent sight, saw the star χ Tauri double, and 51 and 56 Tauri separated, also ι Orionis, and others.
Thursday, November 7, 2024