Asterope (star)

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Star
Asterope (21 Tauri)
M45map.jpg
Above right the pair of steropes in the pleiades
AladinLite
Observation
dates equinoxJ2000.0 , epoch : J2000.0
Constellation bull
Right ascension 03 h 45 m 54.48 s
declination + 24 ° 33 ′ 16.2 ″
Apparent brightness 5.76 likes
Typing
B − V color index (−0.04) 
U − B color index (−0.33) 
R − I index (−0.03) 
Spectral class B8 V
Astrometry
Radial velocity (6.0 ± 0.6) km / s
parallax (7.57 ± 0.13)  mas
distance (431 ± 8)  ly
(132)  pc
Proper movement 
Rec. Share: (20.03 ± 0.05)  mas / a
Dec. portion: (−45.95 ± 0.03)  mas / a
Physical Properties
Other names
and catalog entries
Flamsteed name 21 Tauri
Bonn survey BD + 24 ° 553
Bright Star Catalog HR 1151 [1]
Henry Draper Catalog HD 23432 [2]
Hipparcos catalog HIP 17579 [3]
SAO catalog SAO 76159 [4]
Tycho catalog TYC 1803-1584-1 [5]
2MASS catalog 2MASS J03455447 + 2433162 [6]
Other names Asterope, Sterope I

Asterope (also Sterope ) is the proper name of the star 21 Tauri in the Pleiades . The name comes from Asterope , a Pleiad of Greek mythology .

Because of the low luminosity and the small distance, the name was also used in the past alongside 21 Tauri ( Sterope I ) for 22 Tauri ( Sterope II ). In 2016, however, the IAU set the proper name Asterope as a standardized proper name only for 21 Tauri.

Asterope, like all stars in the Pleiades, can occasionally be covered by the moon .

Web links

Commons : Asterope  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g h i 21 Tau. In: SIMBAD . Center de Données astronomiques de Strasbourg , accessed July 22, 2018 .
  2. Richard Hinckley Allen: Star names - Their Lore and Meaning . Dover Books, 1963, p. 407 (Retrieved September 14, 2016).
  3. Bulletin of the IAU Working Group on Star Names, No. October 2, 2016. (PDF) Retrieved November 10, 2016 (English, 151 KiB).