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Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Rhode-Saint-Genese(Sint-Genesius-Rode) Belgium
Posts: 71
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Epsilon Aurigae is eclipsed by a dark companion object every 27 years, the nature of both the star and object has remained unclear.
One theory holds that the bright star is a massive supergiant, periodically eclipsed by two tight-knit stars inside a swirling, dusty disk. The second theory holds that the bright star is in fact a dying star with a lot less mass, periodically eclipsed by just a single star inside a disk. The Spitzer data strongly support the latter scenario. PDF>http://www.citizensky.org/sites/defa...10-printed.pdf |
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