• Random
  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Have I piqued your mind? Ask away....

Stars Are My Muse

"Someday I'll build my spaceship and travel amongst the stars."

The Nearest Stars To Earth (Infographic)
Of all the stars closer than 15 light-years, only two are spectral type G, similar to our sun: Alpha Centauri A and Tau Ceti. The majority are M-type red dwarf stars.
Only nine of the stars in this area are bright enough to be seen by the naked human eye from Earth. These brightest stars include Alpha Centauri A and B, Sirius A, Epsilon Eridani, Procyon, 61 Cygni A and B, Epsilon Indi A and Tau Ceti.
Barnard’s Star, a red dwarf 5.96 light-years away, has the largest proper motion of any known star. This means that Barnard’s Star moves rapidly against the background of more distant stars, at a rate of 10.3 seconds of arc per Earth year.
Sirius A is the brightest star in Earth’s night sky, due to its intrinsic brightness and its proximity to us. Sirius B, a white dwarf star, is smaller than Earth but has a mass 98 percent that of our sun.
In late 2012, astronomers discovered that Tau Ceti may host five planets including one within the star’s habitable zone. Tau Ceti is the nearest single G-type star like our sun (although the Alpha Centauri triple-star system also hosts a G-type star and is much closer).
The masses of Tau Ceti’s planets range from between two and six times the mass of Earth.
Pop-upView Separately

The Nearest Stars To Earth (Infographic)

Of all the stars closer than 15 light-years, only two are spectral type G, similar to our sun: Alpha Centauri A and Tau Ceti. The majority are M-type red dwarf stars.

Only nine of the stars in this area are bright enough to be seen by the naked human eye from Earth. These brightest stars include Alpha Centauri A and B, Sirius A, Epsilon Eridani, Procyon, 61 Cygni A and B, Epsilon Indi A and Tau Ceti.

Barnard’s Star, a red dwarf 5.96 light-years away, has the largest proper motion of any known star. This means that Barnard’s Star moves rapidly against the background of more distant stars, at a rate of 10.3 seconds of arc per Earth year.

Sirius A is the brightest star in Earth’s night sky, due to its intrinsic brightness and its proximity to us. Sirius B, a white dwarf star, is smaller than Earth but has a mass 98 percent that of our sun.

In late 2012, astronomers discovered that Tau Ceti may host five planets including one within the star’s habitable zone. Tau Ceti is the nearest single G-type star like our sun (although the Alpha Centauri triple-star system also hosts a G-type star and is much closer).

The masses of Tau Ceti’s planets range from between two and six times the mass of Earth.

Source: space.com

    • #astronomy
    • #space
    • #science
    • #education
    • #learning
    • #stars
    • #universe
  • 4 months ago
  • 119
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

119 Notes/ Hide

  1. bespectacledorangecat reblogged this from starsaremymuse
  2. bespectacledorangecat likes this
  3. the-promised-wlan reblogged this from donufo
  4. the-promised-wlan likes this
  5. donufo reblogged this from the-naut
  6. g-sin likes this
  7. inspirationandwonders reblogged this from anengineersaspect
  8. alexandria-thegreat reblogged this from breakavector
  9. breakavector reblogged this from anengineersaspect
  10. crantashine likes this
  11. dalekfaceofevil reblogged this from the-naut
  12. the-naut reblogged this from anengineersaspect
  13. anengineersaspect reblogged this from culturerevo
  14. kilomajor likes this
  15. davinken likes this
  16. davinken reblogged this from imagineatoms
  17. dermoosealini likes this
  18. embrace-the-flaws-within likes this
  19. patienceee reblogged this from lindsdyke
  20. soreiyu likes this
  21. polymethodic reblogged this from ajora
  22. ajora reblogged this from abcstarstuff
  23. ladybonerz likes this
  24. summerdiddleband reblogged this from emotivelogic
  25. shakarakababi reblogged this from darylelockhart
  26. oddlyuneven likes this
  27. freetoe likes this
  28. greenms6delta likes this
  29. strangermouse reblogged this from astrodidact
  30. psychadelicyarncastle likes this
  31. cogito-ergo-doleo likes this
  32. the2universes likes this
  33. hierophage likes this
  34. fromstarstostarfish likes this
  35. ginandthought likes this
  36. evan-g likes this
  37. pfowolf reblogged this from america-wakiewakie
  38. pfowolf likes this
  39. america-wakiewakie reblogged this from eyesdriftskyward
  40. america-wakiewakie likes this
  41. eyesdriftskyward reblogged this from astrodidact
  42. andrewhale reblogged this from imagineatoms
  43. a-a-s-i-y-a likes this
  44. salivasoup reblogged this from culturerevo
  45. noeacitehtsea likes this
  46. selhattab likes this
  47. feb201986 likes this
  48. nonchalante reblogged this from imagineatoms
  49. civis-anima likes this
  50. redberylemeraldtears likes this
  51. Show more notesLoading...
← Previous • Next →

About

Avatar A blog about science, astronomy, psychology, biology, and other things of the sort.

Follow my personal blog: erikwithakayy.tumblr.com

Tags I follow:
-astronomy
-space
-science
-education

Pages

  • About Me
  • Find Me

Me, Elsewhere

  • @@ErikWithakayy on Twitter
  • Facebook Profile

Twitter

loading tweets…

  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Have I piqued your mind? Ask away....
  • Mobile
Effector Theme by Pixel Union