December 2009

Hunting the Great White Dwarf

In the early 1900s astronomers were stunned to discover that some stars had masses comparable to the Sun's but packaged into earth-sized volumes. The first such stars discovered were spectral type A (white) and thus became known as White Dwarfs. The most famous white dwarf is Sirius B, the companion to Sirius. Most white dwarfs don’t make good targets for washed-out astronomers because they are faint, inconspicuous stars or are hard to see companions to bright stars such as Sirius. But there is one white dwarf that is easy: 40 Eridani B.

40 Eridani A, B, & C by David Darling40 Eridani (also known as ο2 Eridani or Keid) is a relatively bright 4th magnitude star. Even in urban areas, it is easy to find by star-hopping from Rigel going via β Eri, μ Eri, and ν Eri. I recently did it from my light polluted front yard using a 50mm finder. Even looking directly over my neighbor’s very bright holiday lights it was an easy hop. 40 Eridani is a triple star system. The primary has magnitude 4.4. Component B—the white dwarf—has magnitude 9.5 and is widely separated from A (83”, PA 105°) making it easy to see in even small telescopes. (Image courtesy of David Darling)

As a special prize, the third component C is a red dwarf flare star of magnitude 11.2. The B-C separation is much tighter at about 8” but it isn’t hard to split except for the faintness of the C component. You’ll probably need at least a 4 inch (100mm) aperature to see C in washed-out skies, but it’s rather easy with 6 inches (150mm) or more. In my 10 inch (250mm) Dob, it looks pretty much like the photo above.

So don’t miss the chance to “bag” a white dwarf. If you want to learn more about white dwarfs, read the excellent Wikipedia article. Now 40 Eridani is interesting for several other reasons, including a connection to Star Trek....