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RELEASE: 10:00 am (EDT) July 15, 2004
PHOTO NO.: STScI-PRC04-24 MEASURING THE MASS OF A SINGLE STAR How do astronomers weigh a star? These images help tell the story. In the image at top, left, astronomers
discovered a subtle brightening of a star [located within the box] due
to the effect of gravitational When astronomers used the Mount Stromlo telescope to observe the same region almost a year later, the background star had returned to its normal brightness. The foreground star -- the "natural lens" that had magnified the background star -- had moved away. The ground-based telescope's vision, however, was not keen enough to resolve the stars separately. So, astronomers used the sharp vision
of the Hubble telescope to resolve the stars as two separate objects.
The foreground star is red, Seeing the two stars allowed astronomers to calculate the foreground star's distance from Earth, which is 1,800 light-years. They already knew that the background star is 170,000 light-years away, the distance to the Large Magellanic Cloud. Knowing the distances to both stars then allowed astronomers to calculate the foreground star's mass, which is one-tenth the mass of the Sun. Credits: NASA, ESA and D. Bennett (Notre Dame University) |