Stellar finding may outshine all others.Astronomers have found what may be the heaviest, biggest, and brightest star ever observed. The star, known as LBV LBV Lake Buena Vista LBV Late Bottled Vintage (port wine) LBV Legião da Boa Vontade (Brazil) LBV Landesamt für Besoldung und Versorgung (Germany) LBV Load Bearing Vest 180620, may weigh more than 150 times as much as the sun, span 200 times its width, and shine up Verb 1. shine up - ingratiate oneself to; often with insincere behavior; "She is playing up to the chairman" cotton up, cozy up, sidle up, suck up, play up ingratiate - gain favor with somebody by deliberate efforts to 40 million times as brightly. Residing 45,000 light-years from Earth and blocked by dust, the star appears dim in visible light. But at the infrared wavelengths studied by Stephen S. Eikenberry of the University of Florida University of Florida is the third-largest university in the United States, with 50,912 students (as of Fall 2006) and has the eighth-largest budget (nearly $1.9 billion per year). UF is home to 16 colleges and more than 150 research centers and institutes. in Gainesville and his colleagues, about 10 percent of the star's radiation penetrates the dust. Eikenberry reported the team's finding on Jan. 6 in Atlanta at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society The American Astronomical Society (AAS, sometimes pronounced "double-A-S") is a US society of professional astronomers and other interested individuals, headquartered in Washington, DC. . The researchers' sharp infrared images and spectra have made determinations of the star's distance, temperature, and infrared emissions that are more precise than ever before. These data, in turn, led to new estimates of LBV 1806-20's properties. Donald F. Fixer fixer, n the chemicals used in the final step of film processing that remove the unaffected silver halide particles from the developed film. fixer of the Space Telescope Science Institute The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) is the science operations center for the Hubble Space Telescope (HST; in orbit since 1990) and for the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST; scheduled to be launched in 2013). in Baltimore cautions that LBV 1806-20 could turn out to be two or three closely orbiting stars masquerading as a single bright body. In that case, says Eikenberry, the brightness of the star might at best rival the current record holder, a massive star called the Pistol that Figer's team imaged in 1997 (SN: 10/11/97, p. 231). Figer says that infrared spectra of LBV 1806-20 recently obtained by his group should reveal whether the body is a single star or several. With both LBV 1806-20 and the Pistol discovered in the past decade, "other monster stars may still be lurking in the depths of the Milky Way;' Eikenberry notes, and some of them might even dwarf the current record holders. |
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