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Mu Columbae

μ Columbae
Columba constellation map.svg
Red circle.svg

Location of μ Columbae (circled)
Observation data
Epoch J2000      Equinox J2000
Constellation Columba
Right ascension 05h 45m 59.89496s
Declination −32° 18′ 23.1630″
Apparent magnitude (V) 5.18
Characteristics
Spectral type O9.5 V
U−B color index −1.06
B−V color index −0.28
Variable type Suspected
Astrometry
Radial velocity (Rv) +109.00 ± 1.8 km/s
Proper motion (μ) RA: 2.98 mas/yr
Dec.: −22.24 mas/yr
Parallax (π) 2.52 ± 0.55mas
Distance approx. 1,300 ly
(approx. 400 pc)
Absolute magnitude (MV) −3.64
Details
Mass 16 M
Radius 6.58 R
Luminosity 45,700 L
Surface gravity (log g) 4.0 cgs
Temperature 33,000 K
Rotational velocity (v sin i) 111 km/s
Age 2 - 4 Myr
Other designations
HR 1996, CD−32°2538, HD 38666, SAO 196149, HIP 27204

Mu Columbae (μ Col, μ Columbae) is a star in the constellation of Columba. It is one of the few O-class stars that are visible to the unaided eye. The star is known to lie approximately 1,300 light years from the Solar System (with an error margin of a few hundred light years).

This is a relatively fast rotating star that completes a full revolution approximately every 1.5 days. (Compare this to the Sun, which at only 22 percent of this star's diameter rotates only once every 25.4 days.) This rate of rotation is fairly typical for stars of this class.

Based on measurements of proper motion and radial velocity, astronomers know that this star and AE Aurigae are moving away from each other at a relative velocity of over 200 km/s. Their common point of origin intersects with Iota Orionis in the Trapezium cluster, some two and half million years in the past. The most likely scenario that could have created these runaway stars is a collision between two binary star systems, with the stars being ejected along different trajectories radial to the point of intersection.

In Chinese astronomy, Mu Columbae is called 屎, Pinyin: Shǐ, meaning "Excrement" or "The Secretions", because this star is marking itself and stand alone in the asterism of the same namd, Three Stars mansion.

This star, along with ζ CMa, λ CMa, γ Col, δ Col, θ Col, κ Col, λ Col and ξ Col, were Al Ḳurūd (ألقرد - al-qird), the Apes.


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