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Points of Light

Week of February 2, 1998

There was an interesting discussion recently on the USENET bulletin boards about the sizes of stars. When you look up in the sky all the stars look like little points, with no discernible disk (except for one, of course: the Sun). But this does not mean the stars are infinitely small points, just too small for the eye to resolve. Sometimes, though, it does look like the stars have some sort of width to them, but this is not because the stars are big, but instead because the Earth's atmosphere distorts the stars' images. Tiny cells of air in the Earth's atmosphere are constantly dancing about, and they act like tiny lenses, bending the stars' light. We see this dance as twinkling, which smears out the point of light from the star into a small disk. The more turbulent the atmosphere, the bigger the star looks.

There are ways around this. One, which seems kind of obvious now, is to get a telescope above the Earth's atmosphere. We have done this with the Hubble Space Telescope and with many other telescopes as well. But this is terribly expensive. Another method, used many years ago and still producing excellent data today, is to take extremely short exposures. This snapshot method freezes the turbulence as far as the telescope is concerned, so the turbulence doesn't affect the picture. This only works with very bright stars of course, since a dim star won't show up well on such a short exposure. but some of the brightest stars are also the biggest, so you can use this method to see if they have disks. (I am grossly oversimplifying the technique used, but if you'd like to know more details, there are plenty of websites about speckle interferometry).

image of Betelgeuse A similar method was used on board the Hubble Space Telescope to obtain pictures of the red supergiant star Betelgeuse (most people pronounce it "Beetle Juice", like the movie), easily visible in the winter skies right now; the star marks the right shoulder of Orion. Click on the picture to go to the Hubble site with a description of what the astronomers did. Betelgeuse is an enormous star, so big that it would stretch clear across the inner solar system if placed at the Sun's position. The disk is clearly seen in this image, as well as a bright spot in its atmosphere which is not well understood. Betelgeuse is many people's favorite candidate for the Galaxy's next supernova. Good thing it's so far away!



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