Alpha Centauri: The Triplet Star System

The Closest Star System to Earth: Alpha Centauri

Situated around 4 light years away, Alpha Centauri is the closest star-system to the Solar System. In the night sky, this star system looks like a single star to the naked eye, but is actually triplets. It takes a powerful telescope and a lot of patience to find the difference between the three stars.

The two bright stars are Alpha A and Alpha B, while the smaller red star between them is Proxima Centauri.
Credit: Wikipedia

The Three Stars

Two sun-like stars, Alpha Centauri A and Alpha Centauri B orbit a common centre about once every 80 years and are separated by around 23 Astronomical Units or AU(The average distance between the Earth and the Sun about 150 million km or 93 million miles). There is also a third fainter star, called Proxima Centauri which orbits the other two but at a huge distance from them. Scientists think that it takes Proxima Centauri about a million years to orbit the other two stars. Out of these three stars, Proxima Centauri is the nearest to the Earth.

Alpha A is a yellow star, very similar to our sun but brighter and slightly more massive. Alpha B meanwhile, is an orange star, slightly cooler than our sun and a bit less massive. Proxima Centauri is a red dwarf.
Scientists think that the Alpha Centauri system formed 1000 million years before our Solar System. Both Alpha A and Alpha B are stable stars and may have been born surrounded by planet forming disks.

Exoplanets

In 2008, scientists suggested that planets may have formed around Alpha A and Alpha B. Since then, they are monitoring Alpha Centauri to see whether small wobbles in Starlight will show us exoplanets around these stars.

The first exoplanet discovered in Alpha Centauri was orbiting Proxima Centauri. It is called Proxima - b.

Recently, a second exoplanet was discovered in 2020 and scientists predict that it could have a mass about 7 times that of the Earth.

Interesting Facts

Alpha Centauri can be seen from the Earth's southern hemisphere, where it is a part of the Centaurus constellation. Its proper name - Rigil Kentaurus - means 'centaur's foot'.

Alpha A and Alpha B are binary stars. This means that if you were standing on any one of its planets, at particular times, you would be able to see both the stars in the sky. It would be like having two Suns in the sky!


That is all for this post on Alpha Centauri. Hope you found it informative and easy to understand. For any suggestions/reviews, you can contact me by filling the contact form on the right or you can comment down below. Please follow this blog for more mindblowing facts about space and the Universe.

Cheers,
Aarav Iyer

Aarav Iyer

I am a technology and programming enthusiast, currently a high school student. I also love drawing and am fairly interested in aeronautics and astrophysics. My favourite pastimes are reading books, blogging and skywatching with my telescope.

Post a Comment

Leave a review!

Previous Post Next Post