'Deneb' (α Cyg / α Cygni /
Alpha Cygni) is the brightest
star in the
constellation Cygnus and one of the vertices of the
Summer Triangle. The 19th
brightest star in the night sky, with an
apparent magnitude of 1.25, Deneb is also one of the
most luminous stars known. It is, or has been, known by a number of other traditional names, including 'Arided' and 'Aridif', but today these are almost entirely forgotten.
Distance and physical characteristics
Deneb's
absolute magnitude is about −8.5, placing it among the most luminous stars known.
Deneb's exact distance from the Earth is uncertain. The most likely distance is 3,200 light years, but the
parallax uncertainties do not rule out a distance as close as 2,100 light years or as far as 7,400 light years. This distance uncertainty makes determining many of Deneb's other properties similarly imprecise.
Estimates for Deneb's luminosity range from about 60,000 times the brightness of our
Sun (if Deneb is 1600 light years away) to 250,000 times the Sun's brightness (if 3,200 light years away).
[1]
Based on its temperature and luminosity and also on direct measurements of its tiny
angular diameter (a mere 0.002 second of arc), Deneb appears to have a diameter about 200 to 300 times that of the Sun; if placed at the center of our Solar System, Deneb would extend to the orbit of the Earth.
[2] It is
one of the largest stars known and the most powerful class A star identified.
A star of
spectral type A2Ia, Deneb has a surface temperature of 8,400 kelvins. Deneb is the prototype of a class of
variable stars known as
Alpha Cygni variables. Its surface undergoes non-radial fluctuations, which cause its brightness and spectral type to change slightly.
Deneb's mass is estimated at 20 to 25 solar masses.
12 As a
blue supergiant, its high mass and temperature mean that the star will have a short lifespan and will probably become a
supernova within a few million years. It has already stopped fusing
hydrogen in its core.
Deneb's
solar wind causes it to lose mass at a rate of 0.8 millionth of a solar mass per year, a hundred thousand times the flow rate from the Sun.
2
Name
The name is from ''dheneb'', the Arabic for "tail", from the phrase 'ذنب الدجاجة' ''ḏanab ad-dajāja
h'', or "tail of the hen". Similar names were given to at least seven different stars, most notably
Deneb Kaitos, the brightest star in the constellation
Cetus, and
Denebola, the second brightest star in
Leo.
It is known as 天津四 (the Fourth Star of the Celestial Ford) in Chinese.
Mythology
In the Chinese love story of
Qi Xi, Deneb marks the magpie bridge across the
Milky Way which allows the separated lovers Niu Lang (
Altair) and Zhi Nü (
Vega) to be reunited on one special night of the year in late summer. In other versions of the story Deneb is a fairy who acts as chaperone when the lovers meet across the bridge of magpies.
See also
★
Deneb in fiction
External links
★
Hipparcos star catalog entry