Altair is one of the highlights of summer. It’s at one point of the Summer Triangle, and it’s the twelfth-brightest star in the night sky. And it’s just 16.7 light-years away.
Because Altair is so close and bright, we know quite a bit about it. And we’re learning more all the time. A study a couple of years ago, for example, refined the likely age of the star – 88 million years, give or take 10 million. That’s just two percent the age of the Sun.
Altair is about twice the size and mass of the Sun. And because it’s so young, it spins in a hurry – one turn every eight hours or so, versus 25 days for the Sun. That whirling rotation makes the star look squished – it’s about 25 percent wider through the equator than the poles.
In 2022, astronomers “listened” to the star with a space telescope. It measured vibrations on the surface of the star. Combined with observations from the ground, that revealed a total of 34 vibration modes – like 34 different musical notes.
The vibrations travel deep into the star. Each “note” reveals details about Altair’s interior. Piecing together the whole symphony, the astronomers found that the core of Altair contains more than 97 percent of the hydrogen it was born with. As a star ages, it converts its hydrogen to helium. So the amount of hydrogen reveals that Altair is just starting out.
Script by Damond Benningfield