List of nearest stars
This list of the nearest stars to Earth is by distance in light years (ly). These distances are taken from parallax data determined by the Research Consortium on Nearby Stars (or Recons).[1] The sources for this information were the Yale Parallax Catalog [Y], Hipparcos [H], Soderhjelm 1999 [S], Tinney 1996 [T]. Stars move, and so distances are as at present only.
Some 52 star systems beyond our own, the Solar System, lie within Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1850: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value). of the Sun. These systems contain 63 stars. 50 of these are red dwarfs, by far the most common type of star in the Milky Way. Much more massive stars, such as our own, make up the remaining 13. In addition to these "true" stars, scientists have identified 11 brown dwarfs (objects not quite massive enough to fuse hydrogen), and four white dwarfs. White dwarfs are extremely dense collapsed cores that remain after stars such as our Sun have exhausted all fusible hydrogen in their core and have slowly shed their outer layers. Despite the relative proximity of these 78 objects to Earth, only nine are bright enough in visible light to be visible to the naked eye from Earth, 6.5 apparent magnitude.[2] All of these objects are currently moving in the Local Bubble, a region within the Orion–Cygnus Arm of the Milky Way.
List
- Sun – about 8.2 light minutes from Earth
- Alpha Centauri star system – 4.24 to 4.36 ly
- Proxima Centauri – 4.24 ly [YH]
- Alpha Centauri A – 4.36 ly [YS]
- Alpha Centauri B – 4.36 ly [YS]
- Barnard's Star – 5.96 ly [YH]
- WISE 1049-5319 – 6.5 ly, also known as Luhman 16, a binary of two brown dwarf stars
- Wolf 359 – 7.78 ly [Y]
- Lalande 21185 – 8.3 ly [YH]
- Sirius star system
- Sirius A – 8.58 ly [YH]
- Sirius B – 8.58 ly [YH]
- Luyten 726-8 – 8.73 ly
- Ross 154 – 9.68 ly [YH]
- Ross 248 – 10.32 ly [Y]
- Epsilon Eridani – 10.52 ly [YH]
- Lacaille 9352 – 10.74 ly [YH]
- Ross 128 – 10.92 ly [YH]
- EZ Aquarii star system
- EZ Aquarii – 11.26 ly [Y]
- Gl 866 B – 11.26 ly [Y]
- Gl 866 C – 11.26 ly [Y]
- Procyon star system
- Procyon A – 11.4 ly [YH]
- Procyon B – 11.4 ly [YH]
- 61 Cygni star system
- 61 Cygni A – 11.4 ly [YH]
- 61 Cygni B – 11.4 ly [YH]
- Struve 2398 (Gliese 725) star system
- Struve 2398 A – 11.52 ly [YH]
- Struve 2398 B – 11.52 ly [YH]
- Groombridge 34 (Gliese 15) star system
- Groombridge 34 A – 11.62 ly [YH]
- Groombridge 34 B – 11.62 ly [YH]
- Epsilon Indi – 11.82 ly [YH]
- DX Cancri – 11.82 ly [Y]
- Tau Ceti – 11.88 ly [YH]
- GJ 1061 – 11.92 ly [RECONS]
- YZ Ceti – 12.13 ly [YH]
- Luyten's Star – 12.36 ly [YH]
- Teegarden's Star – 12 ly (discovered 2003)
- Kapteyn's Star – 12.77 ly [YH]
- AX Microscopium – 12.86 ly [YH]
- Kruger 60 star system
- Kruger 60 A – 13.14 ly [YS]
- Kruger 60 B – 13.14 ly [YS]
- Ross 614 star system
- Gl 628 – 13.81 ly [YH]
- Gl 35 – 14.06 ly [YH]
- Gl 1 – 14.22 ly [YH]
- Wolf 424 star system
List Of Nearest Stars Media
Animated 3D map of the nearest stars, centered on the Sun. Template:3d glasses
Stars within 11 ly.
Visualisation of the orbit of the Sun (yellow dot and white curve) around the Galactic Centre (GC) in the last galactic year. The red dots correspond to the positions of the stars studied by the European Southern Observatory in a monitoring programme.
Related pages
References
- ↑ Research Consortium on Nearby Stars, GSU 2007. The one hundred nearest star systems. [1]
- ↑ Weaver, Harold F. (1947). "The visibility of stars without optical aid". Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. 59 (350): 232–243. Bibcode:1947PASP...59..232W. doi:10.1086/125956.