Mu Cephei (Latinized from μ Cephei, abbreviated Mu Cep or μ Cep), officially named the Garnet Star, is a red supergiant star in the constellation Cepheus. It appears garnet red and is located at the edge of the IC 1396 nebula. It is a 4th magnitude star easily visible to the naked eye under good observing conditions. Since 1943, the stellar spectrum of this star has served as a spectral standard by which other stars are classified.
Mu Cephei is more than 100,000 times brighter than the Sun, with an absolute visual magnitude of −7.6. It is also one of the largest known stars with a radius around or over 1,000 times that of the sun (), and were it placed in the Sun's position it would engulf the orbit of Mars and Jupiter.
In 1848, English astronomer John Russell Hind discovered that Mu Cephei was variable. This variability was quickly confirmed by German astronomer Friedrich Wilhelm Argelander. Almost continual records of the star's variability have been maintained since 1881.
The angular diameter of μ Cephei has been measured interferometrically. One of the most recent measurements gives a diameter of at , modelled as a Limb darkening disk across. However, this later turned out to be the surrounding molecular layer and not the actual star, as the star has an angular diameter of 14.11 ± 0.6 mas.
μ Cephei was used as one of the original "dagger stars", those with well-defined spectra that could be used for the classification of other stars, for MK spectral classifications. In 1943 it was the standard star for M2 Ia, updated in 1980 to be the standard star for the new type M2- Ia.
Calculation of the distance from the measured angular diameter, surface brightness, and calculated luminosity leads to . Averaging the distances of nearby luminous stars with similar reddening and reliable Gaia Data Release 2 parallaxes gives a distance of .
The star is surrounded by a spherical shell of ejected material that extends outward to an angular distance of 6″ with an expansion velocity of . This indicates an age of about 2,000–3,000 years for the shell. Closer to the star, this material shows a pronounced asymmetry, which may be shaped as a torus.
The bolometric luminosity, summed over all wavelengths, is calculated from integrating the spectral energy distribution (SED) to be , making μ Cephei one of the most luminous red supergiants in the Milky Way. Its effective temperature of , determined from colour index relations, implies a radius of . Other recent publications give similar effective temperatures. Calculation of the luminosity from a visual and infrared colour relation give and a corresponding radius of . An estimate made based on its angular diameter and an assumed distance of gives it a radius of , however the angular diameter used later turned out to be the diameter of the molecular layer around the star.
The radius has been estimated to be in 2010 based on the star's effective temperature of and the luminosity estimate.
A 2019 paper measurement based on the distance gives the star a lower luminosity below and a correspondingly lower radius of , and as well as a lower temperature of . These parameters are all consistent with those estimated for Betelgeuse.
The initial mass of Mu Cephei has been estimated from its position relative to theoretical stellar evolutionary tracks to be between and . The star currently has a mass loss rate of per year.
Distance
Surroundings
Variability
Properties
Supernova
Components
Simbad
See also
External links
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