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DOUBLE STARS.

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“that wonderful tell-tale, the ‘telescope,’ reveals the double character of some stars,” said mr. marple. “there are six thousand stars which are thus double.

that is singular.

[pg 55]there are some in the pleiades, in the dog, in orion, and in the southern cross and crown. but the most wonderful part of my story is yet to come. some of these double stars revolve round each other.

what! great suns at a tremendous distance from one another, walk round one another? why, if they have planets round them, like our sun has, these must have a fine double journey to make. how many of these strange stars are there?

about 650 of them are binary or revolving.

but which stands still to have the other revolving round it?

they both move, each one round the other.

a regular polka in the heavens, father. and yet i suppose they are not just like a gentleman and his lady partner.

i don’t know that; for it has been observed that a number have different colours to their companions. while one is blue, the other will be yellow. one shall be green, and its mate will be orange. one-half are white, and one-tenth are both blue.

that does please me. how i should like to be in a planet where my sun should be blue, and its companion sun red. it would be so funny to get up in the morning and see my sun blue, throwing a blue tint on everything. then, when the other sun rose, a rich red would steal over the blue, and change everything. but when the blue sun had set, the red one would have it all its own way, and bathe my world in its ruddy light.

[pg 56]that fancy is good, and not very improbable either; especially if the other sun should come pretty near your sun at times, as it is likely they move in an ellipse.

can you tell me, dear father, how long these pleasant binary stars take in performing their polka?

one in hercules takes thirty-one years. in our old great bear, a binary pair take sixty-one, and in leo eighty-two. in the swan we have 178 years, and in the virgin 182. in the crown we have two several times given of 608 and 736 years. it is believed that one pair are 1200 years. the north polar star is double, and is thought by some to revolve in 6000 years.

please, father, tell me some more about the colours of the double folk.

the polar double stars are red and white. in scorpion, there is a white one and a lilac one; in the centaur, we have both orange; in andromeda, crimson and green; in the lion, gold and green; in one of scorpio, white and plum; in castor, yellow and green; in antares, both are bright red; arcturus was all red in 1841, and yellow in 1852.

i wonder how far these partners are from each other.

that is difficult to ascertain. the binary stars of the swan are thought to take 450 years going their circuit, and yet to be billions of miles away from each other.

there is little danger of quarrelling at that distance apart, father.

[pg 57]astronomers talk of stars running against one another. there are also triple stars.

three stars polkaing in and around each other! that is odd. where are there any?

in the lyre and scorpion. in the latter the colours are white, grey, and yellow. in the swan the largest star is very yellow, and its two mates are blue. but more wonderful still, in orion there are four stars thus rolling round each other.”

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