SURVEY OF THE PROBLEM
13
iterferometer
ti reflector at
merits of the
is, begun by
ual orbit. It
nents can be
aries; and it
termined for
is unusually
ries between
etween + 63
lean velocity
of recession
must be in
he brighter
e may treat
the line of
be equal to
ly; to allow
here i is the
rcumference
the period,
of the two
the usual
nical units
eriod P in
1 already
12 . In the orbit determined from the visual measures the semiaxis of
the relative orbit (cq + a 2 ) is found to be 0"-0536. We have seen that in
linear measure this is equal to 0-847 astronomical units. Hence 1 as
tronomical unit corresponds to 0"-0632. Accordingly the parallax of
Capella is
w = 0"-0632.
A rough parallax had previously been found trigonometrically in close
agreement with the above value, but the parallax furnished by the orbital
data is presumably of much superior accuracy.
The observed visual magnitude of Capella is 0 m -21. To reduce to
absolute magnitude, i.e. magnitude at the standard distance of 10 parsecs
or parallax 0"-1, we must add
51og 10 ( ra /0"-l),
which gives 0-21 — 1-00 = — 0 m -79. This represents the sum of the light
of the two components. It is estimated that they differ in visual magnitude
by 0 m -5. The absolute visual magnitudes are then found to be — 0 m -26
and + 0 m -24, since these would compound to give — 0 m -79.
The spectral type of the bright component is classed as G 0, the same
as that of the sun. The sun’s effective temperature is 5740°, but it appears
from theory and observation that the same spectral characteristics will
appear at lower temperature in a diffuse star like Capella than in the sun.
We shall therefore adopt 5200° for the effective temperature. This, of
course, is only the marginal temperature of the great furnace, and affords
no idea of the terrific heat within.
It is convenient to introduce the bolometric magnitude, which is a
measure of the heat-intensity of a star in the same way that the visual
magnitude is a measure of its luminous intensity or the photographic
magnitude is a measure of its photographic intensity, the measures in
each case being on a logarithmic scale. Black-body radiation has maximum
luminous efficiency when it corresponds to a temperature of about 6500°,
and the zero of the scale of bolometric magnitude is chosen so as to agree
with visual magnitude for stars of this effective temperature. At any
other temperature a greater amount of radiant energy is required to
produce the same intensity of light, so that the bolometric magnitude is
brighter (numerically smaller) than the visual magnitude. At 5200° the
reduction to bolometric magnitude is 0 m -10, so that the absolute bolo
metric magnitude of the bright component of Capella is
- 0-26 - 0-10 - - 0 m -36.
Since the bolometric magnitude indicates the total radiation emitted
from the star and the effective temperature indicates the radiation per
sq. cm., we are able to calculate the area of the surface and hence the
radius of Capella. The calculation is most conveniently made by using