Alpha Cassiopeiae
Alpha Cassiopeiae is a star in the northern constellation of Cassiopeia ; Alpha Cassiopeiae is its [Bayer designation, which is Latinized from α Cassiopeiae and abbreviated Alpha Cas or α Cas. Though listed as the "alpha star" by Johann Bayer, α Cas's visual brightness closely matches the 'beta' star in the constellation and it may appear marginally brighter or dimmer, depending on which passband is used. However, recent calculations from NASA's WISE telescope confirm that α Cas is the brightest in Cassiopeia, with an apparent magnitude of 2.240. Its absolute magnitude is 18 times greater than β Cas, and it is located over four times farther away from the Sun.
Nomenclature
α Cassiopeiae is the star's Bayer designation.It bore the traditional name Schedar, which was first encountered in the Alfonsine tables of the thirteenth century. It derives from the Arabic word صدر şadr, meaning "breast", a word which is derived from its relative position in the heart of the mythological queen Cassiopeia. Johannes Hevelius used the name Schedir in his writings, although there were additional traditional spellings of this Arabic transliteration such as Shedar, Shadar, Sheder, Seder, Shedis, and Shedir. In 2016, the International Astronomical Union organized a IAU Working Group [on Star Names|Working Group on Star Names] to catalogue and standardize proper names for stars. The WGSN approved the name Schedar for this star on 21 August 2016 and it is now so included in the List of IAU-approved Star Names.
Al-Sufi and Ulug Beg named the star Al Dhāt al Kursiyy, which Giovanni Battista Riccioli changed to Dath Elkarti.
In Chinese, 王良 refers to the Chinese asterism Wang Liang, a famous charioteer during the Spring and Autumn period. The stellar pattern consists of Alpha, Beta, Kappa, Eta and Lambda Cassiopeiae. Consequently, the Chinese name for Alpha Cassiopeiae itself is 王良四.
Visibility
With a declination of 56° 32' North, α Cassiopeiae is principally visible in the Northern Hemisphere. The star is detectable to most observers across the globe reaching as far south as Perth, Australia, Santiago, Chile and other settlements north ± 33° South latitude, albeit close to the horizon. α Cassiopeiae is located in line-of-sight of the Milky Way galaxy, so there are other notable celestial objects that can be viewed close to this star—such as the Pacman Nebula, NGC 436 and NGC 457.Alpha Cas reaches its zenith above cities like Edinburgh, Copenhagen and Moscow. It is circumpolar throughout Europe, Russia, and as far south as Los Angeles, California on the North American continent as well as other locations around the globe having a latitude greater than ± 33° North. Since α Cassiopeiae is listed as a second-magnitude star, it is easily observable to the naked eye as long as one's stargazing is not hindered by the light pollution common to most cities.
The best time for observation is during the late autumn months of the Northern Hemisphere, when Cassiopeia passes the meridian at midnight, but given its circumpolar nature in many northern localities, it is visible to many of the world's inhabitants throughout the year.
Angular analysis
With the advances in optical interferometry in the 1990s, α Cassiopeiae's angular diameter was measured in 1998 at various wavelengths ranging from 500 to 850 nm. The result was a limb darkened angular measurement of 5.62 ± 0.06 milliarcseconds, a diameter which equates to roughly 0.393 AU or, assuming a parallax of 14.29 mas. With the planet Mercury orbiting the Sun at approximately 0.4 AU, α Cassiopeiae's photosphere extends to roughly half the mercurial orbit.Properties
α Cassiopeiae is a red giant star whose spectral classification is K0-IIIa, notably cooler than the Sun. However, because it is nearing the final stages of its evolution, the photosphere has expanded substantially, yielding a bolometric luminosity that is approximately. It is considered 98% likely to be a horizontal branch star fusing helium in its core.According to Hipparcos, the New Reduction, the estimated distance to the star is about 70 parsecs or 228 light-years. Like all giant stars, α Cassiopeiae rotates slowly with an approximate velocity of —a speed which takes the star approximately 102 days to make one complete revolution on its axis.
α Cassiopeiae has been sometimes classified as a variable star, but no variability has been detected since the 19th century. Also, three companions to the star have been listed in the Washington [Double Star Catalog], but it seems that all of them are just distant line-of-sight optical components.
α Cassiopeiae is thought to be around 100 to 200 million years old, having spent much of that time as a blue-white B-type main-sequence star.