Examples of using Spectroscopic binary in English and their translations into Swedish
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Colloquial
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Official
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Medicine
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Official/political
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Computer
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Political
One of them is also an unresolved spectroscopic binary.
Gamma Aquarii is a spectroscopic binary with a period of 58.1 days.
At least one of the components is a spectroscopic binary.
Gamma Lupi A is itself a spectroscopic binary with a period of 2.8081 days.
The spectroscopic binary nature of this star was discovered in 1901 by William Wallace Campbell using the Mills spectrograph at the Lick Observatory.
One or both of the stars may be a spectroscopic binary as well.
The inner pair is a spectroscopic binary that completes an orbit with a period of 72 days.
and is itself a spectroscopic binary with an orbital period of 2,270 days.
The spectroscopic binary σ2 CrB is an RS Canum Venaticorum variable.
In 1966 it was listed as a suspected spectroscopic binary, but it is believed to be single.
It is a spectroscopic binary with an orbital period of 143.6 days and an eccentricity of 0.56.
Each of the components of Castor is itself a spectroscopic binary, making Castor a quadruple star system.
which would make Electra a spectroscopic binary.
In addition, the primary is spectroscopic binary GLE 2Aa, with a 6.06 year period.
This is a long-period spectroscopic binary with an orbital period of approximately 15,000 days(41 years)
Theta1 Crucis(θ1 Cru, Theta1 Crucis) is a spectroscopic binary star system in the southern constellation of Crux.
There is another spectroscopic binary 8 arcminutes distant,
is actually a spectroscopic binary, with the components designated Kappa Pegasi Ba
Alpha Delphini A is a spectroscopic binary star which has now been resolved using speckle interferometry.
In 1957, German astronomer Wulff-Dieter Heintz discovered that it is a spectroscopic binary with components that are too close together to resolve with a telescope.
The primary of the spectroscopic binary has a stellar classification of K3 III,
Spectrograms taken from 1957 to 1959 revealed that γ Andromedae B was itself a spectroscopic binary, composed of two type-B main sequence stars orbiting each other with a period of 2.67 days.
A is reported as a spectroscopic binary with a smaller star of 0.29 solar masses orbiting it every 186 days.
component A, is a spectroscopic binary whose two components are separated by 0.1 arcseconds.
The inner components form a spectroscopic binary with a period of 6.1 years(2,238.7 days)
is a spectroscopic binary variable star in the constellation Puppis.
The assumption was that the star was a spectroscopic binary, although no period or other orbital parameters were determined.
Crateris happens to be a spectroscopic binary with a period of 2.9 days,
Eta Boötis is a suspected spectroscopic binary with a reported period of 494 days,
The star has also been categorized as a spectroscopic binary, indicating that it has an orbiting companion that has not been separately resolved with a telescope.