Examples of using Variable star in English and their translations into Vietnamese
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
Rotationally variable Star.
The variable star designation for HD 209458 is V376 Pegasi.
Arcavi was so sure,he said,“I would have bet my car that that was a variable star.”.
Several types of variable star include subgiants.
The magnitude 5.39[1] secondary, component B,is classified as a Gamma Cassiopeiae type variable star.
A0620-00 also bears the variable star designation V616 Monocerotis.[3].
Despite the large amplitude of variation,it was only named as a variable star in 2006.[3][10].
HD 118508 is a variable star in the northern constellation of Boötes.
The most massive and luminous component of the pair has the variable star designation GX Andromedae.
V Hydrae is a semiregular variable star of type SRa, sometimes considered to be a Mira variable. .
Because of the variations in emission at various wavelengths,Cygnus X-3 has been given the variable star designation V1521 Cygnus.[1].
It was identified as a variable star in 1930, and later named as KY Cygni.
These names include Bayer designations such as Alpha Centauri,Flamsteed designations such as 61 Cygni, and variable star designations such as RR Lyrae.
The supergiant component W Sgr Aa1 is a variable star which pulsates regularly between magnitudes 4.3 and 5.1 every 7.59 days.
M13 is about 145 light-years in diameter, and it is composed of several hundred thousand stars, the brightest of which is the variable star V11 with an apparent magnitude of 11.95.
Alpha Circini(α Cir, α Circini) is a variable star in the faint, southern, circumpolar constellation of Circinus.
The reflection nebula NGC 1999is brilliantly illuminated by V380 Orionis(center), a variable star with about 3.5 times the mass of the Sun.
V602 Car is a semiregular variable star with a maximum brightness range of magnitude 7.6- 9.1[10] and a period of 635[10] or 672[2] days.
CK Carinae(CK Car/ HD 90382/ SAO 238038)is a variable star in the constellation Carina.
It was discovered to be a variable star in 1686 and its apparent visual magnitude varies from as bright as 3.3 to as faint as 14.2.
R Leporis(R Lep), sometimes called Hind's Crimson Star,[1]is a well-known variable star in the constellation Lepus, near its border with Eridanus.
Although designated as a variable star,[1] observations with the Hipparcos satellite showed a variation of no more than 0.02 in magnitude.
Gamma Cassiopeiae is a Be star, a variable star, and a binary star system.
Luyten-726-8A was found to be a variable star and given the variable star designation BL Ceti.[3] It is a red dwarf of spectral type M5.5e.
Bonfils noted in 2005 that Gliese 581"has been classified as a variable star(HO Lib), but its variability(Weis 1994) is only marginally significant.
RX Andromedae is a Z Camelopardalis type variable star, with its brightness ranging between 10.3 and 14 over 14 day periods.
It could simplybe caused by Beta Librae being a variable star, showing a present-day variability of 0.03 of a magnitude.[11].
Graphs of the apparent magnitude of a variable star over time are commonly used to visualise and analyse their behaviour.
It contains NGC 2363-V1, a Luminous Blue Variable star which is 6,300,000 times more luminous than the Sun and one of the most luminous stars known.
Andromedae is the Flamsteed designation, while its variable star designation is V340 And.[3] Its apparent visual magnitude is 5.55,[4] which indicates it is faintly visible to the naked eye.