"completely unprecedented for any F-type main sequence star"

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CosmicLettuce
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"completely unprecedented for any F-type main sequence star"

Unread post by CosmicLettuce » Sun Jan 24, 2016 6:23 pm

KIC 8462852 Faded at an Average Rate of 0.165+-0.013 Magnitudes Per Century From 1890 To 1989
The star KIC 8462852 is a completely-ordinary F3 main sequence star, except that the light curve from the Kepler spacecraft shows episodes of unique and inexplicable day-long dips with up to 20% dimming. Here, I provide a light curve of 1232 Johnson B-band magnitudes from 1890 to 1989 taken from archival photographic plates at Harvard. KIC 8462852 displays a highly significant and highly confident secular dimming at an average rate of 0.165+-0.013 magnitudes per century. From the early 1890s to the late 1980s, KIC 8462852 has faded by 0.193+-0.030 mag. This century-long dimming is completely unprecedented for any F-type main sequence star. So the Harvard light curve provides the first confirmation (past the several dips seen in the Kepler light curve alone) that KIC 8462852 has anything unusual going on. The century-long dimming and the day-long dips are both just extreme ends of a spectrum of timescales for unique dimming events, so by Ockham's Razor, all this is produced by one physical mechanism. This one mechanism does not appear as any isolated catastrophic event in the last century, but rather must be some ongoing process with continuous effects. Within the context of dust-occultation models, the century-long dimming trend requires 10^4 to 10^7 times as much dust as for the one deepest Kepler dip. Within the context of the comet-family idea, the century-long dimming trend requires an estimated 648,000 giant comets (each with 200 km diameter) all orchestrated to pass in front of the star within the last century.
http://arxiv.org/abs/1601.03256

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comingfrom
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Re: "completely unprecedented for any F-type main sequence s

Unread post by comingfrom » Sun Jan 24, 2016 10:07 pm

If we classify that an F-flat type star, because it dims now and then,
then, when we find an F type star that brightens, we can classify that as a F-sharp type star.

:P

Of course, we know, and it is fairly obvious, that the brightness and appearance of stars is completely dependent on it's plasma environment and the currents that feeds it.

And if a star happens to be traveling through a region of mixed densities, it will undergo changes in appearance.
They are just experiencing brownouts, and power surges.

Our Sun experiences them too. Not too extreme, fortunately.
Our Sun is also a variable star.

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