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To: ETL

how the base of a wine glass bends light.

Doesn’t that depend on how many glasses you’ve had?
I know it does with beer...


20 posted on 10/15/2018 10:41:46 AM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: tet68
how the base of a wine glass bends light. Doesn’t that depend on how many glasses you’ve had?

Lol! Good one!

I guess the same goes for seeing “double stars”!

______________________________________________

In observational astronomy, a double star or visual double is a pair of stars that appear close to each other as viewed from Earth, especially with the aid of optical telescopes.

This occurs because the pair either forms a binary star (i.e. a binary system of stars in mutual orbit, gravitationally bound to each other) or is an optical double, a chance line-of-sight alignment of two stars at different distances from the observer.[1][2]

Binary stars are important to stellar astronomers as knowledge of their motions allows direct calculation of stellar mass and other stellar parameters.

Since the beginning of the 1780s, both professional and amateur double star observers have telescopically measured the distances and angles between double stars to determine the relative motions of the pairs.[3]

If the relative motion of a pair determines a curved arc of an orbit, or if the relative motion is small compared to the common proper motion of both stars, it may be concluded that the pair is in mutual orbit as a binary star.

Otherwise, the pair is optical.[2] Multiple stars are also studied in this way, although the dynamics of multiple stellar systems are more complex than those of binary stars.

The following are three types of paired stars:

Optical doubles are unrelated stars that appear close together through chance alignment with Earth.

Visual binaries are gravitationally-bound stars that are separately visible with a telescope.

Non-visual binaries are stars whose binary status was deduced through more esoteric means, such as occultation (eclipsing binaries), spectroscopy (spectroscopic binaries), or anomalies in proper motion (astrometric binaries).

Improvements in telescopes can shift previously non-visual binaries into visual binaries, as happened with Polaris A in 2006.[4] It is only the inability to telescopically observe two separate stars that distinguish non-visual and visual binaries.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_star

21 posted on 10/15/2018 10:52:52 AM PDT by ETL (Obama-Hillary, REAL Russia collusion! Uranium-One Deal, Missile Defense, Iran Deal, Nukes: Click ETL)
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