Draft:Original research/Trigonometric-parallax astronomy

From Wikiversity
Jump to navigation Jump to search
With parallax technique, astronomers observe an object at the opposite ends of the Earth's orbit around the Sun to precisely measure its distance. Credit: Alexandra Angelich, NRAO/AUI/NSF.

Trigonometric-parallax astronomy is the astronomy of conducting trigonometric parallax measurements to determine the distance to astronomical objects.

The image on the right shows the elementary aspects of parallax independent of the radiation used. Here, opposite ends of the Earth's orbit around the Sun are used to precisely measure the distance to an astronomical object.

Theoretical parallax astronomy

[edit | edit source]

Def. an "apparent shift in the position of two stationary objects relative to each other as viewed by an observer, due to a change in observer position"[1] is called a parallax.

The distance from a parallax measurement in pc is given by D = 1/p in arcseconds. The "standard deviation, which describes the 'typical' amount of error, is not negligible in comparison with the parallax. [...] the non-linearity of the relation causes the distribution function of the estimates [...] and thus the distribution function of the errors in distance [...] to be skewed."[2]

For example, the most recent parallax for χ Cyg is 5.53 ± 1.10. The skewness results when the distance is calculated D = 1/0.00553 = 181 pc, but this ranges from 151 to 226 or 181 +45 and -30 pc.

"Extreme values are less likely to appear in a small sample than in a larger one. The reason is that with a small sample it is not very probable that any of the sample parallaxes will have an absolute value close to zero. As the sample size is increased the absolute value nearest to zero will continually decrease and the corresponding very large value of [D] will drive up the sample variance. Furthermore, this anomalous value will more and more seriously distort the value of the sample mean. The increasingly erratic behaviour of the sample mean as sample size is increased contrasts with the behaviour of the mean for a Gaussian distribution, which more and more closely approaches the population mean with increasing sample size."[2]

Electromagnetic radiation

[edit | edit source]

Parallax measurements can be made at any wavelength of electromagnetic radiation.

Entities

[edit | edit source]

"Physical entities are (almost) always characterized by a numerical parameter whose value can only be approached through some measuring process, by means of a statistical adjustment of a set of appropriate measurements. All that we can ever obtain is a best (in some prescribed sense) estimate of that value. By itself this estimate is, strictly speaking, meaningless, for it simply defines an interior point of a set of possible values; unless one has some estimate of the extremes of that set (to within some level of probability) in addition to the best estimate itself, one cannot exclude any value of that parameter. In many cases the probabilities of nearby values can be described by a function that is symmetric around the best estimate, and the parameter values bounding an interval (or a region if one happens to be dealing with multivariate analysis) which has a certain cumulative probability (usually 0.68) define an 'error bar' or error interval whose endpoints are equally distant from the best estimate."[2]

X-rays

[edit | edit source]
This image shows the Pleiades in X-rays, taken by ROSAT. Credit: T. Preibisch (MPIfR), ROSAT Project, MPE, NASA.

"The Pleiades star cluster is one of the jewels of the northern sky. To the unaided eye it appears as an alluring group of stars in the constellation Taurus, while telescopic views reveal cluster stars surrounded by delicate blue wisps of dust-reflected starlight. To the X-ray telescopes on board the orbiting ROSAT observatory, the cluster also presents an impressive, but slightly altered, appearance. This false color image was produced from ROSAT observations by translating different X-ray energy bands to visual colors - the lowest energies are shown in red, medium in green, and highest energies in blue. (The green boxes mark the position of the seven brightest visual stars.) The Pleiades stars seen in X-rays have extremely hot, tenuous outer atmospheres called coronas and the range of colors corresponds to different coronal temperatures."[3]

According to SIMBAD, M45 (the Pleiades) is located at "ICRS coord. (ep=J2000) : 03 47 00.0 +24 07 00 (Optical)" and "Gal coord. (ep=J2000) : 166.5707 -23.5212". It is X-ray source H 0346+24.

The Pleiades appears to extend from J2000.0 RA 3h 42m to 4h 00m with Dec +23° 30' to +25 30'.

Ultraviolets

[edit | edit source]
File:Pleiades in ultraviolet.jpg
The ultraviolet image at 220.0 nm shows significant nebulosity. Credit: Steven J. Gibson and Kenneth H. Nordsieck.
File:Pleiades he ultraviolet.jpg
Even at 165.0 nm the Pleiades show significant nebulosity. Credit: Steven J. Gibson and Kenneth H. Nordsieck.

The image on the right is at 220.0 nm of the Pleiades. Each star is labeled using its number in Taurus, e.g. 23 Tau (23 Tauri) is Merope.

"The stars 20 Tau (Maia), 23 Tau (Merope), and 25 Tau (Alcyone) have prominent nebular glows".[4]

Even at higher energies as in the image on the left, "The stellar halos merge into a diffuse nebular glow like that seen in photographs, but the faint outer nebulosity remains undetected. The UV nebular intensities are generally less than might be expected from optical intensities and the UV brightness of the illuminating stars."[4]

Opticals

[edit | edit source]
File:NOAOPleaides.jpg
A target of interest for parallax measurements is in this optical image of the Pleiades. Credit: NOAO/AURA/NSF.

"Until the 1990s, the consensus was that the Pleiades are about 430 light-years from Earth. However, the European satellite Hipparcos, launched in 1989 to precisely measure the positions and distances of thousands of stars, produced a distance measurement of only about 390 light-years."[5]

Infrareds

[edit | edit source]
Pleiades (M45, Seven Sisters) open cluster is shown in an infrared image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/J. Stauffer (SSC/Caltech).

"The Seven Sisters, also known as the Pleiades, seem to float on a bed of feathers in a new infrared image [on the right] from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. Clouds of dust sweep around the stars, swaddling them in a cushiony veil."[6]

"The Pleiades, located more than 400 light-years away in the Taurus constellation, are the subject of many legends and writings. Greek mythology holds that the flock of stars was transformed into celestial doves by Zeus to save them from a pursuant Orion. The 19th-century poet Alfred Lord Tennyson described them as "glittering like a swarm of fireflies tangled in a silver braid."[6]

"The star cluster was born when dinosaurs still roamed the Earth, about one hundred million years ago. It is significantly younger than our 5-billion-year-old sun. The brightest members of the cluster, also the highest-mass stars, are known in Greek mythology as two parents, Atlas and Pleione, and their seven daughters, Alcyone, Electra, Maia, Merope, Taygeta, Celaeno and Asterope. There are thousands of additional lower-mass members, including many stars like our sun. Some scientists believe that our sun grew up in a crowded region like the Pleiades, before migrating to its present, more isolated home."[6]

"The new infrared image from Spitzer highlights the "tangled silver braid" mentioned in the poem by Tennyson. This spider-web like network of filaments, colored yellow, green and red in this view, is made up of dust associated with the cloud through which the cluster is traveling. The densest portion of the cloud appears in yellow and red, and the more diffuse outskirts appear in green hues. One of the parent stars, Atlas, can be seen at the bottom, while six of the sisters are visible at top."[6]

Infrared 4.5 µm (blue) from the Spitzer IRAC, Infrared 8.0 µm (green) from the Spitzer IRAC, and Infrared 24.0 µm (red) from the Spitzer MIPS are the colors in the image used to represent these wavelengths.[6]

Radios

[edit | edit source]
File:Radio parallaxes.jpg
The graphs show parallax fits to VLBI position measurements and associated random errors (±1 SD) for five Pleiades stars, including both components of the HII 2147 binary system. Credit: Carl Melis, Mark J. Reid, Amy J. Mioduszewski, John R. Stauffer, and Geoffrey C. Bower.

A "global network of radio telescopes [can be used] to make the most accurate possible distance measurement. The network included the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA), a system of 10 radio telescopes ranging from Hawaii to the Virgin Islands; the Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia; the 1,000-foot-diameter William E. Gordon Telescope of the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico; and the Effelsberg Radio Telescope in Germany."[5]

"Using these telescopes working together, we had the equivalent of a telescope the size of the Earth. That gave us the ability to make extremely accurate position measurements -- the equivalent of measuring the thickness of a quarter in Los Angeles as seen from New York."[7]

"The astronomers used this system to observe several Pleiades stars over about a year and a half to precisely measure the apparent shift in each star's position caused by the Earth's rotation around the Sun. Seen at opposite ends of the Earth's orbit, a star appears to move slightly against the backdrop of more-distant cosmic objects. Called parallax, the technique is the most accurate distance-measuring method astronomers have, and relies on simple trigonometry."[5]

A "distance to the Pleiades [was determined] of 443 light-years, accurate [...] to within one percent. This is the most accurate and precise measurement yet made of the Pleiades distance."[5]

"Radio-telescope systems such as the one we used for the Pleiades will provide a crucial cross-check to insure the accuracy of Gaia's measurements."[8]

"Now we've used a system that provides modern astronomy's sharpest 'vision' to solve a longstanding scientific debate about the Pleiades themselves."[9]

"For each object [measured in the image on the right] the solid line is the best-fitting astrometric model that includes proper motion and parallax; the proper motion has been removed in the data points to accentuate the parallax motion. For each component of the HII 2147 binary system and for HII 1136 we additionally include acceleration terms in our fit to model short segments of a binary orbit (the average angular separation between the two stars of the HII 2147 system over the monitoring period [...] is ≈60 milliarcseconds or ≈8.2 AU in projection). The left-hand panel curves and data points show East (right ascension times cos(declination)) angular offsets on the sky of the source position relative to a distant quasar. The right-hand panel curves and data points show North (declination) offsets. Each source is color-coded and labeled in the declination panels."[10]

Stars

[edit | edit source]
File:Summary of Pleiades distances.png
The graph shows a summary of Pleiades distances obtained through various methods. Credit: Carl Melis, Mark J. Reid, Amy J. Mioduszewski, John R. Stauffer, and Geoffrey C. Bower.

The graph on the right "summarizes distances obtained for the Pleiades cluster to date, including the new measurement described here. As can be seen, most measurements are in rough agreement with that produced in this work, with the stark exception of the Hipparcos astrometric satellite distances. For a single object near the distance of the Pleiades, Hipparcos was not capable of producing a distance measurement with accuracy better than 10%. However, by taking the aggregate of many cluster members, Hipparcos was able to achieve a Pleiades parallax with roughly 1% precision (6, 7). In almost any other case, one would simply discard the disagreeable Hipparcos cluster distances as bad measurements, but the Hipparcos mission represents the most complete astrometric survey of the sky and of the Pleiades cluster to date. It provides a path that is free of stellar physical models to obtaining the cluster distance and combines more than 50 cluster-member distance measurements. Other methods either include at most several cluster members in their distance determination, rely heavily on physical models to obtain a cluster distance (whereas it should be the distance measurement that informs the development of physical models), or result in large uncertainties in the cluster distance."[10]

1 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

1 Tauri is Omicron Tauri.

Parallax = 11.21 ± 0.87 mas.[11]

1 Tauri has three times the mass of the Sun and fifteen[12] to eighteen times the Sun's radius. Based on the latter, interferometry-measured radius, it is rotating once every 533 days.[13] It is approximately 212 light years from Earth and is radiating 155 times the luminosity of the Sun.[14]

This is a single-lined spectroscopic binary[15] system with the two components orbiting each other over a period of 1,655 days with an eccentricity of 0.263.[16]

Gaia DR2 has the parallax for 1 Tauri as 17.1066 ± 0.3775 mas.[17]

11 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

11 Tauri, HIP 17181 (TYC 1803-1582-1), has a 1997 parallax of 6.24 ± 0.93, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 6.83 ± 0.50 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is A2IV (SIMBAD). Gaia DR2 has the parallax for 11 Tauri as 5.7578 ± 0.0887.[18]

16 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

16 Tauri (Celaeno), HIP 17489 (TYC 1799-1440-1), has a 1997 parallax of 9.75 ± 1.05, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 8.65 ± 0.36 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is B7IV (SIMBAD).

17 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

17 Tauri (Electra), HIP 17499 (TYC 1799-1441-1), has a 1997 parallax of 8.80 ± 0.89, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 8.06 ± 0.25 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is B6IIIe (SIMBAD).

18 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

18 Tauri, HIP 17527 (TYC 1803-1583-1), has a 1997 parallax of 8.87 ± 0.89, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 7.97 ± 0.37 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is B8V (SIMBAD).

19 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

19 Tauri (Taygeta, q Tau), HIP 17531 (TYC 1803-1585-1), has a 1997 parallax of 8.75 ± 1.08, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 7.97 ± 0.33 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is B6IV (SIMBAD).

20 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

According to SIMBAD, 20 Tauri (Maia) is also designated as Hipparcos, or HIP, 17573. The parallax measurements by Hipparcos of 20 Tau are recorded in "Vol 5: The Hipparcos Catalogue -- RA: 0h-4h, HIP: 1-18677".[19]

Its spectral type is B8III (SIMBAD).

According to VizieR, in the 1997 catalogue, HIP 17573 has a parallax of 9.06 mas ± 1.03 mas. Whereas, according to SMBAD, in the 2007 reduction, its parallax is 8.51 mas ± 0.28 mas.

21 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

21 Tauri (Asterope), HIP 17579 (TYC 1803-1584-1), has a 1997 parallax of 8.43 ± 0.89, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 8.77 ± 0.54 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is B8V (SIMBAD).

22 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

22 Tauri, HIP 17588 (TYC 1804-2521-1), has a 1997 parallax of 9.21 ± 0.92, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 8.58 ± 0.56 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is A0Vn (SIMBAD).

23 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

23 Tauri (V971 Tau), HIP 17608 (TYC 1800-2204-1), has a 1997 parallax of 9.08 ± 1.04, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 8.58 ± 0.37 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is B6IVe (SIMBAD).

24 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

24 Tauri, HIP 17702 (TYC 1800-2201-1), has a 1997 parallax of 8.87 ± 0.99, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 8.09 ± 0.42 per VizieR, which is considered faulty by SIMBAD. See 25 Tauri. The spectral type is A0V (SIMBAD), with parallax of 6.4 ± 18.5.

25 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

25 Tauri (Alcyone, eta Tau), HIP 17702 (TYC 1800-2201-1), has a 1997 parallax of 8.87 ± 0.99, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 8.09 ± 0.42 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is B7III (SIMBAD).

26 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

26 Tauri, HIP 17832 (TYC 1800-2205-1), has a 1997 parallax of 13.44 ± 0.97, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 13.22 ± 0.52 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is F0 (SIMBAD).

27 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

27 Tauri (Atlas), HIP 17847 (TYC 1800-2203-1), has a 1997 parallax of 8.57 ± 1.03, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 8.53 ± 0.39 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is B8III (SIMBAD).

28 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

28 Tauri (Atlas), HIP 17851 (TYC 1800-2200-1), has a 1997 parallax of 8.42 ± 8.42, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 8.54 ± 0.31 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is B8Vne (SIMBAD).

V382 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

The variable star V382 Tau (HII 3030) is not in either Hipparcos or Tycho catalogues. Its parallax was not measured by Hipparcos. The absolute parallax for V382 (HII 3030) is "7.41 ± 0.18" mas.[20]

It is spectral type K9V (SIMBAD).

V677 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

V* V677 Tau (HII 3063) has not had its parallax measured by Hipparcos. Its absolute parallas is "7.43 ± 0.16" mas.[20] Its spectral type is K6V (SIMBAD).

V811 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

The variable star V811 Tau (HII 625) is not in either Hipparcos or Tycho catalogues. Its parallax was not measured by Hipparcos.

It is spectral type G5 (SIMBAD).

V1065 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

The variable star V1065 Tau (HII 1136) was not measured by Hipparcos. It is spectral type G7V (SIMBAD).

V1271 Taur

[edit | edit source]

The variable star 1271 Tau is also Tycho (TYC) catalogue TYC 1803-8-1. But, according to VizieR, the parallax of this star (HII 174) was apparently not measured by Hipparcos.

"The measured distances and +/−1 [standard deviation] SD errors for the four systems are 134.8 ± 0.5 pc (HII 174), 138.4 ± 1.1 pc (HII 625), 135.5 ± 0.6 pc (HII 1136), and 136.6 ± 0.6 pc (HII 2147 system)."[10]

V1282 Tauri

[edit | edit source]

V* V1282 Tau (HII 2147) has a Tycho catalogue designation of TYC 1800-1091-1. But, its parallax was not measured by Hipparcos.

It is spectral type G7IV (SIMBAD).

HD 23753

[edit | edit source]

HD 23753 (HR 1172), HIP 17776 (TYC 1800-2207-1), has a 1997 parallax of 9.64 ± 0.91, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 8.45 ± 0.39 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is B8V (SIMBAD).

HD 23923

[edit | edit source]

HD 23923 (HR 1183), HIP 17900 (TYC 1800-2207-1), has a 1997 parallax of 8.58 ± 0.93, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 8.72 ± 0.60 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is B8V (SIMBAD).

HD 24194

[edit | edit source]

HD 24194 (HII 3179) has not had its parallax measured by Hipparcos. Its absolute parallax is "7.45 ± 0.16" mas.[20]

HD 24802

[edit | edit source]

HD 24802 (HR 1222), HIP 18508 (TYC 1817-176-1), has a 1997 parallax of 3.04 ± 0.92, according to VizieR. Its 2007 reduction parallax is 3.13 ± 0.97 per SIMBAD. The spectral type is K0 (SIMBAD).

Star clusters

[edit | edit source]
File:Pleiades large2.jpg
The Pleiades s an open cluster consisting of approximately 3,000 stars at a distance of 400 light-years (120 parsecs) from Earth in the constellation of Taurus. Credit: NASA, ESA, AURA/Caltech, Palomar Observatory.
Named Pleiades stars are framed in their dust clouds. Credit: Ville Koistinen (Vzb83).

Messier 45 is an open galactic cluster of stars. It is also called the Pleiades and the Seven Sisters.

According to SIMBAD, the Pleiades have been detected by HEAO 1 as an X-ray source.

"The brilliant stars seen in this image [on the right] are members of the popular open star cluster known as the Pleiades, or Seven Sisters. The Hubble Space Telescope's Fine Guidance Sensors refined the distance to the Pleiades at about 440 light-years. The Fine Guidance Sensors are at the periphery of Hubble's field-of-view. They trace a circumference that is approximately the angular size of the Moon on the sky. They are overlaid on this image to give a scale to Hubble's very narrow view on the heavens."[21]

"Hubble Fine Guidance Sensors measured slight changes in the apparent positions of three stars within the cluster when viewed from different sides of Earth's orbit. Astronomers took their measurements six months apart over a 2 1/2-year period. About 1,000 stars comprise the cluster, located in the constellation Taurus."[21]

"The color-composite image of the Pleiades star cluster was taken by the Palomar 48-inch Schmidt telescope. The image is from the second Palomar Observatory Sky Survey, and is part of the Digitized Sky Survey. The Pleiades photo was made from three separate images taken in red, green, and blue filters. The separate images were taken between Nov. 5, 1986 and Sept. 11, 1996."[21]

On the left is a celestial map of the Pleiades with some of the stars named and their dust clouds outlined. Star magnitudes are indicated by circle sizes.

Astromathematics

[edit | edit source]

"For each object in our sample, we conducted astrometric fits to the measured positions to extract stellar parallaxes. Only data taken in 2012-2013 were used for HII 1136 to ensure consistent and readily comparable results. Measured positions are modeled with the sum of a parallax sinusoid (determined by the parallax magnitude – π – and the purely geometrical motion for a given part of the sky induced by Earth’s orbit), a reference position at an arbitrarily chosen fixed epoch, and a linear or accelerated proper motion (μαcosδ, μδ, aαcosδ, and aδ; acceleration terms account for binary motion when the orbital period is much larger than the time frame over which the system was monitored and have been successfully used in past attempts to measure system parallaxes, see ref. 16). This results in five or seven fitted model parameters. During the fitting process the data are weighted using the quadrature sum of the formal measured fit uncertainties and an additional component that represents systematic uncertainties. A least squares fitting routine determines the parameters that minimize the sum of the squares of the residuals. This process allows the systematic error component to be adjusted as necessary to obtain a χ2 equal to 1 for each of the R.A. and Decl. data. The fitted proper motions can be compared with the values shown in second and third columns that were previously determined from optical measurements. All uncertainties are ±1 SD."[10]

Hypotheses

[edit | edit source]
  1. The optical parallax measurements made by Hipparchus had an error large in comparison with the distance measured to the Pleiades.
  2. A spherical galactic star cluster of ~ 3000 stars separated by an average distance of 4 lyrs would be about 60 lyrs in diameter.
  3. The stars measured for radio parallaxes are at the farther side of the cluster whereas those measured for optical parallaxes are at the nearer side of the cluster.

See also

[edit | edit source]

References

[edit | edit source]
  1. parallax. San Francisco, California: Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. 8 December 2015. https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/parallax. Retrieved 2016-01-13. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Haywood Smith, Jr and Heinrich Eichhorn (1996). "On the estimation of distances from trigonometric parallaxes". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 281 (1): 211-18. http://mnras.oxfordjournals.org/content/281/1/211.short. Retrieved 2014-04-18. 
  3. Robert Nemiroff & Jerry Bonnell (28 August 1999). X-Ray Pleiades. Washington, DC USA: NASA. http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap990828.html. Retrieved 2016-01-13. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 Steven J. Gibson and Kenneth H. Nordsieck (20 May 2003). "The Pleiades Reflection Nebula. I. Ultraviolet, Optical, and Far-Infrared Imaging Photometry". The Astrophysical Journal 589 (01): 347-61. doi:10.1086/374589. http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1086/374589/fulltext/. Retrieved 2016-01-14. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Dave Finley (28 August 2014). Radio Telescopes Settle Controversy Over Distance to Pleiades. National Radio Telescope Observatory. https://public.nrao.edu/news/pressreleases/radio-telescopes-settle-controversy. Retrieved 2016-01-12. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 John Stauffer (12 April 2007). The Seven Sisters Pose for Spitzer. http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/images/1770-ssc2007-07a-The-Seven-Sisters-Pose-for-Spitzer. Retrieved 2016-01-13. 
  7. Amy Miouduszewski (28 August 2014). Radio Telescopes Settle Controversy Over Distance to Pleiades. National Radio Telescope Observatory. https://public.nrao.edu/news/pressreleases/radio-telescopes-settle-controversy. Retrieved 2016-01-12. 
  8. Mark Reid (28 August 2014). Radio Telescopes Settle Controversy Over Distance to Pleiades. National Radio Telescope Observatory. https://public.nrao.edu/news/pressreleases/radio-telescopes-settle-controversy. Retrieved 2016-01-12. 
  9. Carl Melis (28 August 2014). Radio Telescopes Settle Controversy Over Distance to Pleiades. National Radio Telescope Observatory. https://public.nrao.edu/news/pressreleases/radio-telescopes-settle-controversy. Retrieved 2016-01-12. 
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 Carl Melis, Mark J. Reid, Amy J. Mioduszewski, John R. Stauffer, and Geoffrey C. Bower (29 August 2014). "A VLBI Resolution of the Pleiades Distance Controversy". Science 345 (6200): 1029-32. http://science.sciencemag.org/content/345/6200/1029.full. Retrieved 2016-01-14. 
  11. van Leeuwen, F. (2007). "Validation of the new Hipparcos reduction". Astronomy and Astrophysics 474 (2): 653–664. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20078357. http://www.aanda.org/index.php?option=com_article&access=bibcode&Itemid=129&bibcode=2007A%2526A...474..653VFUL.  Vizier catalog entry
  12. da Silva, L.; et al. (November 2006), "Basic physical parameters of a selected sample of evolved stars", Astronomy and Astrophysics, 458 (2): 609–623, arXiv:astro-ph/0608160, Bibcode:2006A&A...458..609D, doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20065105
  13. Setiawan, J.; et al. (July 2004), "Precise radial velocity measurements of G and K giants. Multiple systems and variability trend along the Red Giant Branch", Astronomy and Astrophysics, 421: 241–254, Bibcode:2004A&A...421..241S, doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20041042-1
  14. Mallik, Sushma V. (December 1999), "Lithium abundance and mass", Astronomy and Astrophysics, 352: 495–507, Bibcode:1999A&A...352..495M
  15. Pourbaix, D.; Tokovinin, A. A.; Batten, A. H.; Fekel, F. C.; Hartkopf, W. I.; et al. (2004), "SB9: The ninth catalogue of spectroscopic binary orbits", Astronomy & Astrophysics, 424 (2): 727, arXiv:astro-ph/0406573, Bibcode:2004A&A...424..727P, doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20041213.
  16. Jackson, E. S.; Shane, W. W.; Lynds, Beverly T. (May 1957), "The Orbits of the Spectroscopic Binaries Omicron Tauri, Xi Cancri, and Mu Ursae Majories", Astrophysical Journal, 125: 712, Bibcode:1957ApJ...125..712J, doi:10.1086/146345
  17. SIMBAD (2018). "* omi Tau -- Spectroscopic binary". Strasbourg, France: Université de Strasbourg/CNRS. Retrieved 22 June 2019.
  18. SIMBAD (2018). "* 11 Tau -- Spectroscopic binary". Strasbourg, France: Université de Strasbourg/CNRS. Retrieved 22 June 2019.
  19. Lennart Lindegren and Jean Kovalevsky (June 1997). The Hipparcos and Tycho Catalogues. ESA SP-1200. ESA. http://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/hipparcos/catalogues. Retrieved 2016-01-14. 
  20. 20.0 20.1 20.2 David R. Soderblom and Ed Nelan, G. Fritz Benedict, Barbara McArthur, Ivan Ramirez, and William Spiesman, and Burton F. Jones (March 2005). "Confirmation of Errors in Hipparcos Parallaxes from Hubble Space Telescope Fine Guidance Sensor Astrometry of the Pleiades". The Astronomical Journal 129 (3): 1616-24. doi:10.1086/427860. http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2005AJ....129.1616S. Retrieved 2016-01-16. 
  21. 21.0 21.1 21.2 NASA, ESA and AURA/Caltech (1 June 2004). Hubble Refines Distance to Pleiades Star Cluster. Baltimore, Maryland USA: Hubblesite. http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/2004/20/image/a/. Retrieved 2016-01-13. 
[edit | edit source]