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Its spectral class is A0V (Sirius, an A1V, is slightly less powerful) and it is firmly in the main sequence, fusing hydrogen to helium in its core. Since more powerful stars use their fusion fuel more quickly than smaller ones, Vega's life time is only one billion years, a tenth of our Sun's. Vega is two and a half times more massive than our Sun and burns at fifty times the power. Vega has a disk of dust and gas around it, discovered by the IRAS satellite in the mid 1980s. This either signifies planets or that planets that may soon form. The protoplanetary disk, as can be guessed from its name, is believed to be a precursor to the formation of planets but can persist long after planets have been formed if there are no gas giant planets such as Jupiter. In about 14,000 AD, Vega will become the North Star, owing to the precession of the equinoxes. See Polaris for more information. Professional astronomers have used Vega for the calibration of absolute photometric brightness scales. When the magnitude scale was fixed, Vega happened to be close to zero magnitude. Therefore the visual magnitude of Vega was decided to be, by definition, zero at all wavelengths. It has also a relatively flat electromagnetic spectrum in the visual region (wavelength range 350-850 nanometers, most of which can be seen with the human eye), so the flux densities are roughly equal, 2000-4000 Jy. The flux density of Vega drops rapidly in the infrared, and is near 100 Jy at 5 micrometres. The star has been the subject of many 'firsts' in Astronomy; in 1850 it became the first star to be photographed, and in 1872 the first to have its spectrum photographed. It was also debatably the first star to have its parallax measured, in the pioneering experiments of Friedrich Struve in 1837. Finally, it became the first star to have a car named after it, when Chevrolet launched the 'Vega' in 1971. The name Vega comes from the Arabic word waqi meaning "falling", applied via the phrase al nasr al waqi meaning "the falling vulture". As part of the constellation Lyra it represents a jewel set in the body of the harp.
Science fiction
Facts
Alternative and former names
Mythologyca:Vega de:Vega (Stern) es:Vega fa:ونَند fi:Vega fr:Véga he:וגה it:Vega ja:ベガ pl:Wega sv:Vega (stjärna)
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