Alnasl / Gamma2 Sagittarii Facts (Type, Distance, Magnitude, Colour, Luminosity, Location & more)

Alnasl Facts

Alnasl Location

The location of the giant star in the night sky is determined by the Right Ascension (R.A.) and Declination (Dec.), these are equivalent to the Longitude and Latitude on the Earth. The Right Ascension is how far expressed in time (hh:mm:ss) the star is along the celestial equator. If the R.A. is positive then its eastwards. The Declination is how far north or south the object is compared to the celestial equator and is expressed in degrees. For Alnasl, the location is 18h 05m 48.52 and -30° 25` 25.1 .

Alnasl Radial Velocity and Proper Motion

Alnasl Proper Motion

All stars like planets orbit round a central spot, in the case of planets, its the central star such as the Sun. In the case of a star, its the galactic centre. The constellations that we see today will be different than they were 50,000 years ago or 50,000 years from now. Proper Motion details the movements of these stars and are measured in milliarcseconds. The star is moving -180.90 ± 0.11 milliarcseconds/year towards the north and -53.92 ± 0.18 milliarcseconds/year east if we saw them in the horizon.

Alnasl Radial Velocity

The Radial Velocity, that is the speed at which the star is moving away/towards the Sun is 22.00000 km/s with an error of about 2.90 km/s . When the value is negative then the star and the Sun are getting closer to one another, likewise, a positive number means that two stars are moving away. Its nothing to fear as the stars are so far apart, they won't collide in our life-time, if ever.

Alnasl Physical Properties

Alnasl Colour and Temperature

Based on the star's spectral type of K0III , Alnasl's colour and type is orange to red giant star. Based on the spectral type, we can deduce that the surface temperature of the star is in the order of between 3,500 and 5,000K based on the notes from Harvard University. To put this in context, the temperature of our Sun is about 5,778 Kelvin as said by Google.

Alnasl Luminosity

Luminosity is the amount of energy that a star pumps out and its relative to the amount that our star, the Sun gives out. The figure of 67.59 that I have given is based on the value in the Simbad Hipparcos Extended Catalogue at the University of Strasbourg from 2012.

Alnasl Radius

Alnasl estimated radius has been calculated as being 9.74 times bigger than the Sun. The Sun's radius is 695,800km, therefore the star's radius is an estimated 6,778,276.03.km. If you need the diameter of the star, you just need to multiple the radius by 2. However with the 2007 release of updated Hipparcos files, the radius is now calculated at being round 9.79. The figure is derived at by using the formula from SDSS rather than peer reviewed papers. It has been known to produce widely incorrect figures.

Alnasl Iron Abundance

Alnasl Iron Abundance is -0.26 with an error value of 9.99 Fe/H with the Sun has a value of 1 to put it into context. The value comes from the Hipparcos Extended Catalog.

Alnasl Apparent (Brightness) and Absolute Magnitudes

Alnasl apparent magnitude is 2.98, this is a measure of the brightness of the star as seen from Earth. Apparent Magnitude is also known as Visual Magnitude. If you used the 1997 Parallax value, Alnasl absolute magnitude is 0.63 If you used the 2007 Parallax value, Alnasl absolute magnitude is 0.62.

Absolute Magnitude is the apparent magnitude of the star from a distance of 10 parsecs or 32.6 light years. This assumes that there is nothing in between the object and the viewer such as dust clouds. To really compare the brightness of the star, it is best to use Absolute rather than Apparent Magnitude.

Magnitude, whether it be apparent/visual or absolute magnitude is measured by a number, the smaller the number, the brighter the Star is. Our own Sun is the brightest star and therefore has the lowest of all magnitudes, -26.74. A faint star will have a high number.

Alnasl Distance from Earth

Using the original Hipparcos data that was released in 1997, the parallax to the star was given as 33.94000 which means Alnasl distance from Earth is 96.10 light years away from Earth or 29.46 parsecs. If you want that in miles, it is about 564,935,898,362,944.92, based on 1 Ly = 5,878,625,373,183.61 miles.

In 2007, Hipparcos data was revised with a new parallax of 33.67000 which puts Alnasl distance from Earth as 96.87 light years or 29.70 parsecs. It should not be taken as though the star is moving closer or further away from Earth. It is purely that the distance was recalculated.

Using the 2007 distance, the star is roughly 6,126,022.06 Astronomical Units from the Earth/Sun give or take a few. An Astronomical Unit is the distance between Earth and the Sun. The number of A.U. is the number of times that the star is from the Earth compared to the Sun. The star's Galacto-Centric Distance is 7,370.00 Parsecs or 24,038.24 Light Years. The Galacto-Centric Distance is the distance from the star to the Centre of the Galaxy which is Sagittarius A*.

Alternative Names and Meanings

Alnasl Travel Time

The time it will take to travel to this star is dependent on how fast you are going. U.G. has done some calculations as to how long it will take going at differing speeds. A note about the calculations, when I'm talking about years, I'm talking non-leap years only (365 days).

The New Horizons space probe is the fastest probe that we've sent into space at the time of writing. Its primary mission was to visit Pluto which at the time of launch (2006), Pluto was still a planet.

Mach 1 is the speed of sound, Mach 2 is twice the speed of sound. Corncorde before it was retired was the fastest commercial airline across the Atlantic and only one that could do Mach 2.

DescriptionSpeed (m.p.h.)Time (years)
Walking416,240,658,212.81
Car120541,355,273.76
Airbus A38073688,264,446.81
Mach 1767.26984,667,349.85
Mach 21,534.5442,333,619.75
New Horizons33,0001,968,564.63
Speed of Light670,616,629.0096.87

Source of Information

The source of the information if it has a Hip I.D. is from Simbad, the Hipparcos data library based at the University at Strasbourg, France. Hipparcos was a E.S.A. satellite operation launched in 1989 for four years. The items in red are values that I've calculated so they could well be wrong.

Comparison Between Alnasl and The Sun

Below is a tabular view of the star facts with the values of the Sun on the right so you can compare against our own star, the Sun. The Sun is our nearest star and it is what keeps us warm and gives us light as we complete one orbit in 365.24 days.

If you want to see the comparison between Alnasl and our star, the Sun, you will need a screen of at least 800px across. Rotating your screen maybe sufficient to see the Stellar values for comparison.

Visual Facts


Primary NameAlnaslThe Sun
Alternative NamesGamma2 Sagittarii, Gam Sgr, Nushaba, Awal al Warida, Gamma2 Sgr, Nash, HD 165135, EPIC 220835250, TycId 7391-2710-1, HIP 88635, HR 6746, 28 G. Sagittarii, 10 Sagittarii, 10 Sgr, CD-30 15215Sol
Spectral TypeK0IIIG2V
Binary or Multiple Star SystemYesNo (officially)
Star TypeHigh proper-motion StarMain Sequence Star
ColourOrange to RedYellow (Atmosphere) / White (In Space)
GalaxyMilky WayMilky Way
ConstellationSagittarius N/A
Constellation's Main StarNoN/A
Absolute Magnitude 0.63 / 0.62 +4.38
Visual / Apparent Magnitude2.98-26.74
Naked Eye VisibleYesYes (But don't look at it)
Right Ascension (R.A.)18h 05m 48.52N/A
Declination (Dec.)-30° 25` 25.1N/A
Galactic Latitude-4.53795071 °
Galactic Longitude0.91903319 °
1997 Distance from Earth33.94000 Parallax (milliarcseconds)N/A
 96.10 Light Years8 Lt. Mins, 20 Lt. Sec.
 29.46 Parsecs0.000004848 Parsecs
 6,076,518.85 Astronomical Units1
2007 Distance from Earth33.67000 Parallax (milliarcseconds)N/A
 96.87 Light Years8 Lt. Mins 20 Lt. Secs.
 29.70 Parsecs0.000004848 A.U.
 6,126,022.06 Astronomical Units1 A.U.
Galacto-Centric Distance24,038.24 Light Years / 7,370.00 Parsecs27,000 Light Years / 8,278.2376 Parsecs
Proper Motion Dec.-180.90000 ± 0.11000 milliarcseconds/yearN/A
Proper Motion RA.-53.92000 ± 0.18000 milliarcseconds/yearN/A
B-V Index0.980.656 +/- 0.005
Radial Velocity22.00000 ± 2.90 km/s-
Iron Abundance (Fe/H)-0.2600 ± 9.990.14
Eccentricity0.19510-
Semi-Major Axis6677.0000000-
Luminosity (Lsun)67.5900000 1
Effective Temperature (Kelvin) 4888 5,772
Associated / Clustered StarsW SagittariiN/A

Companions (Multi-Star and Exoplanets) Facts


Exoplanet CountNone/Unaware8 (9 inc. Pluto)

Estimated Calculated Facts


Radius (x the Sun)9.74 / 9.79 1
Surface Temperature between 3,500 and 5,000K 5,778K

Sources and Links


SIMBAD SourceLink
EPIC SourceEpic Search
Sun FactsSource

Map of Alnasl's Location in Sagittarius


Map of Alnasl Location in Sagittarius)

The map was generated using Night Vision, an awesome free application by Brian Simpson.

Sagittarius's 5 Brightest Stars

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