Ancient
Egyptians may have chronicled the flickering of a star known as "the
Demon," perhaps the earliest known record of a variable star, astronomers
suggest.
The ancient Egyptians wrote calendars that
marked lucky and unlucky days. These predictions were based on astronomical and mythological events thought of as influential
for everyday life. The best preserved of these calendars is the Cairo Calendar,
a papyrus document dating between 1163 and 1271 B.C. The entry for each day is
prefaced by three hieroglyphics that indicate either good or bad luck, with the
characters often derived from events of mythology.
Astronomers at the University of Helsinki
in Finland had
previously discovered that some of the fortunate days recurred in a pattern,
every 29.6 days. This almost exactly matches the length of the lunar cycle —
the time between two
full moons. New moons may have been associated with bad luck.
Dimming
demon star
The scientists also detected another
pattern in the calendar, one that occurred every 2.85 days. Now the researchers
suggest this approximately matches regular dimming of Algol, "the Demon
Star," which lies approximately 93 light-years away in the constellation
Perseus as one of the eyes of Medusa's head. Its name comes from the Arabic
phrase, ra's al-ghul, which means "the demon's head."
Algol is the brightest known example of an
eclipsing binary system — the large bright member of the system, Beta Persei
A, regularly gets eclipsed by the dimmer Beta Persei B. From our point of view,
Algol dims by more than a factor of three for 10 hours at a time, dwindling
easily seen with the naked eye.
"It seems that the first observation
of a
variable star was made 3,000 years earlier than was previously
thought," said researcher Lauri Jetsu, an astronomer at the University
of Helsinki.
The Cairo Calendar describes how Wedjat,
the Eye of Horus,
regularly transformed from peaceful to raging, with good or bad influences on
life. Horus was the patron god of kings in ancient Egypt.
[Gallery: Sun Gods and Goddesses]
"The eclipse seems to be linked with
the lucky days, because it represents the pacification of the Eye of
Horus," researcher Sebastian Porceddu, an astronomer and Egyptologist at
the University of Helsinki,
told LiveScience. "A bright Eye of Horus meant it is raging and a threat
to mankind."
Pinch of salt?
"the Demon Star,"
In modern times, Algol actually dims every
2.867 days. The researchers suggest this discrepancy of 0.017 days — about 25
minutes — between ancient Egyptian and modern values for Algol's dimming may be
due to changes Algol may have undergone in the past three millennia. Matter is
apparently flowing from the dimmer member of this eclipsing binary to the
brighter star, altering their orbit so that eclipses now take longer than they
once did. If correct, this ancient Egyptian data could shed light on eclipsing binaries and the details of how such mass transfer
might affect their orbits.
"I believe that from now on,
Egyptologists will be keeping an eye on possible references to Algol
elsewhere," Porceddu said.
Other scientists are intrigued by the idea,
but remain skeptical.
"I think it's an interesting idea —
just how convincing it is is another issue," astrophysicist Peter Eggleton
at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, who did not take part in this
research, said in an interview.
This pattern
"does seem very plausibly attributed to Algol, and the suggestion that it
has slowed down by a small amount over 3,000 years is not unreasonable,"
Eggleton said. "But you do have to take the idea with a pinch of salt —
it's obviously difficult to pin down what people were really thinking 3,000
years ago."
No comments:
Post a Comment