t he r egulus s tar by: olivia aronoff-kinsella. r egulus is the brightest star in the constellation...

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THE REGULUS STAR By: Olivia Aronoff-Kinsella

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Page 1: T HE R EGULUS S TAR By: Olivia Aronoff-Kinsella. R EGULUS IS THE BRIGHTEST STAR IN THE CONSTELLATION L EO AND IS 77.5 LIGHT YEARS FROM EARTH

THE REGULUS STARBy: Olivia Aronoff-Kinsella

Page 2: T HE R EGULUS S TAR By: Olivia Aronoff-Kinsella. R EGULUS IS THE BRIGHTEST STAR IN THE CONSTELLATION L EO AND IS 77.5 LIGHT YEARS FROM EARTH

REGULUS IS THE BRIGHTEST STAR IN THE CONSTELLATION LEO AND IS 77.5 LIGHT YEARS FROM EARTH.

Page 3: T HE R EGULUS S TAR By: Olivia Aronoff-Kinsella. R EGULUS IS THE BRIGHTEST STAR IN THE CONSTELLATION L EO AND IS 77.5 LIGHT YEARS FROM EARTH

Size of Regulus

Regulus is approximately 4,384,737. It is 3.15 times larger than the sun km in diameter.

Page 4: T HE R EGULUS S TAR By: Olivia Aronoff-Kinsella. R EGULUS IS THE BRIGHTEST STAR IN THE CONSTELLATION L EO AND IS 77.5 LIGHT YEARS FROM EARTH

Temperature of Regulus

Regulus shines about 350 times brighter than the Sun! It’s temperature is about 15,100 degrees Celsius.

Page 5: T HE R EGULUS S TAR By: Olivia Aronoff-Kinsella. R EGULUS IS THE BRIGHTEST STAR IN THE CONSTELLATION L EO AND IS 77.5 LIGHT YEARS FROM EARTH

Color of Regulus: Regulus has many different colors. It is a bluish-white.

Page 6: T HE R EGULUS S TAR By: Olivia Aronoff-Kinsella. R EGULUS IS THE BRIGHTEST STAR IN THE CONSTELLATION L EO AND IS 77.5 LIGHT YEARS FROM EARTH

Regulus’ distance from our sun

Regulus is 77 light-years from our sun.

Page 7: T HE R EGULUS S TAR By: Olivia Aronoff-Kinsella. R EGULUS IS THE BRIGHTEST STAR IN THE CONSTELLATION L EO AND IS 77.5 LIGHT YEARS FROM EARTH

H-R DIAGRAM

Page 8: T HE R EGULUS S TAR By: Olivia Aronoff-Kinsella. R EGULUS IS THE BRIGHTEST STAR IN THE CONSTELLATION L EO AND IS 77.5 LIGHT YEARS FROM EARTH

CONSTELLATION LEO

Leo has been represented as a lion by numerous civilizations for thousands of years. One explanation is that the Sun was among its stars in Midsummer, and during this time the lions of the Egyptian desert left their accustomed haunts for the banks of the Nile, where they could find relief from the heat in the waters of the inundation. Pliny wrote that the Egyptians worshipped the stars of Leo because the rise of their great river was coincident with the Sun's entrance among them. Distinct reference is made to Leo in an inscription of the walls of the Ramesseum at Thebes, which, like the…

Page 9: T HE R EGULUS S TAR By: Olivia Aronoff-Kinsella. R EGULUS IS THE BRIGHTEST STAR IN THE CONSTELLATION L EO AND IS 77.5 LIGHT YEARS FROM EARTH

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Nile temples generally, was adorned with the animal's bristles, while on the planisphere of Dendera its figure is shown standing on an outstretched serpent. The Egyptian stellar Lion, however, comprised only a part of the modern constellation, and in the earliest records some of its stars were shown as a knife, whereas they now are as a sickle.

Page 10: T HE R EGULUS S TAR By: Olivia Aronoff-Kinsella. R EGULUS IS THE BRIGHTEST STAR IN THE CONSTELLATION L EO AND IS 77.5 LIGHT YEARS FROM EARTH

STAR LIFE CYCLE

Page 11: T HE R EGULUS S TAR By: Olivia Aronoff-Kinsella. R EGULUS IS THE BRIGHTEST STAR IN THE CONSTELLATION L EO AND IS 77.5 LIGHT YEARS FROM EARTH

HTTP://EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG/WIKI/REGULUS HTTP://EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG/WIKI/LEO_(CONSTELLATION) HTTP://BDAUGHERTY.TRIPOD.COM/GCSEASTRONOMY/IMAGES/HR.JPG HTTP://WWW.SPACE.COM/SCIENCEASTRONOMY/MM_REGULUS_STAR_050131.HTML HTTP://WWW.IR.ISAS.JAXA.JP/ASTRO-F/OUTREACH/STARLIFE_E.GIF