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Vega

Portrait of A Star We Thought We Knew (Science and Cosmos)

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Vega

De: Boris Kriger
Narrado por: Richard Bryce Wallis
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For half a century, Vega was the most trusted star in astronomy—the zero point of the brightness scale, the calibration standard for every major telescope, the benchmark of stellar normalcy. Then, in 2006, two independent teams of astronomers discovered that everything we believed about it was wrong. Vega is not a calm, slowly spinning star. It is a rapidly rotating, gravity-darkened, metal-poor enigma, spinning at ninety-three percent of the speed that would tear it apart—and it had been hiding in plain sight, concealed by a geometric accident so perfect that it fooled the finest instruments on Earth.

In Vega: Portrait of a Star We Thought We Knew, Boris Kriger tells the detective story behind one of the deepest puzzles in modern astrophysics. Drawing on a peer-reviewed research paper that develops and tests four competing hypotheses for Vega's anomalous properties, this book translates cutting-edge stellar physics into vivid, equation-free prose. From the centrifugal barriers of collapsing molecular clouds to the sinking of iron atoms through a stellar atmosphere, from the cultural mythology of the Tanabata festival to the engineering challenges of interstellar probes, Kriger weaves a narrative that is at once scientifically rigorous and deeply human.

Why is Vega's surface stripped of the very elements that form planets? How did it come to spin so close to self-destruction? Why does its debris disk show none of the planetary signatures found around the otherwise-identical star Fomalhaut? And what does a single observation—possibly already sitting in a data archive—have to tell us about the star's four-hundred-fifty-million-year history?

©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger
Astronomía y espacio Ciencia Física
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