Rasalgethi (Alpha, sometimes Alpha-1, Herculis) varies by almost a magnitude over the nearly 14 years of observation, the principal period 128 or so days. The scale on the bottom is the "Julian Date" of 2440000 plus the number that appears, where the Julian Date is the number of days since January 1, 4713 BC of the Julian Calendar and is commonly used for variable phenomena in astronomy. JD 2446500 corresponds to March 11, 1986. The left-hand scale expresses the difference between the apparent visual magnitude of Rasalgethi and a nearby comparison star. (From an article in the Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific by J. R. Percy, J. B. Wilson, and G. W. Henry.) |