Position: Right Ascension: 19h 58m 21.9s Declination: 35o12'09" Magnitude: 8.8 Distance: 5600 light years Cygnus X-1 was discovered as an X-ray source in 1965. This binary system, distant of 2.5 kiloparsecs, consists of the O9.7 Iab type blue supergiant HDE 226868 and a compact object orbiting around with a period of 5.6 days, estimated to have a diameter of only about 9 miles. The mass of the unseen companion, significantly larger then 5 solar masses suggests that it is a black hole. Focused wind accretion from a primary star being extremely close to filling the Roche lobe drives the powerful source of the X-ray radiation. Cygnus X-1 is one of the brightest X-ray sources in the sky. . . .
Deneb (Alpha Cygni) is the brightest star in the constellation Cygnus and one of the vertices of the Summer Triangle. It is the 19th brightest star in the night sky, with an apparent magnitude of 1.25. A white supergiant, Deneb is also one of the most luminous stars known. It is, or has been, known by a number of other traditional names, including Arided and Aridif, but today these are almost entirely forgotten.
Deneb's absolute magnitude is about -8.5, placing it among the most luminous stars known. Estimates for Deneb's luminosity range from about 60,000 times the brightness of our Sun (if Deneb is 1600 light-years away) to 250,000 times the Sun's brightness (if 3,200 light-years away). Based on its temperature and luminosity and also on direct measurements of its tiny angular diameter (a mere 0.002 second of arc), Deneb appears to have a diameter about 200 to 300 times that of the Sun. It is one of the largest stars known and the most powerful class A star identified. Deneb's mass is estimated at 20 to 25 solar masses Deneb's solar wind causes it to lose mass at a rate of 0.8 millionth of a solar mass per year, a hundred thousand times the flow rate from the Sun.
Arcturus, the leading star of Bootes, the herdsman, is in the west tonight. The bright yellow-orange star moves across our line of sight faster than almost any other star. Even so, it is so distant that it takes centuries for the changing position to become obvious. . . . . From the northern hemisphere, the bright star with the greatest proper motion is yellow-orange Arcturus, which is visible in the west tonight. In fact, Arcturus is one of the stars that Edmund Halley used to make his discovery. He saw that the star had a slightly different position in his time from those recorded in ancient times -- a sign that the star was moving as it followed its own path through the galaxy.