Rigel in fiction


is one of the brightest stars in the sky, usually the brightest star in the constellation Orion. It is frequently mentioned in works of fiction.

The star Rigel

Rigel is a luminous blue supergiant of spectral type B8 Iae, in the constellation Orion. The star is actually a visual binary, with the secondary component Rigel B itself being a spectroscopic binary that has never been resolved visually, and which taken as a single source is 500 times dimmer and over 2200 AU from its overwhelming companion Rigel A. This irregular variable star is the most luminous in our local region of the Milky Way; at about 71 times the diameter of the Sun it would, if viewed from a hypothetical planet at a distance of 1 AU, subtend an angle of 35° in the sky—when rising or setting it would extend from the horizon almost halfway up the sky—and it would shine at a lethal magnitude of −38.
There is no evidence that the Rigel system hosts any extrasolar planets. However, several creators of works of science fiction have chosen to populate it with an unusually large family of worlds.
The star's name is a contraction of Riǧl Ǧawza al-Yusra, this being Arabic for left foot of the central one. Another Arabic name is رجل الجبار, riǧl al-ǧabbār, that is, the foot of the great one. It figures prominently in the mythologies of Egypt, China, Japan, and Oceania.

General uses of Rigel

Rigel may be referred to in fictional works for its metaphorical or mythological associations, or else as a bright point of light in the sky of the Earth, but not as a location in space or the center of a planetary system:
The following references refer to Rigel as a location in space or the center of a planetary system.

Literature

''Star Trek''

The items in this subsection all refer to works in the film, television, and print franchise originated by Gene Roddenberry. In the [|Star Trek] universe, Rigel lends its name to at least twelve planets—a large number for a fictional universe—many of which have been colonized by the Federation.
Not all of these worlds are in the Beta Orionis planetary system, and the name Rigel is used to describe at least one other star by some aliens. It is also unclear which, if any, of these bodies is home to the Rigellians, a reptilian race seen in ', and distinct from the "one-l" Rigelians of Rigel V.
Unlike many creators of works of science fiction, Star Trek eschews the use of common names for imaginary extrasolar worlds, instead consistently using the Roman numeral convention —and never the modern astronomical convention.