Psi Centauri, which is Latinized from ψ Centauri, is a binary star[10] system in the southern constellation of Centaurus. It is visible to the naked eye with a baseline apparent visual magnitude of +4.05.[2] The distance to this system is approximately 259light years based on parallax.[1] The radial velocity is poorly constrained, but it appears to be slowly drifting away from the Sun at the rate of +2km/s.[5]
A light curve for Psi Centauri, plotted from data published by Bruntt et al. (2006)[4]
This is a detached eclipsing binary system with the secondary eclipse being total.[4] The pair are orbiting each other with a period of 38.81days and an eccentricity of 0.55.[10] The brightness of the system dips by 0.28 and 0.16 magnitude during the two eclipses per orbit.[4] The system displays an infrared excess at a wavelength of 60μm, indicating the presence of a circumstellar debris disk with a temperature of 120K, orbiting at a distance of 64AU.[11]
The pair have a combined stellar classification of A0IV,[3] matching a white-hued A-type subgiant.[2] The two components appear to be at different evolutionary stages.[4] Both have high rotation rates, with projected rotational velocities over 120km/s.[7] The primary has 3.6 times the Sun's radius while the secondary is 1.8 times.[8] The primary showed evidence of pulsational behavior with 1.996 and 5.127 cycles per day,[4] which suggests it is a slowly pulsating B star.[7] But this remains unconfirmed as of 2017,[12] and the finding may instead be the result of instrumental error.[7]
Johnson, H. L.; etal. (1966), "UBVRIJKL photometry of the bright stars", Communications of the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, 4 (99): 99, Bibcode:1966CoLPL...4...99J.
Buscombe, W. (1962), "Spectral classification of Southern fundamental stars", Mount Stromlo Observatory Mimeogram, 4: 1, Bibcode:1962MtSOM...4....1B.
Bruntt, H.; etal. (September 2006), "Eclipsing binaries observed with the WIRE satellite. I. Discovery and photometric analysis of the new bright A0 IV eclipsing binary ψ Centauri", Astronomy and Astrophysics, 456 (2): 651–658, arXiv:astro-ph/0606551, Bibcode:2006A&A...456..651B, doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20065628, S2CID16701277.
Gontcharov, G. A. (November 2006), "Pulkovo Compilation of Radial Velocities for 35495 Hipparcos stars in a common system", Astronomy Letters, 32 (11): 759–771, arXiv:1606.08053, Bibcode:2006AstL...32..759G, doi:10.1134/S1063773706110065, S2CID119231169.
Gerbaldi, M.; etal. (June 1999), "Search for reference A0 dwarf stars: Masses and luminosities revisited with HIPPARCOS parallaxes", Astronomy and Astrophysics Supplement, 137 (2): 273–292, Bibcode:1999A&AS..137..273G, doi:10.1051/aas:1999248.
Mantegazza, L.; etal. (March 2010), "Spectroscopic search for g-mode pulsations in ψ Centauri", Astronomy and Astrophysics, 512: 5, Bibcode:2010A&A...512A..42M, doi:10.1051/0004-6361/200913013, A42.
Eker, Z.; etal. (April 2015), "Main-Sequence Effective Temperatures from a Revised Mass-Luminosity Relation Based on Accurate Properties", The Astronomical Journal, 149 (4): 16, arXiv:1501.06585, Bibcode:2015AJ....149..131E, doi:10.1088/0004-6256/149/4/131, S2CID118740259, 131.
"psi Cen". SIMBAD. Centre de données astronomiques de Strasbourg. Retrieved 2017-06-30.
Rhee, Joseph H.; etal. (May 2007), "Characterization of Dusty Debris Disks: The IRAS and Hipparcos Catalogs", The Astrophysical Journal, 660 (2): 1556–1571, arXiv:astro-ph/0609555, Bibcode:2007ApJ...660.1556R, doi:10.1086/509912, S2CID11879505.
Liakos, Alexios; Niarchos, Panagiotis (February 2017), "Catalogue and properties of δ Scuti stars in binaries", Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 465 (1): 1181–1200, arXiv:1611.00200, Bibcode:2017MNRAS.465.1181L, doi:10.1093/mnras/stw2756.
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