Star in the constellation Pavo
HD 164427 is a star with a likely red dwarf companion in the southern constellation of Pavo . It has an apparent visual magnitude of 6.88,[ 2] placing it just below the nominal limit for visibility with the typical naked eye. The annual parallax shift of 23.5 mas [ 1] yields a distance estimate of 139 light-years (43 parsecs ). It is moving further from the Earth with a heliocentric radial velocity of +3.4 km/s.[ 1]
This is an inactive [ 7] G-type main-sequence star given a stellar classification of G0+V by Gray et al. (2006),[ 3] although Evans et al. (1964) classified it as a subgiant star with luminosity class IV.[ 7] It is 6.6 billion years old with 1.125 times the mass of the Sun and 1.40 times the Sun's radius .[ 8] The star is somewhat over-luminous for its class,[ 7] radiating 2.33[ 2] times the Sun's luminosity from its photosphere at an effective temperature of 5,876 K.[ 3]
Companions
In 2001, a brown dwarf candidate companion was announced by Anglo-Australian Planet Search program. It was detected by the Doppler velocity technique with an echelle spectrograph attached to the 3.92m Anglo-Australian Telescope .[ 7] A magnitude 12.60 companion star designated HD 164427 B lies at an angular separation of 28.90″ along a position angle of 336°, as of 2010.[ 9] This is a suspected common proper motion companion with 52% of the Sun's mass[ 10] and a physical separation of as much as 1,090 AU .[ 7]
HD 164427 b was initially thought to be a brown dwarf based on its minimum mass of 46 times that of Jupiter .[ 7] In 2023, an astrometric orbit for this object was published using data from Gaia , showing its true mass to be 0.34 M ☉ , making it a likely red dwarf star.[ 5] This stellar companion orbits at nearly half an astronomical unit or Earth -to-Sun distance away from its primary. The angular separation between the two stars as viewed from Earth is 11.76 milliarcseconds . It takes 108.55 Earth days to orbit eccentrically around HD 164427. It has a very high semi-amplitude of almost 1400 m/s , because this is a very massive object which exerts strong gravitational pull on its tugging star.[ 7]
References
^ a b c d e f g h Brown, A. G. A. ; et al. (Gaia collaboration) (August 2018). "Gaia Data Release 2: Summary of the contents and survey properties" . Astronomy & Astrophysics . 616 . A1. arXiv :1804.09365 . Bibcode :2018A&A...616A...1G . doi :10.1051/0004-6361/201833051 . Gaia DR2 record for this source at VizieR .
^ a b c d Anderson, E.; Francis, Ch. (2012). "XHIP: An extended hipparcos compilation". Astronomy Letters . 38 (5): 331. arXiv :1108.4971 . Bibcode :2012AstL...38..331A . doi :10.1134/S1063773712050015 . S2CID 119257644 .
^ a b c Gray, R. O.; et al. (July 2006). "Contributions to the Nearby Stars (NStars) Project: Spectroscopy of Stars Earlier than M0 within 40 parsecs: The Northern Sample I". The Astronomical Journal . 132 (1): 161– 170. arXiv :astro-ph/0603770 . Bibcode :2006AJ....132..161G . doi :10.1086/504637 . S2CID 119476992 .
^ a b Holmberg, J.; et al. (July 2009). "The Geneva-Copenhagen survey of the solar neighbourhood. III. Improved distances, ages, and kinematics". Astronomy and Astrophysics Supplement Series . 501 (3): 941– 947. arXiv :0811.3982 . Bibcode :2009A&A...501..941H . doi :10.1051/0004-6361/200811191 . S2CID 118577511 .
^ a b c Unger, N.; Ségransan, D.; et al. (December 2023). "Exploring the brown dwarf desert with precision radial velocities and Gaia DR3 astrometric orbits". Astronomy & Astrophysics . 680 : A16. arXiv :2310.02758 . Bibcode :2023A&A...680A..16U . doi :10.1051/0004-6361/202347578 .
^ "HD 164427" . SIMBAD . Centre de données astronomiques de Strasbourg . Retrieved 2018-08-02 .
^ a b c d e f g Tinney, C. G.; et al. (2001). "First Results from the Anglo-Australian Planet Search: A Brown Dwarf Candidate and a 51 Peglike Planet" . The Astrophysical Journal . 551 (1): 507– 511. arXiv :astro-ph/0012204 . Bibcode :2001ApJ...551..507T . doi :10.1086/320097 . hdl :2299/138 . S2CID 7192024 .
^ Takeda, Genya; et al. (February 2007). "Structure and Evolution of Nearby Stars with Planets. II. Physical Properties of ~1000 Cool Stars from the SPOCS Catalog". The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series . 168 (2): 297– 318. arXiv :astro-ph/0607235 . Bibcode :2007ApJS..168..297T . doi :10.1086/509763 . S2CID 18775378 .
^ Mason, B. D.; et al. (2014). "The Washington Visual Double Star Catalog" . The Astronomical Journal . 122 (6): 3466. Bibcode :2001AJ....122.3466M . doi :10.1086/323920 .
^ Tokovinin, Andrei (April 2014). "From Binaries to Multiples. II. Hierarchical Multiplicity of F and G Dwarfs". The Astronomical Journal . 147 (4): 14. arXiv :1401.6827 . Bibcode :2014AJ....147...87T . doi :10.1088/0004-6256/147/4/87 . S2CID 56066740 . 87.
External links