V1054 Ophiuchi

Coordinates: Sky map 16h 55m 32.0s, −08° 21′ 30″
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V1054 Ophiuchi
Observation data
Epoch J2000.0      Equinox J2000.0
Constellation Ophiuchus
Right ascension 16h 55m 32.0s
Declination −08° 21′ 30″
Other designations
V1054 Oph, BD−08°4352, GJ 644, HD 152751, HIP 82817, SAO 141439, Wolf 630[1]
Database references
SIMBADThe system
ABab
A
Bab
GJ 643
C (vB 8)
vB 8B (artifact)

V1054 Ophiuchi, together with the star Gliese 643, is a nearby quintuple star system, in constellation Ophiuchus at 21.05 light-years. It consists of five stars, all of which are red dwarfs. The alternative designation of Wolf 630 forms the namesake of a moving group of stars that share a similar motion through space.[2]

Overview

V1054 Ophiuchi/Gliese 643 has the largest number of stars of all star systems located within 10 pc from Earth.[3] It is also the nearest quintuple star system[4] (the next nearest star systems with at least five stars are GJ 2069 (quintuple)[3] at 41.8 light-years, and Castor[4] (sextuple) at 51.6 light-years), and only quintuple star system within 10 pc.[3][5]

The system consists of three widely separated parts:

  • close triple subsystem V1054 Ophiuchi A-Bab (including very close binary subsystem V1054 Ophiuchi Bab)
  • Gliese 643
  • V1054 Ophiuchi C (vB 8)

Hierarchy of the system is following:[4]

V1054 Ophiuchi/Gliese 643
V1054 Ophiuchi/Gliese 643 (without V1054 Ophiuchi C)
V1054 Ophiuchi A‑Bab
V1054 Ophiuchi Bab

V1054 Ophiuchi Ba

V1054 Ophiuchi Bb

V1054 Ophiuchi A

Gliese 643

V1054 Ophiuchi C (vB 8)

System's five components are:

Star Mass, M Spectral
class
Absolute
magnitude (MV)
Apparent
magnitude (V)
V1054 Ophiuchi A 0.4155 ± 0.0057[3] M3 V[3] 10.69 ± 0.02[4][note 1] 9.74[4]
V1054 Ophiuchi Ba 0.3466 ± 0.0047[3] M4 Ve[note 2] 11.29 ± 0.05[4][note 1] 10.34[4]
V1054 Ophiuchi Bb 0.3143 ± 0.0040[3] M4 Ve[note 2] 11.79 ± 0.05[4][note 1] 10.84[4]
Gliese 643 0.19[4] M3.5 V[3] 12.69[4] 11.74[4]
V1054 Ophiuchi C 0.08[4] M7.0 V[4] 17.75[4] 16.80[4]

The brightest and most massive of this five stars is V1054 Ophiuchi A. Close binary subsystem V1054 Ophiuchi B is more massive than V1054 Ophiuchi A, however, its total visual magnitude is 0.1 mag fainter than V1054 Ophiuchi A's visual magnitude.[4]

Total apparent magnitude of V1054 Ophiuchi A-Bab triple subsystem is 9.02.[4][6]

Despite V1054 Ophiuchi/Gliese 643 consists of small low-mass stars, system's total mass, due large number of components, exceeds Solar mass,[4] (it is about 1.35 M).

Distance

Currently, the most accurate distance estimate of V1054 Ophiuchi/Gliese 643 (apart from weighted mean distance, see below) is trigonometric parallax of V1054 Ophiuchi AB from YPC (Yale Parallax Catalog), 4th edition, published in 1995 (van Altena, Lee & Hoffleit):[7] 154.8 ± 0.6 mas, corresponding to a distance 6.460 ± 0.025 pc, or 21.07 ± 0.08 ly.

V1054 Ophiuchi/Gliese 643 distance estimates

V1054 Ophiuchi A-Bab:

Source Paper Parallax, mas Distance, pc Distance, ly Ref.
Woolley Woolley et al. 1970 156 ± 4 6.41 ± 0.17 20.9 ± 0.6 [8]
GJ, 3rd version Gliese & Jahreiß 1991 153.9 ± 2.6 6.50 ± 0.11 21.19 ± 0.36 [9]
YPC, 4th edition van Altena et al. 1995 154.8 ± 0.6 6.460 ± 0.025 21.07 ± 0.08 [7]
Hipparcos Perryman 1997 174.23 ± 3.90 5.74 ± 0.13 18.7 ± 0.4 [6]
Soederhjelm Soederhjelm 1999 155.63 ± 1.81 6.43 ± 0.08 20.96 ± 0.25 [10]
Hipparcos2 van Leeuwen 2007 161.41 ± 5.64 6.20 ± 0.22 20.21 ± 0.73 [11]

Gliese 643:

Source Paper Parallax, mas Distance, pc Distance, ly Ref.
Woolley Woolley et al. 1970 169 ± 5 5.92 ± 0.18 19.3 ± 0.6 [8]
GJ, 3rd version Gliese & Jahreiß 1991 171.9 ± 7.3 5.82 ± 0.26 19.0 ± 0.8 [9]
YPC, 4th edition van Altena et al. 1995 169.8 ± 6.6 5.89 ± 0.24 19.2 ± 0.8 [7]
Hipparcos Perryman 1997 153.96 ± 4.04 6.50 ± 0.18 21.2 ± 0.6 [6]
Hipparcos2 van Leeuwen 2007 148.92 ± 4.00 6.72 ± 0.19 21.9 ± 0.6 [11]

V1054 Ophiuchi C (vB 8):

Source Paper Parallax, mas Distance, pc Distance, ly Ref.
CTIOPI 1.5 m TSN 14 (Costa et al. 2005) 155.43 ± 1.33 6.43 ± 0.06 20.98 ± 0.18 [12]

The most accurate estimate is marked in bold.

Weighted mean distance

Weighted mean parallax,[13] considering YPC (V1054 Ophiuchi A-Bab and Gliese 643), Hipparcos (Soederhjelm — V1054 Ophiuchi A-Bab and van Leeuwen — Gliese 643) and CTIOPI (V1054 Ophiuchi C) data, is 154.96 ± 0.52 mas,[14] corresponding to a distance 6.453 ± 0.022 pc, or 21.05 ± 0.07 ly.

V1054 Ophiuchi A-Bab (inner triple subsystem)

V1054 Ophiuchi A-Bab is a close spectroscopic triple subsystem, consisting of brighter component V1054 Ophiuchi A and more massive binary subsystem V1054 Ophiuchi Bab, orbiting each other with period 627 days,[3][4] or 1.72 years.[4] V1054 Ophiuchi Bab components are orbiting each other with period 2.9655 days.[3][4] Both outer and inner orbits are nearly circular and, probably, coplanar[3][4] (in keeping with a general tendency of close triple systems).[3]

V1054 Ophiuchi A-Bab pair is also visually resolved (for nearly 50 years it was the shortest-period resolved by visual means binary, since its binarity was discovered by G. P. Kuiper in 1934),[4] whereas V1054 Ophiuchi Ba-Bb pair is still unresolved).[3][4][note 3]

Outer orbit (V1054 Ophiuchi A - V1054 Ophiuchi Bab):

Period P (yr) 1.717267 ± 0.000039[4]
Period P (days) 627.0 ± 0.2,[3]
627.232 ± 0.014[4]
Semi-major axis a, arcsec 0.2273 ± 0.0004,[3]
0.2256 ± 0.0011[4]
Semi-major axis a, a.u. 1.46683,[3][note 4]
1.45586[4][note 4]
Eccentricity e 0.042 ± 0.001,[3]
0.0433 ± 0.0018[4]
Inclination i, ° 160.3 ± 0.1,[3]
163.1 ± 1.6[4]
Longitude of the
periastron ω, °
306.0 ± 1.5,[3]
115.6 ± 5.1[4]
Position angle of the
ascending node Ω, °
-10.2 ± 0.2,[3]
163.2 ± 3.1[4]
Time of periastron
passage T0
MJD 53943. ± 3.,[3]
1988.143 ± 0.011[4]

The most accurate estimates are marked in bold.

Inner orbit (V1054 Ophiuchi Ba - V1054 Ophiuchi Bb):

Period P (days) 2.965509 ± 0.000006,[3]
2.965522 ± 0.000014[4]
Semi-major axis a, arcsec 0.00687[note 5]
Semi-major axis a, a.u. 0.04432[note 6]
Eccentricity e 0.0209 ± 0.0008,[3]
0.026 ± 0.007[4]
Inclination i, ° 164.18 ± 0.08,[3]
16.3 ± 0.3 or 163.7 ± 0.3[4]
Longitude of the
periastron ω, °
150.0 ± 3.0,[3]
166 ± 16[4]
Position angle of the
ascending node Ω, °
Time of periastron
passage T0
MJD 50919.48 ± 0.03,[3]
HJD 2447337.3 ± 0.14[4]

The most accurate estimates are marked in bold.

Distant components

Gliese 643

The projected separation of Gliese 643 from V1054 Ophiuchi A-Bab is 72 arcsec,[3] corresponding at 21.05 light-years to 465 a.u.

V1054 Ophiuchi C (vB 8)

vB 8 is the smallest, faintest, and most separated component of the V1054 Ophiuchi system. The projected separation of the red dwarf from the primary triple system is about 220 arcsec,[3][4] corresponding at 21.05 light-years to 1420 a.u. Since it is only three times larger than projected separation between Gliese 643 and V1054 Ophiuchi A-Bab, and such a small ratio should render triple system dynamically unstable, it was suggested,[4] that real separation of V1054 Ophiuchi C from V1054 Ophiuchi A-Bab is much larger, at least by factor two,[4] i. e. at least 2840 a.u.

In 1984, the apparent detection of an infrared source near vB 8 suggested it had a low mass companion. The low mass of this candidate led to speculation that it may be a brown dwarf; the first such to be detected. This discovery was later found to be spurious, but it produced much interest in this class of astronomical object.[15]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c From apparent magnitude and parallax.
  2. ^ a b Referred to entire V1054 Ophiuchi Bab subsystem.
  3. ^ At least it was not resolved by 2001.
  4. ^ a b Assuming weighted mean parallax 154.96 mas.
  5. ^ From masses, period and parallax.
  6. ^ From masses and period. According to Mazeh et al. 2001, of order of 0.05 a. u.

References

  1. ^ "HD 152751". SIMBAD. Centre de données astronomiques de Strasbourg. Retrieved 2019-03-25.
  2. ^ Bubar, Eric J.; King, Jeremy R. (August 2010). "Spectroscopic Abundances and Membership in the Wolf 630 Moving Group". The Astronomical Journal. 140 (2): 293–318. arXiv:1005.1205. Bibcode:2010AJ....140..293B. doi:10.1088/0004-6256/140/2/293.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Ségransan, D.; Delfosse, X.; Forveille, T.; Beuzit, J.-L.; Udry, S.; Perrier, C.; Mayor, M. (2000). "Accurate masses of very low mass stars. III. 16 new or improved masses". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 364: 665–673. arXiv:astro-ph/0010585. Bibcode:2000A&A...364..665S.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap Mazeh, Tsevi; Latham, David W.; Goldberg, Elad; Torres, Guillermo; Stefanik, Robert P.; Henry, Todd J.; Zucker, Shay; Gnat, Orly; Ofek, Eran O. (2001). "Studies of multiple stellar systems - IV. The triple-lined spectroscopic system V1054 Ophiuchi". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 325: 343–357. arXiv:astro-ph/0102451. Bibcode:2001MNRAS.325..343M. doi:10.1046/j.1365-8711.2001.04419.x.
  5. ^ RECONS CENSUS OF OBJECTS NEARER THAN 10 PARSECS
  6. ^ a b c Vizier, The Hipparcos and Tycho Catalogues (ESA 1997)
  7. ^ a b c VizieR, Yale Trigonometric Parallaxes, Fourth Edition (van Altena+ 1995)
  8. ^ a b Vizier, Stars within 25 pc of the Sun (Woolley+ 1970)
  9. ^ a b Vizier, Nearby Stars, Preliminary 3rd Version (Gliese+ 1991)
  10. ^ Vizier, Visual binary orbits and masses (Soederhjelm 1999)
  11. ^ a b Vizier, Hipparcos, the New Reduction (van Leeuwen 2007)
  12. ^ Costa, Edgardo; Méndez, René A.; Jao, W.-C.; Henry, Todd J.; Subasavage, John P.; Brown, Misty A.; Ianna, Philip A.; Bartlett, Jennifer (2005). "The Solar Neighborhood. XIV. Parallaxes from the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory Parallax Investigation-First Results from the 1.5 m Telescope Program". The Astronomical Journal. 130: 337–349. Bibcode:2005AJ....130..337C. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.573.7563. doi:10.1086/430473.
  13. ^ DENSE Project. 25 pc White Dwarf Sample (see formulae below)
  14. ^ THE ONE HUNDRED NEAREST STAR SYSTEMS brought to you by RECONS (Research Consortium On Nearby Stars)
  15. ^ Reid, Neill I.; Hawley, Suzanne L., New Light on Dark Stars: Red Dwarfs, Low-Mass Stars, Brown Dwarfs, Astronomy and Planetary Sciences, Springer Science & Business Media, 2013, p. 344, ISBN 1447136632.