Menu

Rigil Kentaurus

HIP 71681; Alpha1 Cen

Observable Double Star Excellent (74/100)

Sep: 20.9", Companion: mag 1.3

HIP 71681; Alpha1 Cen DoubleStar Cen Visible Level 1 Naked eye / Binoculars - Requires steady seeing
Star Map Add to List Add to Plan
Back to Catalog

Physical Properties

Magnitude -0.01
Spectral Type G2V
Star Color Orange (B-V 0.71)
Temperature 5794 K
Radius 1.3 R☉
Distance 4.0 ly

Position & Identifiers

RA 14h 39m 35.9s
Dec -60° 50' 07.0"
Constellation Cen
HR 5459
HIP 71681
Bayer Alpha1

Visibility

Set a location in User Settings to see visibility data.

Multiple Star System

Components 3
Component IDs AB
Separation 20.9″
Companion Mag 1.3
Position Angle
Star Colors A: Orange B: Orange

Eyepiece View

80x Dawes: 1.9″ TFOV: 0.6°
Realistic = true angular size
N E A (-0.0) B (1.3)

Sep: 20.9″ · PA: 5° · N up, E left

Resolved · Rayleigh: 2.3″ · Dawes: 1.9″ · Eff: 3.1″

Size Comparison

Stellar Lifecycle

Spectral Classification

Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram

Loading HR diagram…

Blackbody Spectrum

Stellar Absorption Spectrum

Simulated absorption spectrum based on spectral type. Hover over lines to identify elements.

Stellar Notes

AB 79.920y, a = 17.515". B = HR 5460, CPM with Proxima at 2.2d, discovered by Innes in 1915, a flare star, V 645 Cen, | 12.4 - 13.4p, 11.10V, +1.88(B-V), +2.05(R-I), M5.5Ve.
81.18y or 29.652d, K 5.0k/s, V0 -21.6k/s, msin3i 0.939, asini 1730.
Components A and B have about twice the metal abundance of the Sun and an age of about 6 billion years.
0.750".
Rigel Kentaurus; RIGIL KENT; Toliman.

Survey Image

Loading survey image…

About Rigil Kentaurus

Description

Alpha Centauri (Rigil Kentaurus) is the closest star system to the Sun at just 4.37 light-years away, located in the constellation Centaurus. The system consists of three stars: Alpha Centauri A (a G2V star very similar to the Sun), Alpha Centauri B (a slightly cooler K1V star), and the red dwarf Proxima Centauri, which at 4.24 light-years is technically the closest individual star. The two main stars orbit each other with a period of about 80 years, with a separation ranging from 11 to 36 AU.

Observing Tips

Visible only from latitudes south of about 29°N, Alpha Centauri appears as a brilliant point of magnitude -0.27 (combined light). A small telescope easily splits the pair into two dazzling components (A at mag 0.0, B at mag 1.3) when near maximum separation. Proxima Centauri, a faint magnitude 11 red dwarf, lies over 2 degrees away and requires a telescope and a finder chart. Best observed from March through September from southern latitudes.

History

Known since antiquity as one of the 'Pointers' to the Southern Cross. Its large proper motion was first measured by Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille in the 1750s. Thomas Henderson determined its parallax in 1832, making it one of the first stars to have its distance measured. In 2016, the discovery of Proxima Centauri b — an Earth-mass planet in the habitable zone — made headlines worldwide.

Fun Facts

Alpha Centauri A is sometimes called the Sun's twin — it has nearly the same spectral type, temperature, and luminosity. The system is the primary target of the Breakthrough Starshot initiative, which aims to send tiny light-sail spacecraft to reach it within a human lifetime. At current rocket speeds, a journey there would take over 70,000 years.