Menu

Matar — Star in Pegasus

Eta Peg

Star Pegasus (Peg) Visible
Star Map
+ List + Plan

About Matar

Description

Matar, Eta Pegasi, is a bright-giant binary system about 215 light-years away in the constellation Pegasus. The primary is a G-type bright giant (G2 II-III) roughly 5 times the Sun's mass and 175 times its luminosity, accompanied by a closer F-type companion in a 813-day orbit. Matar marks one of the corners of the fainter Pegasus "neck," north of the Great Square. It shines at magnitude 2.94 and has a soft yellow-white color in binoculars.

Observing Tips

Matar is an easy naked-eye target in moderately dark skies, forming the northwestern corner of a prominent asterism above the Great Square of Pegasus. Use the line from Scheat (Beta Peg) northward toward Polaris; Matar sits roughly one-third of the way along. The stellar companion is far too close (tens of milliarcseconds) to split visually in any amateur telescope — Matar is effectively a single point of warm yellow light at the eyepiece. Best observed August through December when Pegasus dominates the evening sky.

History

The name Matar derives from the Arabic "al-Sa'd al-Matar," meaning "the lucky star of rain," an allusion to its heliacal rising at the start of the rainy season on the Arabian peninsula. The International Astronomical Union formally adopted the name in 2016 as part of the Working Group on Star Names standardization effort. Along with Scheat, Markab, and Algenib, Matar has been used for centuries as a celestial marker of Pegasus.

Fun Facts

Matar's G-type primary is one of the few bright giants close enough to have its angular diameter directly measured, yielding a radius of about 11 solar radii. The binary system radiates more than 250 times the Sun's total luminosity when both stars are combined. Matar's stellar wind is shedding mass at a rate roughly a million times higher than the Sun's — a preview of the star's future as it evolves toward its red-giant phase.

Observe

1Physical Properties

Magnitude 2.94
Spectral Type G2. II-III SB
Star Color Orange (B-V 0.86)
Distance 214 ly

2Position & Identifiers

RA 22h 43m 00.1s
Dec +30° 13' 17.0"
Constellation Pegasus (Peg)
HR 8650
HIP 112158
HD 215182
Bayer Eta
Flamsteed 44 Peg
Double Cat 16211

3How easy to spot?

Sign in and configure your equipment and default location to see a personalized row.
Equipment Bortle 3 Bortle 4 Bortle 5
Naked eye Easy Easy Easy
50mm finder Easy Easy Easy
150mm scope Easy Easy Easy
Easy Medium Hard Very hard Impossible

Bortle 3 = rural · 4 = outer suburbs · 5 = suburbs

4Visibility

Set a location in User Settings to see visibility data.

Best season Jul – Sep (peak: Aug)

Explore

6

Size Comparison

Querying VizieR for stellar data…
7

Compare Stars

8

Spectral Classification

9

Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram

Loading HR diagram…
10

Stellar Lifecycle

11

Blackbody Spectrum

12

Stellar Absorption Spectrum

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

13

Stellar Fusion

Discover

14Stellar Notes

ADS 16211A.
A* 2.94 G2II-III, 2.23y, a = 0.022". Speckle interferometry measures range from unresolved to sep. 0.059". BC, 10.0, | 10.0v sep. 0.2" at 90" from A, physical.
ADS 16211A, 818.0d, K 14.2k/s, V0 +4.3k/s, asini 158, vsini of G8 component 9k/s, F0 component =<50k/s.
Matar.
15

Light Travel Time Machine

16

Relativistic Travel

Survey Image

Loading survey image…

Nearby in the Sky

Other targets within a few degrees — pan your scope a little and keep exploring.

Visibility scores assume a 150 mm Newton at Bortle 4.

}