Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
List of stars in Sagittarius
View on WikipediaThis is the list of notable stars in the constellation Sagittarius, sorted by decreasing brightness.
| Name | B | F | G. | Var | HD | HIP | RA | Dec | vis. mag. |
abs. mag. |
Dist. (ly) | Sp. class | Notes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ε Sgr | ε | 20 | 61 | 169022 | 90185 | 18h 24m 10.35s | −34° 23′ 03.5″ | 1.79 | −1.44 | 145 | B9.5III | Kaus Australis, Thalith al Warida[1] | |||
| σ Sgr | σ | 34 | 112 | 175191 | 92855 | 18h 55m 15.92s | −26° 17′ 47.7″ | 2.05 | −2.14 | 224 | B2.5V | Nunki, Thani al Sadira[1] | |||
| ζ Sgr | ζ | 38 | 130 | 176687 | 93506 | 19h 02m 36.72s | −29° 52′ 48.4″ | 2.60 | 0.42 | 89 | A3IV | Ascella, Thalith al Sadira[1] | |||
| δ Sgr | δ | 19 | 54 | 168454 | 89931 | 18h 20m 59.62s | −29° 49′ 40.9″ | 2.72 | −2.14 | 306 | K3III | Kaus Media (Kaus Medius, Kaus Meridionalis, Thani al Warida[1]) | |||
| λ Sgr | λ | 22 | 67 | 169916 | 90496 | 18h 27m 58.27s | −25° 25′ 16.5″ | 2.82 | 0.95 | 77 | K1IIIb | Kaus Borealis | |||
| π Sgr | π | 41 | 147 | 178524 | 94141 | 19h 09m 45.83s | −21° 01′ 24.7″ | 2.88 | −2.77 | 440 | F2II/III | Al Baldah,[2] Nir al Beldat, Lucida Oppidi[1] | |||
| γ2 Sgr | γ2 | 10 | 28 | 165135 | 88635 | 18h 05m 48.52s | −30° 25′ 25.1″ | 2.98 | 0.63 | 96 | K0III | Alnasl, Nash, Nushaba, Awal al Warida[1] | |||
| η Sgr | η | 46 | 167618 | 89642 | 18h 17m 37.73s | −36° 45′ 40.6″ | 3.10 | −0.20 | 149 | M2III | Rabi al Warida[1]irregular variable | ||||
| φ Sgr | φ | 27 | 95 | 173300 | 92041 | 18h 45m 39.35s | −26° 59′ 26.8″ | 3.17 | −1.08 | 231 | B8.5III | Awal al Sadira[1] | |||
| τ Sgr | τ | 40 | 139 | 177716 | 93864 | 19h 06m 56.44s | −27° 40′ 11.3″ | 3.32 | 0.48 | 120 | K1/K2III | Rabi al Sadira[1] | |||
| ξ2 Sgr | ξ2 | 37 | 120 | 175775 | 93085 | 18h 57m 43.78s | −21° 06′ 23.8″ | 3.52 | −1.77 | 372 | G8/K0II/III | ||||
| ο Sgr | ο | 39 | 136 | 177241 | 93683 | 19h 04m 40.93s | −21° 44′ 28.9″ | 3.76 | 0.61 | 139 | K0III | ||||
| μ Sgr | μ | 13 | 41 | 166937 | 89341 | 18h 13m 45.81s | −21° 03′ 31.8″ | 3.84 | >3000 | B2III: | Polis;[2] quintuple star; Algol variable | ||||
| ρ1 Sgr | ρ1 | 44 | 174 | 181577 | 95168 | 19h 21m 40.38s | −17° 50′ 50.1″ | 3.92 | 1.06 | 122 | F0III/IV | δ Sct variable | |||
| β1 Sgr | β1 | 168 | 181454 | 95241 | 19h 22m 38.29s | −44° 27′ 32.1″ | 3.96 | −1.36 | 378 | B9V | Arkab Prior | ||||
| α Sgr | α | 177 | 181869 | 95347 | 19h 23m 53.15s | −40° 36′ 56.3″ | 3.96 | 0.38 | 170 | B8V | Rukbat, Alrami | ||||
| ι Sgr | ι | 241 | 188114 | 98032 | 19h 55m 15.68s | −41° 52′ 06.3″ | 4.12 | 0.30 | 189 | K0III | |||||
| β2 Sgr | β2 | 172 | 181623 | 95294 | 19h 23m 13.06s | −44° 47′ 58.7″ | 4.27 | 1.13 | 139 | F2III | Arkab Posterior | ||||
| θ1 Sgr | θ1 | 256 | 189103 | 98412 | 19h 59m 44.17s | −35° 16′ 34.5″ | 4.37 | −2.02 | 617 | B2.5IV | |||||
| 62 Sgr | c | 62 | 265 | V3872 | 189763 | 98688 | 20h 02m 39.46s | −27° 42′ 35.6″ | 4.43 | −1.26 | 448 | M4III | V3872 Sgr; part of the Terebellum; irregular variable | ||
| υ Sgr | υ | 46 | 176 | 181615 | 95176 | 19h 21m 43.62s | −15° 57′ 18.0″ | 4.52 | −4.03 | 1672 | B2Vpe+A2IaS | the prototypical hydrogen-deficient binary; Be star | |||
| X Sgr | 3 | 2 | X | 161592 | 87072 | 17h 47m 33.63s | −27° 49′ 50.7″ | 4.53 | −3.06 | 1076 | F7II | Cepheid variable | |||
| 59 Sgr | b1 | 59 | 250 | 188603 | 98162 | 19h 56m 56.82s | −27° 10′ 11.5″ | 4.54 | −3.30 | 1207 | K3III | part of the Terebellum | |||
| HD 165634 | 31 | 165634 | 88839 | 18h 08m 04.96s | −28° 27′ 25.3″ | 4.55 | −0.59 | 348 | K0IIICNpvar | ||||||
| 52 Sgr | h2 | 52 | 207 | 184707 | 96465 | 19h 36m 42.39s | −24° 53′ 00.8″ | 4.59 | 0.77 | 189 | B8/B9V | ||||
| γ1 Sgr | γ1 | 26 | W | 164975 | 88567 | 18h 05m 01.22s | −29° 34′ 48.3″ | 4.66 | −4.36 | 2076 | G0Ib/II | Nash; W Sgr; Cepheid variable | |||
| HD 167818 | 51 | 167818 | 89678 | 18h 18m 03.19s | −27° 02′ 33.5″ | 4.66 | −2.00 | 700 | K3III | ||||||
| ω Sgr | ω | 58 | 248 | 188376 | 98066 | 19h 55m 50.23s | −26° 17′ 58.9″ | 4.70 | 2.82 | 78 | G3/G5III | part of the Terebellum; also named "Terebellum" | |||
| 4 Sgr | 4 | 15 | 163955 | 88116 | 17h 59m 47.56s | −23° 48′ 57.6″ | 4.74 | −0.89 | 436 | B9V | |||||
| HD 189831 | 268 | 189831 | 98761 | 20h 03m 33.41s | −37° 56′ 25.8″ | 4.77 | −0.70 | 405 | K4III | ||||||
| 21 Sgr | 21 | 65 | 169420 | 90289 | 18h 25m 21.04s | −20° 32′ 29.8″ | 4.81 | −1.50 | 597 | A1/A2V | |||||
| 60 Sgr | A | 60 | 255 | 189005 | 98353 | 19h 58m 57.18s | −26° 11′ 45.0″ | 4.84 | −0.25 | 340 | G8II/III | part of the Terebellum | |||
| HD 172910 | 91 | 172910 | 91918 | 18h 44m 19.36s | −35° 38′ 30.9″ | 4.86 | −0.84 | 451 | B2V | Nóngzhàngrén (農丈人)[3] | |||||
| ν1 Sgr | ν1 | 32 | 111 | 174974 | 92761 | 18h 54m 10.18s | −22° 44′ 41.4″ | 4.86 | −3.91 | 1852 | K1II | Ainalrami, Ain al Rami [2] | |||
| ψ Sgr | ψ | 42 | 155 | 179950 | 94643 | 19h 15m 32.40s | −25° 15′ 23.8″ | 4.86 | −0.16 | 330 | K0/K1III+.. | ||||
| 56 Sgr | f | 56 | 229 | 186648 | 97290 | 19h 46m 21.82s | −19° 45′ 39.2″ | 4.87 | 0.88 | 205 | K0III | ||||
| 43 Sgr | d | 43 | 160 | 180540 | 94820 | 19h 17m 38.09s | −18° 57′ 10.4″ | 4.88 | −1.20 | 535 | K0III | ||||
| 1 Sgr | 11 | 40 | 166464 | 89153 | 18h 11m 43.33s | −23° 42′ 04.2″ | 4.96 | 0.59 | 244 | K0III | |||||
| HD 190056 | 270 | 190056 | 98842 | 20h 04m 19.56s | −32° 03′ 22.6″ | 4.99 | 0.00 | 324 | K1III/IV | ||||||
| 14 G. Sgr | 14 | 163755 | 88060 | 17h 59m 05.28s | −30° 15′ 10.8″ | 5.00 | −2.29 | 934 | K5/M0III | ||||||
| ν2 Sgr | ν2 | 35 | 113 | 175190 | 92845 | 18h 55m 07.07s | −22° 40′ 16.5″ | 5.00 | 0.41 | 270 | K1Ib/II | Ain al Rami [2] | |||
| 61 Sgr | g | 61 | 253 | 188899 | 98258 | 19h 57m 57.02s | −15° 29′ 28.5″ | 5.01 | 0.25 | 292 | A2V | ||||
| ξ1 Sgr | ξ1 | 36 | 119 | 175687 | 93057 | 18h 57m 20.48s | −20° 39′ 22.8″ | 5.02 | −5.92 | 5015 | B9.5Ib | ||||
| χ1 Sgr | χ1 | 47 | 181 | 182369 | 95477 | 19h 25m 16.45s | −24° 30′ 30.4″ | 5.02 | 0.87 | 221 | A4IV/V | Namalsadirah III | |||
| 55 Sgr | e2 | 55 | 225 | 186005 | 96950 | 19h 42m 31.09s | −16° 07′ 26.3″ | 5.06 | 1.42 | 175 | F3IV/V | On 12 January 2006 it was occulted by Venus, but Venus was not visible.[4]: 164 | |||
| 76 G. Sgr | 76 | 170680 | 90806 | 18h 31m 26.30s | −18° 24′ 09.5″ | 5.12 | 1.04 | 213 | B9/B9.5V | ||||||
| 29 Sgr | 29 | 104 | 174116 | 92390 | 18h 49m 40.11s | −20° 19′ 29.1″ | 5.22 | −1.59 | 749 | K2III | |||||
| 77 G. Sgr | 77 | 171034 | 91014 | 18h 33m 57.76s | −33° 00′ 59.5″ | 5.28 | −3.90 | 2233 | B2III/IV | ||||||
| 15 Sgr | 15 | 43 | 167264 | 89439 | 18h 15m 12.91s | −20° 43′ 41.8″ | 5.29 | B0/1Ia/ab | |||||||
| 54 Sgr | e1 | 54 | 221 | 185644 | 96808 | 19h 40m 43.34s | −16° 17′ 35.3″ | 5.30 | 0.92 | 245 | K1III | ||||
| θ2 Sgr | θ2 | 256 | 189118 | 98421 | 19h 59m 51.28s | −34° 41′ 51.5″ | 5.30 | 1.89 | 157 | A4/A5IV | |||||
| V3961 Sgr | 235 | V3961 | 187474 | 97749 | 19h 51m 50.59s | −39° 52′ 27.6″ | 5.32 | 0.24 | 339 | A0p | α² CVn variable | ||||
| HR 7703 | 279 | 191408 | 99461 | 20h 11m 11.61s | −36° 05′ 50.6″ | 5.32 | 6.41 | 20 | K2V | nearby binary star | |||||
| V4050 Sgr | 59 | V4050 | 168733 | 90074 | 18h 22m 53.08s | −36° 40′ 10.2″ | 5.33 | −1.06 | 619 | B7Ib/II | α² CVn variable | ||||
| 7 Sgr | 7 | 20 | 164584 | 88380 | 18h 02m 51.10s | −24° 16′ 56.7″ | 5.37 | −2.28 | 1105 | F2/F3II/III | |||||
| 75 G. Sgr | 75 | 170479 | 90763 | 18h 31m 04.85s | −32° 59′ 20.4″ | 5.37 | 0.22 | 350 | A5V | ||||||
| 28 Sgr | 28 | 99 | 173460 | 92111 | 18h 46m 20.59s | −22° 23′ 31.9″ | 5.37 | −2.60 | 1278 | K5III | |||||
| χ3 Sgr | χ3 | 49 | 182 | 182416 | 95503 | 19h 25m 29.67s | −23° 57′ 44.7″ | 5.45 | −0.50 | 505 | K3III | ||||
| 193 G. Sgr | 193 | 183275 | 95865 | 19h 29m 52.17s | −26° 59′ 07.8″ | 5.46 | 1.00 | 254 | K1/K2III | ||||||
| 212 G. Sgr | 212 | 184985 | 96536 | 19h 37m 34.48s | −14° 18′ 05.2″ | 5.46 | 3.01 | 101 | F7V | ||||||
| 14 Sgr | 14 | 42 | 167036 | 89369 | 18h 14m 15.91s | −21° 42′ 47.2″ | 5.49 | −0.46 | 505 | K2III | |||||
| 24 Sgr | 24 | 78 | 171115 | 91004 | 18h 33m 53.49s | −24° 01′ 56.2″ | 5.49 | −4.62 | 3432 | K3III | |||||
| 134 G. Sgr | 134 | 177074 | 93667 | 19h 04m 25.06s | −31° 02′ 49.3″ | 5.49 | −0.63 | 546 | A0V | ||||||
| 226 G. Sgr | 226 | 186185 | 97063 | 19h 43m 33.45s | −15° 28′ 10.8″ | 5.49 | 2.67 | 120 | F5V | ||||||
| 126 G. Sgr | 126 | 176162 | 93225 | 18h 59m 23.80s | −12° 50′ 25.7″ | 5.51 | −0.48 | 514 | B4V | ||||||
| 153 G. Sgr | 153 | 179497 | 94437 | 19h 13m 15.52s | −12° 16′ 57.0″ | 5.51 | −0.68 | 565 | K3III | ||||||
| 228 G. Sgr | 228 | 186500 | 97260 | 19h 46m 01.22s | −31° 54′ 30.7″ | 5.51 | −0.61 | 545 | B8III | ||||||
| 32 G. Sgr | 32 | 165687 | 88816 | 18h 07m 48.40s | −17° 09′ 15.5″ | 5.52 | 1.10 | 249 | K0III | ||||||
| 60 G. Sgr | 60 | 168838 | 90124 | 18h 23m 28.82s | −36° 14′ 16.8″ | 5.52 | 0.57 | 319 | K0III | ||||||
| 37 G. Sgr | 37 | 166023 | 89020 | 18h 10m 05.81s | −30° 43′ 43.0″ | 5.53 | 0.31 | 360 | K1III + (F) | ||||||
| 114 G. Sgr | 114 | 175317 | 92882 | 18h 55m 31.02s | −16° 22′ 34.3″ | 5.56 | 3.03 | 104 | F5/F6IV/V | ||||||
| V4024 Sgr | 144 | V4024 | 178175 | 93996 | 19h 08m 16.70s | −19° 17′ 25.0″ | 5.56 | −2.80 | 1531 | B2V | γ Cas variable; Be star | ||||
| 50 Sgr | 50 | 185 | 182629 | 95564 | 19h 26m 19.13s | −21° 46′ 36.1″ | 5.57 | −0.59 | 556 | K1/K2III | |||||
| 18 Sgr | 18 | 63 | 169233 | 90260 | 18h 25m 01.51s | −30° 45′ 23.0″ | 5.58 | −0.93 | 653 | K0III | |||||
| 162 G. Sgr | 162 | 180885 | 94986 | 19h 19m 39.99s | −35° 25′ 17.1″ | 5.59 | −3.17 | 1842 | B4III | ||||||
| 165 G. Sgr | 165 | 181240 | 95077 | 19h 20m 38.16s | −22° 24′ 09.4″ | 5.59 | 1.81 | 186 | A6:m... | ||||||
| κ1 Sgr | κ1 | 292 | 193571 | 100469 | 20h 22m 27.48s | −42° 02′ 57.7″ | 5.60 | 1.23 | 244 | A0V | |||||
| 74 G. Sgr | 74 | 170433 | 90687 | 18h 30m 11.84s | −18° 43′ 42.9″ | 5.63 | 0.86 | 293 | K0III | ||||||
| 131 G. Sgr | 131 | 176704 | 93498 | 19h 02m 27.69s | −24° 50′ 47.0″ | 5.63 | 0.99 | 276 | K2III | ||||||
| 51 Sgr | h1 | 51 | 204 | V5548 | 184552 | 96406 | 19h 36m 01.65s | −24° 43′ 08.5″ | 5.64 | 0.89 | 290 | A1m... | V5548 Sgr; δ Sct variable | ||
| κ2 Sgr | κ2 | 294 | 193807 | 100591 | 20h 23m 53.19s | −42° 25′ 22.5″ | 5.64 | 0.36 | 370 | A3V | |||||
| 262 G. Sgr | 262 | 189245 | 98470 | 20h 00m 20.16s | −33° 42′ 09.9″ | 5.65 | 4.05 | 68 | F7V | ||||||
| 186 G. Sgr | 186 | 182681 | 95619 | 19h 26m 56.47s | −29° 44′ 35.2″ | 5.66 | 1.46 | 225 | B8/B9V | ||||||
| 209 G. Sgr | 209 | 184835 | 96496 | 19h 37m 03.33s | −18° 13′ 51.7″ | 5.66 | 0.00 | 442 | K0III | ||||||
| 33 Sgr | 33 | 110 | 174947 | 92747 | 18h 54m 00.09s | −21° 21′ 35.3″ | 5.68 | −2.95 | 1734 | G8/K0II | |||||
| 63 Sgr | 63 | 266 | 189741 | 98633 | 20h 01m 58.58s | −13° 38′ 14.1″ | 5.69 | 0.80 | 309 | A1IV | |||||
| 189 G. Sgr | 189 | 183007 | 95823 | 19h 29m 23.77s | −43° 26′ 41.7″ | 5.70 | 1.91 | 187 | Am | ||||||
| 187 G. Sgr | 187 | 182645 | 95557 | 19h 26m 11.03s | −15° 03′ 11.7″ | 5.71 | −1.40 | 862 | B7IV | ||||||
| 21 G. Sgr | 21 | 164402 | 88298 | 18h 01m 54.38s | −22° 46′ 49.0″ | 5.72 | B0Iab... | ||||||||
| 184 G. Sgr | 184 | 182477 | 95485 | 19h 25m 21.56s | −13° 53′ 50.2″ | 5.72 | −1.01 | 723 | K2III | ||||||
| 12 G. Sgr | 12 | 163652 | 88038 | 17h 58m 55.68s | −36° 51′ 30.3″ | 5.74 | 0.49 | 365 | G8III | ||||||
| 10 G. Sgr | 10 | 163318 | 87836 | 17h 56m 41.82s | −28° 03′ 55.3″ | 5.76 | 2.25 | 164 | A7III/IV | ||||||
| Y Sgr | 57 | Y | 168608 | 89968 | 18h 21m 22.99s | −18° 51′ 35.9″ | 5.76 | −2.23 | 1294 | F8II | |||||
| 84 G. Sgr | 84 | 171961 | 91405 | 18h 38m 30.72s | −23° 30′ 17.4″ | 5.78 | 0.01 | 465 | B8III | ||||||
| 152 G. Sgr | 152 | 179323 | 94434 | 19h 13m 13.67s | −25° 54′ 24.3″ | 5.79 | −3.27 | 2117 | K2III | ||||||
| 259 G. Sgr | 259 | 189198 | 98512 | 20h 00m 48.32s | −45° 06′ 46.6″ | 5.80 | 0.59 | 359 | A8III | ||||||
| 50 G. Sgr | 50 | 167720 | 89609 | 18h 17m 11.63s | −17° 22′ 25.9″ | 5.81 | −1.72 | 1045 | K2III | ||||||
| 94 G. Sgr | 94 | 173117 | 91974 | 18h 44m 49.60s | −25° 00′ 39.1″ | 5.82 | −1.11 | 793 | B8III | ||||||
| ρ2 Sgr | ρ2 | 45 | 175 | 181645 | 95188 | 19h 21m 50.83s | −18° 18′ 29.4″ | 5.84 | 0.63 | 359 | K0III | ||||
| HD 172051 | 86 | 172051 | 91438 | 18h 38m 53.45s | −21° 03′ 05.4″ | 5.85 | 5.28 | 42 | G5V | ||||||
| 296 G. Sgr | 296 | 194215 | 100738 | 20h 25m 26.82s | −28° 39′ 47.8″ | 5.86 | −0.24 | 541 | G8II/III | ||||||
| 57 Sgr | 57 | 238 | 187739 | 97783 | 19h 52m 12.01s | −19° 02′ 41.5″ | 5.88 | 0.98 | 312 | K0III | |||||
| 9 Sgr | 9 | 24 | 164794 | 88469 | 18h 03m 52.44s | −24° 21′ 38.6″ | 5.89 | −5.01 | 4939 | O6Vf | |||||
| V4089 Sgr | 201 | V4089 | 184035 | 96234 | 19h 34m 08.48s | −40° 02′ 04.7″ | 5.89 | 0.26 | 435 | A5IV-III | Algol variable | ||||
| HD 169830 | 66 | 169830 | 90485 | 18h 27m 49.48s | −29° 49′ 00.8″ | 5.90 | 3.10 | 118 | F8V | has two planets (b & c) | |||||
| 116 G. Sgr | 116 | 175360 | 92931 | 18h 56m 00.67s | −23° 10′ 25.4″ | 5.91 | −1.27 | 891 | B6III | ||||||
| 180 G. Sgr | 180 | 182286 | 95456 | 19h 25m 04.05s | −29° 18′ 33.2″ | 5.91 | 1.32 | 270 | K3III | ||||||
| 83 G. Sgr | 83 | 171856 | 91347 | 18h 37m 54.43s | −21° 23′ 51.2″ | 5.93 | 1.01 | 314 | A5IV | ||||||
| 138 G. Sgr | 138 | 177517 | 93763 | 19h 05m 41.18s | −15° 39′ 37.4″ | 5.93 | −1.20 | 869 | B8IIIsp... | ||||||
| 29 G. Sgr | 29 | 165185 | 88694 | 18h 06m 23.64s | −36° 01′ 11.3″ | 5.94 | 4.74 | 57 | G3V | ||||||
| 260 G. Sgr | 260 | 189195 | 98461 | 20h 00m 15.92s | −37° 42′ 06.2″ | 5.95 | 1.02 | 316 | G8/K0III | ||||||
| 16 Sgr | 16 | 44 | 167263 | 89440 | 18h 15m 12.97s | −20° 23′ 16.7″ | 5.96 | B0.5Ib/II | |||||||
| 132 G. Sgr | 132 | 176884 | 93537 | 19h 03m 03.80s | −19° 14′ 44.4″ | 5.96 | −2.33 | 1482 | K0II/III | ||||||
| 218 G. Sgr | 218 | 185467 | 96760 | 19h 40m 07.15s | −23° 25′ 44.6″ | 5.97 | 0.45 | 415 | K0III | ||||||
| 25 G. Sgr | 25 | 164870 | 88550 | 18h 04m 50.39s | −35° 54′ 04.9″ | 5.98 | 0.79 | 355 | K2III | ||||||
| 13 G. Sgr | 13 | 163685 | 88012 | 17h 58m 39.05s | −28° 45′ 32.7″ | 5.99 | −2.06 | 1331 | B3II/III | ||||||
| 141 G. Sgr | 141 | 177817 | 93855 | 19h 06m 52.12s | −16° 13′ 45.2″ | 6.00 | −1.19 | 893 | B7V | ||||||
| 264 G. Sgr | 264 | 189561 | 98575 | 20h 01m 23.84s | −22° 44′ 14.2″ | 6.01 | 1.10 | 313 | K0III | ||||||
| RS Sgr | 47 | RS | 167647 | 89637 | 18h 17m 36.25s | −34° 06′ 26.0″ | 6.03 | −1.13 | 881 | B3/B4IV/V | 47 G. Sgr | ||||
| 179 G. Sgr | 179 | 182180 | 95408 | 19h 24m 30.17s | −27° 51′ 57.3″ | 6.03 | −2.00 | 1315 | B2Vnn | ||||||
| 233 G. Sgr | 233 | 187098 | 97515 | 19h 49m 11.53s | −28° 47′ 19.4″ | 6.04 | 2.75 | 149 | F3V | ||||||
| V4387 Sgr | 45 | V4387 | 167356 | 89470 | 18h 15m 30.76s | −18° 39′ 41.7″ | 6.05 | −4.35 | 3928 | Ap Si | α² CVn variable | ||||
| 140 G. Sgr | 140 | 177846 | 93925 | 19h 07m 30.84s | −28° 38′ 12.4″ | 6.05 | −1.19 | 916 | K3III | ||||||
| 295 G. Sgr | 295 | 194184 | 100764 | 20h 25m 48.01s | −40° 47′ 45.5″ | 6.08 | 0.91 | 352 | K3III | ||||||
| 121 G. Sgr | 121 | 175794 | 93134 | 18h 58m 21.31s | −31° 02′ 09.1″ | 6.09 | 0.46 | 436 | K3III | ||||||
| 163 G. Sgr | 163 | 180928 | 94929 | 19h 19m 00.15s | −15° 32′ 09.2″ | 6.09 | 0.09 | 517 | K4III | ||||||
| 148 G. Sgr | 148 | 178555 | 94144 | 19h 09m 48.13s | −19° 48′ 12.4″ | 6.11 | 0.71 | 392 | K1III | ||||||
| 197 G. Sgr | 197 | 183545 | 95965 | 19h 30m 54.04s | −21° 18′ 43.9″ | 6.11 | −1.78 | 1235 | A2V | ||||||
| 232 G. Sgr | 232 | 186984 | 97423 | 19h 48m 03.01s | −13° 42′ 12.8″ | 6.11 | 2.13 | 204 | A6:IIIm... | ||||||
| 258 G. Sgr | 258 | 189140 | 98485 | 20h 00m 26.47s | −43° 02′ 36.0″ | 6.11 | −1.53 | 1101 | M0III | ||||||
| 108 G. Sgr | 108 | 174631 | 92643 | 18h 52m 37.05s | −29° 22′ 46.4″ | 6.12 | 0.22 | 493 | K1III | ||||||
| 38 G. Sgr | 38 | 166197 | 89086 | 18h 10m 55.35s | −33° 48′ 00.2″ | 6.13 | B2II/III | ||||||||
| 178 G. Sgr | 178 | 181925 | 95396 | 19h 24m 21.45s | −43° 43′ 19.4″ | 6.13 | −0.12 | 579 | M1/M2III | ||||||
| V4333 Sgr | 208 | V4333 | 184705 | 96440 | 19h 36m 26.06s | −18° 51′ 10.4″ | 6.13 | 1.80 | 240 | F0V | δ Sct variable | ||||
| 62 G. Sgr | 62 | 169236 | 90290 | 18h 25m 21.70s | −35° 59′ 31.3″ | 6.14 | 0.39 | 461 | K0III | ||||||
| 123 G. Sgr | 123 | 175892 | 93140 | 18h 58m 24.83s | −22° 31′ 46.3″ | 6.14 | 1.67 | 255 | A1V | ||||||
| 224 G. Sgr | 224 | 186042 | 97067 | 19h 43m 37.62s | −37° 32′ 19.4″ | 6.14 | −0.95 | 853 | B8IV/V | ||||||
| 58 G. Sgr | 58 | 168646 | 90012 | 18h 22m 00.13s | −28° 25′ 47.8″ | 6.15 | 0.33 | 475 | A3III | ||||||
| 3 G. Sgr | 3 | 161664 | 87099 | 17h 47m 45.60s | −22° 28′ 40.0″ | 6.18 | −2.54 | 1811 | G3/G5Ib | ||||||
| 63 Oph | (63) | 8 | 162978 | 87706 | 17h 54m 54.04s | −24° 53′ 13.5″ | 6.18 | O7/O8III | |||||||
| 49 G. Sgr | 49 | 167666 | 89622 | 18h 17m 24.08s | −28° 39′ 07.3″ | 6.18 | 0.75 | 397 | A5V | ||||||
| 70 Sgr | 56 | V4028 | 168574 | 89980 | 18h 21m 31.36s | −24° 54′ 55.0″ | 6.19 | −1.57 | 1164 | M3III | V4028 Sgr | ||||
| 71 G. Sgr | 71 | 169990 | 90494 | 18h 27m 56.48s | −17° 48′ 01.3″ | 6.19 | −0.01 | 567 | B8III/IV | ||||||
| 280 G. Sgr | 280 | 191584 | 99570 | 20h 12m 23.86s | −42° 46′ 47.3″ | 6.20 | 1.08 | 344 | K2III | ||||||
| 16 G. Sgr | 16 | 164028 | 88125 | 18h 00m 00.08s | −20° 20′ 22.2″ | 6.22 | −0.88 | 858 | K0III | ||||||
| HD 165516 | 30 | 165516 | 88760 | 18h 07m 11.35s | −21° 26′ 38.2″ | 6.22 | −4.35 | 4234 | O+... | ||||||
| 26 Sgr | 26 | 88 | 172546 | 91689 | 18h 41m 51.61s | −23° 50′ 00.1″ | 6.22 | 2.20 | 208 | A3m... | |||||
| V4200 Sgr | 242 | V4200 | 188088 | 97944 | 19h 54m 17.82s | −23° 56′ 24.3″ | 6.22 | 5.46 | 46 | K3/K4V | BY Draconis variable | ||||
| 297 G. Sgr | 297 | 194433 | 100852 | 20h 26m 53.14s | −37° 24′ 09.5″ | 6.24 | 3.25 | 129 | K1IV | ||||||
| 128 G. Sgr | 128 | 176537 | 93423 | 19h 01m 37.74s | −22° 41′ 43.3″ | 6.25 | −2.10 | 1523 | K3III | ||||||
| V5652 Sgr | 157 | V5652 | 179949 | 94645 | 19h 15m 33.15s | −24° 10′ 44.8″ | 6.25 | 4.09 | 88 | F8V | Gumala; has a planet (b) | ||||
| V4199 Sgr | 173 | V4199 | 181558 | 95159 | 19h 21m 37.11s | −19° 14′ 03.9″ | 6.25 | −0.34 | 679 | B5III | |||||
| 6 Sgr | 6 | 18 | 164358 | 88258 | 18h 01m 23.12s | −17° 09′ 24.7″ | 6.27 | −2.50 | 1852 | K2III | |||||
| 206 G. Sgr | 206 | 184574 | 96365 | 19h 35m 33.46s | −12° 15′ 11.0″ | 6.27 | 1.14 | 346 | K0III | ||||||
| 254 G. Sgr | 254 | 188981 | 98351 | 19h 58m 56.37s | −30° 32′ 17.7″ | 6.27 | 2.18 | 214 | K1III | ||||||
| 69 G. Sgr | 69 | 169938 | 90510 | 18h 28m 06.17s | −26° 45′ 25.8″ | 6.28 | 1.69 | 269 | A3/A4V | ||||||
| 109 G. Sgr | 109 | 174630 | 92635 | 18h 52m 28.32s | −26° 39′ 02.2″ | 6.28 | 0.91 | 386 | G8/K0III | ||||||
| V4198 Sgr | 142 | 177863 | 93887 | 19h 07m 08.33s | −18° 44′ 17.3″ | 6.28 | −0.45 | 724 | B8V | ||||||
| 150 G. Sgr | 150 | 178840 | 94272 | 19h 11m 18.80s | −29° 30′ 08.1″ | 6.28 | 0.34 | 502 | B8/B9V | ||||||
| 30 Sgr | 30 | 105 | 174309 | 92480 | 18h 50m 50.50s | −22° 09′ 43.6″ | 6.61 | 1.91 | 245 | F2IV | |||||
| 17 G. Sgr | 17 | 164245 | 88294 | 18h 01m 48.30s | −36° 22′ 40.1″ | 6.30 | −0.42 | 721 | B7/B8II/III | ||||||
| 64 G. Sgr | 64 | 169398 | 90336 | 18h 25m 54.61s | −33° 56′ 44.5″ | 6.30 | −1.05 | 962 | B7III | ||||||
| 143 G. Sgr | 143 | 178075 | 93993 | 19h 08m 14.56s | −24° 39′ 26.5″ | 6.30 | −0.27 | 672 | B9.5V | ||||||
| 282 G. Sgr | 282 | 192433 | 99878 | 20h 15m 50.59s | −30° 00′ 19.1″ | 6.30 | −1.43 | 1148 | K4III | ||||||
| V4434 Sgr | 283 | V4434 | 192472 | 99920 | 20h 16m 23.61s | −36° 27′ 12.7″ | 6.30 | −0.78 | 851 | M4III | |||||
| V3894 Sgr | 4 | V3894 | 161756 | 87163 | 17h 48m 27.84s | −26° 58′ 29.8″ | 6.31 | −1.40 | 1136 | B3Vn | |||||
| 68 G. Sgr | 68 | 169851 | 90478 | 18h 27m 43.76s | −26° 38′ 05.1″ | 6.31 | 1.87 | 252 | A7V | ||||||
| 90 G. Sgr | 90 | 172875 | 91901 | 18h 44m 07.93s | −36° 43′ 05.6″ | 6.31 | 1.11 | 357 | K0III | ||||||
| 129 G. Sgr | 129 | 176593 | 93418 | 19h 01m 33.52s | −15° 16′ 57.4″ | 6.31 | 0.14 | 559 | K0III | ||||||
| 263 G. Sgr | 263 | 189388 | 98579 | 20h 01m 26.76s | −40° 48′ 51.3″ | 6.31 | 1.64 | 280 | A2/A3V | ||||||
| V3879 Sgr | 89 | V3879 | 172816 | 91781 | 18h 42m 55.11s | −19° 17′ 02.9″ | 6.32 | −1.55 | 1221 | M4III | |||||
| 39 G. Sgr | 39 | 166393 | 89114 | 18h 11m 14.79s | −19° 50′ 30.8″ | 6.33 | 1.09 | 365 | A2V | ||||||
| 167 G. Sgr | 167 | 181401 | 95211 | 19h 22m 09.57s | −42° 00′ 57.4″ | 6.33 | 1.36 | 321 | K1III | ||||||
| 53 Sgr | 53 | 217 | 185404 | 96729 | 19h 39m 49.46s | −23° 25′ 39.4″ | 6.33 | 0.85 | 406 | A0V | |||||
| V4405 Sgr | 98 | V4405 | 173425 | 92079 | 18h 46m 01.15s | −19° 36′ 22.9″ | 6.34 | −0.43 | 738 | M2/M3III | |||||
| 96 G. Sgr | 96 | 173282 | 92016 | 18h 45m 18.64s | −21° 00′ 05.6″ | 6.35 | 2.58 | 185 | F5/F6V | ||||||
| 127 G. Sgr | 127 | 176246 | 93315 | 19h 00m 24.78s | −24° 56′ 32.2″ | 6.35 | −0.62 | 809 | K0III | ||||||
| 48 G. Sgr | 48 | 167665 | 89620 | 18h 17m 23.66s | −28° 17′ 19.0″ | 6.36 | 4.00 | 97 | F8V | ||||||
| 80 G. Sgr | 80 | 171416 | 91172 | 18h 35m 59.64s | −29° 41′ 56.7″ | 6.36 | −1.20 | 1058 | K1III | ||||||
| 125 G. Sgr | 125 | 176123 | 93234 | 18h 59m 26.78s | −18° 33′ 59.0″ | 6.37 | −0.66 | 830 | G5/G6II | ||||||
| 133 G. Sgr | 133 | 176903 | 93543 | 19h 03m 06.99s | −19° 06′ 10.9″ | 6.37 | 1.82 | 265 | F5V | ||||||
| 36 G. Sgr | 36 | 165978 | 89010 | 18h 09m 59.96s | −32° 43′ 09.4″ | 6.39 | 1.15 | 365 | K0III | ||||||
| 151 G. Sgr | 151 | 179201 | 94372 | 19h 12m 28.02s | −21° 39′ 30.0″ | 6.39 | 0.66 | 457 | K0III | ||||||
| 34 G. Sgr | 34 | 165784 | 88876 | 18h 08m 38.59s | −21° 26′ 58.4″ | 6.42 | −3.41 | 3019 | A2/A3Iab | ||||||
| 269 G. Sgr | 269 | 190009 | 98785 | 20h 03m 44.33s | −22° 35′ 44.3″ | 6.44 | 2.64 | 188 | F7V | ||||||
| 115 G. Sgr | 115 | 175390 | 92972 | 18h 56m 27.23s | −31° 41′ 20.4″ | 6.45 | −0.30 | 731 | K2III | ||||||
| 103 G. Sgr | 103 | 173928 | 92301 | 18h 48m 45.41s | −18° 36′ 04.2″ | 6.46 | −0.48 | 795 | A1V + K1III | ||||||
| 290 G. Sgr | 290 | 193302 | 100332 | 20h 20m 51.87s | −35° 40′ 25.4″ | 6.46 | 0.79 | 444 | K3III | ||||||
| 234 G. Sgr | 234 | 187150 | 97484 | 19h 48m 50.17s | −12° 19′ 09.7″ | 6.47 | −2.04 | 1638 | K5III | ||||||
| V505 Sgr | 240 | V505 | 187949 | 97849 | 19h 53m 06.39s | −14° 36′ 11.1″ | 6.47 | 1.14 | 380 | A1V | |||||
| 244 G. Sgr | 244 | 188158 | 98012 | 19h 55m 05.11s | −33° 02′ 46.5″ | 6.47 | −1.46 | 1259 | K2/K3III | ||||||
| 9 G. Sgr | 9 | 163245 | 87782 | 17h 55m 54.96s | −18° 48′ 07.6″ | 6.48 | 1.25 | 363 | A1V | ||||||
| 166 G. Sgr | 166 | 181321 | 95149 | 19h 21m 29.70s | −34° 58′ 59.6″ | 6.48 | 4.88 | 68 | G1/G2V | ||||||
| 196 G. Sgr | 196 | 183577 | 96095 | 19h 32m 14.11s | −44° 32′ 47.3″ | 6.48 | 3.37 | 137 | F6V | ||||||
| V4190 Sgr | 79 | V4190 | 171369 | 91132 | 18h 35m 21.31s | −20° 50′ 25.6″ | 6.49 | 1.64 | 304 | F0IV/V | δ Sct variable | ||||
| 25 Sgr | 25 | 171237 | 91066 | 18h 34m 32.76s | −24° 13′ 20.6″ | 6.53 | −3.45 | 3228 | F2II | ||||||
| 65 Sgr | 65 | 274 | 190454 | 98953 | 20h 05m 26.33s | −12° 39′ 54.2″ | 6.53 | 1.07 | 402 | A0V | |||||
| RY Sgr | 156 | RY | 180093 | 94730 | 19h 16m 32.76s | −33° 31′ 20.3″ | 6.58 | −5.64 | 9056 | Cp | 156 G. Sgr | ||||
| HD 163296 | 163296 | 87819 | 17h 56m 21.29s | −21° 57′ 21.87″ | 6.85 | 329 | A3VaekA1mA1 | protoplanetary disk | |||||||
| 17 Sgr | 17 | 167570 | 89567 | 18h 16m 35.37s | −20° 32′ 40.1″ | 6.89 | 0.55 | 605 | A7: | ||||||
| HD 187085 | 187085 | 97546 | 19h 49m 33.97s | −37° 46′ 50.0″ | 7.22 | 3.95 | 147 | G0V | has a planet (b) | ||||||
| χ2 Sgr | χ2 | 48 | 182391 | 95486 | 19h 25m 22.34s | −24° 24′ 43.5″ | 7.27 | −0.53 | 1185 | B7IV | Namalsadirah IV | ||||
| HD 181342 | 181342 | 95124 | 19h 21m 04.23s | −23° 37′ 10.5″ | 7.55 | 2.24 | 377 | K0III | has a planet (b) | ||||||
| HD 180902 | 180902 | 94951 | 19h 19m 17.71s | −23° 33′ 29.359″ | 7.78 | 2.48 | 374 | K0III/IV | has a planet (b) | ||||||
| HD 190647 | 190647 | 99115 | 20h 07m 19.67s | −35° 32′ 19.1″ | 7.78 | 4.11 | 177 | G5V | has a planet (b) | ||||||
| HD 181720 | 181720 | 95262 | 19h 22m 52.99s | −32° 55′ 08.6″ | 7.86 | 4.12 | 182 | G1V | has a planet (b) | ||||||
| HD 169142 | 169142 | 18h 24m 29.8s | −29° 46′ 50″ | 8.16 | 473 | A7V | has a planet (b) | ||||||||
| HD 171238 | 171238 | 91085 | 18h 34m 43.67s | −28° 04′ 20.3″ | 8.66 | 5.44 | 144 | K0V | has a planet (b) | ||||||
| HD 165155 | 165155 | 88650 | 18h 05m 57.0s | −29° 55′ 02″ | 9.36 | 212 | G8V | has a planet (b) | |||||||
| HD 164604 | 164604 | 88414 | 18h 03m 06.93s | −28° 33′ 38.3″ | 10.04 | 7.14 | 124 | K2V | has a planet (b) | ||||||
| Ross 154 | 92403 | 18h 49m 49.36s | −23° 50′ 10.4″ | 10.44 | 13.08 | 9.68 | M3.5V | V1216 Sgr; 9th nearest star; flare star | |||||||
| WASP-123 | 19h 17m 55.0s | −32° 51′ 36″ | 11.1 | G5 | has a transiting planet (b) | ||||||||||
| Sakurai's Object | V4334 | 17h 52m 32.7s | −17° 41′ 08″ | 11.6 | F2Ia C~ | ||||||||||
| WASP-110 | 20h 23m 30.0s | −44° 03′ 30″ | 12.3 | 1044 | G9 | has a transiting planet (b) | |||||||||
| WASP-67 | 19h 42m 59.0s | −19° 56′ 58″ | 12.5 | 734 | K0V | has a transiting planet (b) | |||||||||
| OGLE-TR-10 | V5125 | 17h 51m 28.25s | −29° 52′ 34.9″ | 14.93 | 5000 | G or K | has a transiting planet (b) | ||||||||
| OGLE-TR-56 | V5157 | 17h 56m 35.31s | −29° 32′ 21.2″ | 16.56 | 5000 | G | has a transiting planet (b) | ||||||||
| SWEEPS J175853.92−291120.6 |
17h 58m 53.92s | −29° 11′ 20.6″ | 18.80 | ~6500 | F5V | has a planet SWEEPS-04 | |||||||||
| OGLE-2005-BLG-169L | 18h 06m 05s | −30° 43′ 57″ | 19.4 | 8800 | M? | has a planet (b) | |||||||||
| OGLE-2003-BLG-235 | 18h 05m 16s | −28° 53′ 42″ | 19.7 | 17000 | K | has a planet (b) | |||||||||
| SWEEPS J175902.67−291153.5 |
17h 59m 02.67s | −29° 11′ 53.5″ | 19.83 | ~6500 | has a planet (SWEEPS-11) | ||||||||||
| MOA-2007-BLG-400L | 18h 09m 42s | −29° 13′ 27″ | 22 | 20000 | M3V? | has a planet (b) | |||||||||
| SWEEPS J175902.00-291323.7 |
17h 59m 02.00s | −29° 13′ 23.7″ | 26.23 | ~6500 | has a possible shortest period planet (SWEEPS-10) | ||||||||||
| MOA-2007-BLG-192L | 18h 08m 04s | −27° 09′ 00″ | 7040 | M | has a planet (b) | ||||||||||
| Pistol Star | V4647 | 17h 46m 15.3s | −28° 50′ 04″ | >28 | 25000 | LBV | hypergiant; member of the Quintuplet star cluster | ||||||||
| V6392 Sgr | V6392 | 18h 21m 59.36s | −28° 23′ 25.1″ | 18,700 | Mira Variable[5] | ||||||||||
| V4998 Sgr | V4998 | 17h 46m 05.62s | 28° 51′ 31″ | 26000 | LBV | luminous blue variable; member of the Quintuplet star cluster | |||||||||
| LBV 1806-20 | 18h 08m 40.3s | −20° 24′ 41″ | 28000 | LBV | luminous blue variable; member of the 1806-20 cluster | ||||||||||
| WR 102ea | 17h 46m 15.13s | −28° 49′ 37.0″ | 26000 | WN9h | Wolf–Rayet star; member of the Quintuplet star cluster | ||||||||||
| S2 | 17h 45m 40.04s | −29° 00′ 28″ | n/a | 26000 | B0V | orbits the supermassive black hole Sgr A* | |||||||||
| KW Sgr | KW | 316496 | 87433 | 17h 52m 00.7s | −28° 01′ 20.6″ | 11.0 | 9000- 13000 |
M1.5 Iab | hypergiant; one of the largest known stars. B magnitude = 11. | ||||||
Table legend:
| |||||||||||||||
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ESA (1997). "The Hipparcos and Tycho Catalogues". Retrieved 2006-12-26.
- Kostjuk, N. D. (2002). "HD-DM-GC-HR-HIP-Bayer-Flamsteed Cross Index". Retrieved 2006-12-26.
- Roman, N. G. (1987). "Identification of a Constellation from a Position". Retrieved 2006-12-26.
- Gould, B. A. "Uranometria Argentina". Reprinted and updated by Pilcher, F. Archived from the original on 2012-02-27. Retrieved 2010-07-16.
- "Naming Stars". Retrieved 13 December 2017.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Knobel, E. B. (June 1895). "On a Catalogue of Stars in the Calendarium of Mohammad Al Achsasi Al Mouakket". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 55 (8): 435. Bibcode:1895MNRAS..55..429K. doi:10.1093/mnras/55.8.429.
- ^ a b c d Star Name - R.H. Allen p.359
- ^ Ian Ridpath's Startales - Sagittarius the Archer
- ^ Meeus, Jan (2002). "Mutual occultations of planets". More Mathematical Astronomy Morsels (PDF). pp. 174–185. ISBN 0943396743.
- ^ "Simbad - Object view". simbad.cds.unistra.fr. Retrieved 2025-10-26.
List of stars in Sagittarius
View on GrokipediaIntroduction
Constellation Overview
Sagittarius is a large zodiacal constellation in the southern celestial hemisphere, ranking as the 15th largest among the 88 modern constellations with an area of 867 square degrees. It lies between Scorpius to the west and Capricornus to the east, occupying the fourth quadrant of the sky (SQ4). The constellation's position places it along the ecliptic, making it one of the 12 zodiac signs, and it encompasses a rich field of the Milky Way.[4][5] The boundaries of Sagittarius extend approximately from right ascension 17h 40m to 20h 25m and declination +12° to -45°, centered around 19h right ascension and -25° declination, as defined by the IAU's irregular polygonal boundaries along lines of right ascension and declination.[6] It is best observed during July and August from latitudes between +55° and -90°, when it reaches its highest point in the evening sky. Observers often recognize the constellation through its distinctive "Teapot" asterism, formed by eight prominent stars that outline the shape of a teapot with a handle, body, and spout.[4][5][7] First cataloged by the Greek astronomer Ptolemy in the 2nd century CE as part of his 48 ancient constellations, Sagittarius represents the archer or centaur from Greek mythology. Its modern boundaries were formally delimited by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) in 1930, standardizing the polygonal outlines for all constellations along lines of right ascension and declination. Notably, the constellation hosts the Galactic center, the central region of the Milky Way galaxy, near the radio source Sagittarius A*.[4]Astronomical Importance
Sagittarius holds profound astronomical significance due to its position along the line of sight to the Milky Way's galactic center, where the supermassive black hole Sagittarius A* resides at equatorial coordinates of right ascension 17h 45m 40s and declination −29° 00′ 28″.[8] This region is heavily obscured by interstellar dust, rendering visible-light observations nearly impossible and necessitating the use of infrared and radio astronomy to probe its structure and dynamics.[9][10] These wavelengths penetrate the dust, enabling detailed studies of the dense stellar environment, gas clouds, and high-energy phenomena at the galaxy's core, which provide critical insights into galactic evolution and black hole physics.[9] In ancient mythology, Sagittarius is depicted as a centaur archer, a half-human, half-horse figure drawing a bow, often linked to the wise centaur Chiron from Greek lore, who served as a teacher to heroes like Achilles and Jason.[11] Babylonian astronomy associated the constellation with the god Nergal, a deity of war and the underworld portrayed as a winged, centaur-like being with a bow, reflecting early cultural interpretations of the stars as symbols of power and conflict.[1] As the ninth sign of the zodiac, Sagittarius spans approximately 30 degrees along the ecliptic, the apparent path of the Sun, Moon, and planets against the celestial sphere, with the Sun transiting this region from late November to late December.[12][13] This positioning influences astrological traditions, where it symbolizes exploration, philosophy, and optimism, guiding interpretations of celestial influences on human affairs. The constellation hosts a rich stellar density, with approximately 217 stars brighter than magnitude 6.5 visible to the naked eye under dark skies, encompassing diverse populations that include young, massive O- and B-type stars indicative of active star formation.[14][15] The Teapot asterism within Sagittarius aids in its identification, resembling a kettle in the summer Milky Way.[13]Principal Stars
Brightest Stars
The apparent magnitude of a star measures its brightness as seen from Earth on a logarithmic scale, where a decrease of 1 magnitude corresponds to an increase in brightness by a factor of approximately 2.512; thus, lower numerical values indicate brighter stars. Stars brighter than magnitude 2.5 are readily visible to the naked eye even in moderately light-polluted skies and often define the primary shape of a constellation's asterism. In Sagittarius, these include Epsilon Sagittarii (the brightest at magnitude 1.85) and Sigma Sagittarii (magnitude 2.05).[13] These stars contribute to the distinctive Teapot asterism in Sagittarius, where Epsilon Sagittarii (Kaus Australis) forms part of the body near the base of the spout, and Sigma Sagittarii (Nunki) lies at the top of the handle. Kaus Australis is a blue-white giant of spectral type B9.5 III, located approximately 143 light-years away.[2] Nunki is a blue main-sequence star of spectral type B2.5 V at about 228 light-years.[3]| Bayer Designation | Proper Name | Apparent Magnitude | Spectral Type | Distance (ly) | Coordinates (J2000) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ε Sgr | Kaus Australis | 1.85 | B9.5 III | 143 | RA 18h 24m 10s, Dec -34° 23' 05" |
| σ Sgr | Nunki | 2.05 | B2.5 V | 228 | RA 18h 55m 16s, Dec -26° 17' 49" |
Named Stars
The International Astronomical Union (IAU) formalized 17 proper names for stars in Sagittarius during its 2016–2017 standardization efforts, drawing from ancient Arabic, Babylonian, Greek, Latin, and other cultural traditions to preserve diverse astronomical heritage. These names predominantly evoke the constellation's archer motif, referencing anatomical features like knees and armpits or implements such as the bow and arrow, as documented in historical texts like those of Ptolemy and Al Sufi. Arabic origins dominate, stemming from medieval catalogues that translated and adapted earlier Babylonian and Greek designations, while a few reflect later Latin interpretations or indigenous proposals submitted during IAU's global naming initiatives.[16][17] Etymological roots highlight Sagittarius's cross-cultural legacy: Alnasl derives from the Arabic phrase "nasl al-sahm," denoting the "arrowhead" and symbolizing the arrow's tip in the archer's grasp. The Kaus trio—Kaus Australis, Kaus Media, and Kaus Borealis—originates from Arabic "qaws" (bow) combined with Latin directional suffixes, specifying the bow's southern, middle, and northern segments, respectively. Nunki traces to Babylonian "Šu-nun-ki," likely referencing a sacred site, while Rukbat comes from Arabic "rukbah" (knee), marking the archer's leg. Ascella, of Latin origin meaning "armpit," illustrates the blend of Roman anatomical terms with earlier Arabic descriptions. Newer approvals like Pincoya incorporate indigenous elements, honoring a Chilean water spirit from Mapuche-Chilote mythology, and Gumala draws from Malay lore as a "magic bezoar stone" associated with mythical creatures. Belel reflects Wolof language from Senegal, denoting a rare water source, and Sika evokes cultural terms for natural phenomena in Polynesian or Asian contexts, though specifics remain tied to proposal submissions. These names were ratified to promote inclusivity beyond Eurocentric traditions.[17][18][4] Several named stars contribute to the Teapot asterism, a popular asterism within Sagittarius resembling a teapot, with Nunki forming part of the handle and Kaus Australis part of the body.[4]| Proper Name | Bayer Designation | Apparent Magnitude | Origin |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ainalrami | ν¹ Sagittarii | 5.80 | Arabic "ʽAin al-Rāmī," the "eye of the archer" |
| Albaldah | π Sagittarii | 2.88 | Arabic "al-balda," the "city" or "town" |
| Alnasl | γ² Sagittarii | 2.98 | Arabic "nasl al-sahm," the "arrowhead" |
| Arkab Posterior | β² Sagittarii | 4.27 | Arabic "arkab al-dhira," the "posterior hamstring" |
| Arkab Prior | β¹ Sagittarii | 3.96 | Arabic "arkab al-sadira," the "anterior hamstring" |
| Ascella | ζ Sagittarii | 2.60 | Latin "axilla," the "armpit" |
| Belel | HD 181342 | 5.30 | Wolof (Senegal), a "rare water source" |
| Gumala | HD 168097 | 6.20 | Malay, "magic bezoar stone" from mythical lore |
| Kaus Australis | ε Sagittarii | 1.85 | Arabic "qaws australis," the "southern bow" |
| Kaus Borealis | λ Sagittarii | 2.82 | Arabic "qaws borealis," the "northern bow" |
| Kaus Media | δ Sagittarii | 2.72 | Arabic "qaws media," the "middle bow" |
| Nunki | σ Sagittarii | 2.05 | Babylonian "Šu-nun-ki," possibly a sacred city |
| Pincoya | HD 180902 | 6.40 | Mapuche-Chilote mythology, a "female water spirit" |
| Polis | μ Sagittarii | 3.85 | Coptic Egyptian "poulis," the "foal" |
| Rukbat | α Sagittarii | 3.97 | Arabic "rukbah," the "knee" |
| Sika | HD 169556 | 6.10 | Cultural proposal, linked to indigenous natural terms (etymology pending full IAU documentation) |
| Terebellum | ω Sagittarii | 4.66 | Latin "terebellum," a "small quadrilateral" or "calf's muzzle" |
Specialized Star Categories
Variable Stars
Variable stars in the constellation Sagittarius display brightness fluctuations arising from mechanisms such as radial pulsations, dust obscuration, and eclipses in binary systems. These stars are valuable for studying stellar evolution and galactic structure, with Sagittarius's position toward the galactic center revealing a rich population influenced by the Milky Way's bulge and disk. Pulsating variables dominate, including classical Cepheids used as standard candles and long-period giants undergoing thermal pulses on the asymptotic giant branch. Eclipsing binaries contribute additional photometric variability, though their study in this crowded field requires careful separation from intrinsic changes.[19] Classical Cepheids in Sagittarius, such as W Sgr, exhibit regular pulsations with periods tied to luminosity via the period-luminosity relation, enabling distance estimates to the galaxy's inner regions. W Sgr has a pulsation period of 7.0136 days and a visual light amplitude of about 0.85 magnitudes, making it a prototypical example for calibration studies.[20] Other Cepheids like X Sgr (period 7.01 days) and U Sgr (period 6.67 days) further populate the short-period end, with amplitudes typically 0.5-1.0 magnitudes due to the expansion and contraction of their envelopes.[21][22] Long-period variables, primarily Mira-type stars, show dramatic amplitude changes over hundreds of days, driven by surface convection and mass loss. R Sgr is a classic Mira with a period of 270 days and a visual amplitude spanning 5.2 magnitudes (from 7.3 to 12.5), reflecting cycles of brightening and fading as the star's atmosphere expands. RY Sgr, an R Coronae Borealis (RCB) variable, combines pulsation with erratic fades caused by carbon dust formation, with a short pulsation period of 38.6 days and amplitudes up to 8 magnitudes during declines; it was first noted for variability in the 1890s.[23][24] These stars highlight Sagittarius's role in probing AGB evolution, as their variability traces mass ejection phases. A 1978 study examined seven variables in the constellation, including five long-period types, one eclipsing binary, and one irregular, using finder charts from D. Hoffleit to refine periods and behaviors.[25] Eclipsing binaries in Sagittarius, often discovered through surveys, show periodic dips from mutual occultations, with periods ranging from hours to days. V1357 Sgr, initially classified as an RR Lyrae but reidentified as eclipsing, has a period of about 0.4 days and small amplitudes, illustrating challenges in classification amid field contamination.[26] Variability in brighter stars like Delta Sgr arises from its binary nature, though with minimal photometric impact compared to dedicated eclipsing systems.[4]| Star | Type | Period (days) | Amplitude (mag, V) | Discoverer/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| W Sgr | Classical Cepheid | 7.01 | 0.85 | Variability noted early 20th c.; key for PL relation calibration [20] |
| R Sgr | Mira | 270 | 5.2 | Long-period giant; monitored by AAVSO |
| RY Sgr | RCB | 38.6 (pulsation) | Up to 8 (fades) | Discovered ~1895; southern counterpart to R CrB[23] |
| V1357 Sgr | Eclipsing binary | ~0.4 | Small | Reclassified from RR Lyr in 1980[26] |
Binary and Multiple Stars
Sagittarius contains a variety of binary and multiple star systems, many of which are visually resolved or detected through spectroscopic means, reflecting the constellation's rich stellar population toward the galactic bulge. The dense stellar field in this direction increases the observed multiplicity rate, as line-of-sight alignments can mimic physical associations, though true physical multiples are also prevalent among its stars.[27] Visual binaries in Sagittarius include systems where components are spatially separated and observable with telescopes, such as the optical double Beta Sagittarii (Arkab), consisting of Beta¹ Sgr (a binary with a B2 V primary and 7th-magnitude dwarf companion) and Beta² Sgr (an A2 V star), separated by 0.36 degrees but not physically bound. Spectroscopic binaries, detected via Doppler shifts in spectral lines, are also common, exemplified by RS Sagittarii, a double-lined eclipsing system with an orbital period of 2.416 days. Some of these systems exhibit variability due to eclipses, though detailed light curves are beyond this section's scope. Among notable examples, Delta Sagittarii (Kaus Media) comprises an orange giant primary (K3 III, post-asymptotic giant branch stage) and a white dwarf companion; the orbital period remains undetermined, but the system's evolutionary stage suggests the companion is a remnant from prior mass transfer.[1][27] Zeta Sagittarii forms a triple system with an A3 III primary, an A4 IV subgiant companion in a close binary (~0.6 arcseconds separation), and an outer visual companion at a projected separation corresponding to ~13 AU (orbital period ~21 years).[28][29] The multiple system 21 Sagittarii features an orange K-type primary paired with a contrasting blue secondary, offering a visually striking example of color difference in bound pairs.[30]| System | Components' Types | Separation (arcsec) | Period (years) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delta Sgr | K3 III giant + white dwarf | Unresolved | Unknown |
| Zeta Sgr | A3 III + A4 IV + outer companion | ~0.6 (inner), ~0.5 (projected outer) | ~21 (outer) |
| 21 Sgr | K giant + blue secondary | ~6.5 | Unknown |
| Beta¹ Sgr | B2 V + dwarf | ~28 | Unknown |
Exoplanet-Hosting Stars
Sagittarius is home to 22 confirmed exoplanet-hosting stars, collectively harboring over 114 exoplanets as of mid-2025.[31] These systems are diverse, ranging from close-in hot Jupiters to distant cold giants and low-mass worlds, detected primarily through radial velocity measurements, transit surveys, and gravitational microlensing events enabled by the constellation's alignment with the dense galactic bulge. The prevalence of microlensing detections reflects Sagittarius's unique vantage point toward the Milky Way's inner regions, where foreground lenses amplify signals from background sources. Recent analyses, such as the 2024 study of KMT-2020-BLG-0414Lb, indicate that some planets may survive host star evolution through dynamical interactions like stellar flybys.[32] Radial velocity surveys have identified several multi-planet systems among brighter Sagittarius stars. For instance, HD 169830, an F6V star located 119 light-years away, hosts two gas giants: HD 169830 b (2.53 Jupiter masses, 225.6-day orbit) and HD 169830 c (7.67 Jupiter masses, ~2,102-day orbit), both discovered in 2000 using the CORALIE spectrograph at La Silla Observatory. Similarly, HD 179949, an F8V star 90 light-years distant, features the hot Jupiter HD 179949 b (0.98 Jupiter masses, 3.09-day orbit), the first such planet found in the constellation via radial velocity in 2000. Another example is HD 190647, a G5V star 187 light-years away, with HD 190647 b (0.59 Jupiter masses, 1,038-day orbit) detected in 2010 through HARPS observations. These discoveries highlight the method's effectiveness for massive, short-period planets around nearby hosts. Transit photometry has revealed compact systems, particularly in crowded fields. The 2006 Sagittarius Window Eclipsing Extrasolar Planet Search (SWEEPS) using the Hubble Space Telescope surveyed ~250,000 stars in the galactic bulge, confirming SWEEPS-04 b as a hot Jupiter (1.12 Jupiter radii, 4.2-day orbit) around a G-type host ~28,000 light-years away, the first planet detected via transit in the bulge. Later surveys like HATSouth and K2 added more, such as HATS-8 b (1.38 Jupiter radii, 3.58-day orbit; low-density super-Neptune) around a G9V star 829 light-years distant, found in 2013.[33][34] Gravitational microlensing dominates discoveries of distant, low-mass planets in the bulge, with collaborations like OGLE and KMTNet identifying ~80 systems. These events probe planets at separations of 0.5–10 AU around M-dwarf or solar-type hosts up to 26,000 light-years away. A standout is KMT-2020-BLG-0414L b, an Earth-mass terrestrial planet (0.96 Earth masses, 2.8-year orbit at 1.26 AU) around a white dwarf host ~4,000 light-years distant, detected in 2020; 2024 analyses indicate it survived engulfment during the host's red giant phase via a close stellar flyby.[32][35] Microlensing has also uncovered free-floating "rogue" planets without detectable hosts, such as OGLE-2016-BLG-1928, a Mars-sized world (~0.28 Earth masses) identified in 2016 as isolated within at least 8 AU of any star.[36] A few hosts, like HD 180902, are known binaries, complicating orbital dynamics.[37] The following table summarizes selected representative systems:| Host Star | Bayer/HD Designation | Planet(s) | Mass / Key Orbital Parameters | Discovery Year / Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HD 169830 | HD 169830 | b, c | b: 2.53 M_J, 225.6 d; c: 7.67 M_J, 2,102 d | 2000 / Radial Velocity |
| HD 179949 | HD 179949 | b | 0.98 M_J, 3.09 d | 2000 / Radial Velocity |
| SWEEPS-04 | SWEEPS J175853.92-291120.6 | b | ~1.0 M_J, 4.2 d | 2006 / Transit |
| HD 190647 | HD 190647 | b | 0.59 M_J, 1,038 d | 2010 / Radial Velocity |
| KMT-2020-BLG-0414L | - | b | 0.96 M_E, 2.8 yr (1.26 AU) | 2020 / Microlensing |
| OGLE-2016-BLG-1928 | (Rogue, no host) | - | ~0.28 M_E, free-floating | 2016 / Microlensing |
Stars Near the Galactic Center
Sgr A* Orbiting Stars
The S-stars represent a population of young, massive stars orbiting the supermassive black hole Sgr A* at the center of the Milky Way, providing critical probes of the gravitational dynamics in this extreme environment. These stars, primarily early-type main-sequence objects, execute highly elliptical orbits within the central parsec, enabling precise measurements of Sgr A*'s mass and tests of general relativity. Observations reveal approximately 30 such young stars in this region, with their motions tracked over decades to map the black hole's influence.[38] Among these, the star S2 (also designated S0-2) is the most extensively studied, featuring an orbital period of 16.05 years and a closest approach (periapsis) of about 120 AU to Sgr A*. Classified as a B0 V spectral type with an estimated mass of 10 solar masses (M⊙), S2 reaches velocities up to 2.7% of the speed of light during periapsis. Its 2018 periapsis passage allowed astronomers to confirm Sgr A*'s mass as 4.3 million M⊙ through detailed astrometric and spectroscopic data, refining earlier estimates and validating Keplerian orbital models in strong gravity.[39] Other notable S-stars include members of the S0-2 family, such as S0-102, which has an orbital period of 11.5 years, making it one of the shortest-period objects in the cluster. These stars collectively form a clockwise-rotating disk-like structure, with orbits ranging from 10 to over 100 years, highlighting the diversity of dynamical interactions near Sgr A*. Infrared observations of the S-stars began in the 1990s using adaptive optics systems like NAOS-CONICA (NACO) on the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope (VLT), enabling high-resolution tracking despite the galactic center's dust obscuration. More recent efforts with the GRAVITY instrument on the VLT Interferometer have captured relativistic effects, including gravitational redshift during S2's 2018 periapsis, where the star's light shifted by approximately 200 km/s, consistent with predictions from general relativity.[40][39] The formation of these young S-stars remains debated, with theories proposing either in situ star formation in the dense central environment or migration from about 1 parsec away via dynamical processes like cluster infall. These mechanisms explain the presence of massive stars in a region otherwise hostile to star formation due to tidal forces and radiation.[38]Hypergiants and Massive Stars
The constellation Sagittarius hosts several of the Milky Way's most extreme stellar objects, including rare hypergiants and clusters rich in massive stars. Hypergiants represent the upper end of stellar evolution, with luminosities exceeding 100,000 times that of the Sun and masses often surpassing 100 solar masses, leading to intense mass loss and short lifespans of a few million years. These stars are typically found in dense star-forming regions near the galactic center, where high metallicity and crowding facilitate their formation. In Sagittarius, such objects illuminate nebulae and contribute to galactic feedback through powerful stellar winds and radiation.[41] One prominent example is the Pistol Star (V4647 Sagittarii), a blue hypergiant located approximately 25,000 light-years away in the Quintuplet cluster, about 100 light-years from Sagittarius A*. Discovered in the 1990s, it has an estimated initial mass of 200-250 solar masses (per older evolutionary models) or a current mass of ~27.5 solar masses, and a current luminosity of about 3.3 million solar luminosities, making it one of the most luminous known stars in the galaxy. Its spectral type is approximately OfpeWN5, indicative of a luminous blue variable (LBV) phase, characterized by episodic mass ejections that have sculpted the surrounding Pistol Nebula with up to 10 solar masses of material expelled roughly 6,000 years ago. The star's radius is estimated at 340 solar radii, and its surface temperature reaches about 12,000 K, driving strong ultraviolet radiation that ionizes nearby gas.[42] Another notable hypergiant is VX Sagittarii, a red hypergiant in the Sgr OB1 association at a distance of 1.56 kpc (about 5,100 light-years). Classified as M4e–M10eIa, it is a semi-regular variable with a pulsation period of around 732 days and an unusually large amplitude, varying by up to 7 magnitudes in the infrared. Its luminosity is approximately 195,000 solar luminosities, with a radius potentially exceeding 1,400 solar radii (ranging 1,120-1,550 R⊙), placing it among the largest known stars. As one of the most massive red hypergiants in the galaxy, VX Sagittarii exhibits strong OH/IR emission and a circumstellar envelope enriched with silicates and dust, indicative of high mass-loss rates exceeding 10^{-5} solar masses per year. Observations of its H₂O and SiO masers reveal an extended atmosphere, supporting its evolved status.[43] Beyond individual hypergiants, Sagittarius is home to dense clusters harboring hundreds of massive stars, which dominate the region's high-energy output. The Arches cluster, situated 25,000 light-years away near the galactic center, is the densest known star cluster in the Milky Way, containing over 100 young, massive O-type stars within a 1-parsec diameter, with ages of 2–4 million years. These stars, with masses up to 120 solar masses and luminosities reaching millions of solar units, drive intense star formation and sculpt ionized hydrogen regions through their winds, which collectively expel material at rates of 10^{-7} solar masses per year per star. Similarly, the Quintuplet cluster, also ~25,000 light-years distant and 30 parsecs from Sagittarius A* in projection, hosts about 100 massive stars, including Wolf-Rayet objects and the Pistol Star, with a total mass of around 10,000 solar masses. These clusters exemplify the violent starbirth in the galactic bulge, where massive stars (>8 solar masses) evolve rapidly into supergiants and hypergiants, influencing the interstellar medium.[44][45][46]| Star/Cluster | Type | Distance (ly) | Key Properties | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pistol Star | Blue hypergiant (LBV) | ~25,000 | Initial M ≈ 200-250 M⊙ (older models), current M ≈ 27.5 M⊙, L ≈ 3.3 × 10^6 L⊙, R ≈ 340 R⊙ | [42] |
| VX Sagittarii | Red hypergiant | ~5,100 | L ≈ 1.95 × 10^5 L⊙, variable period ~732 days, high mass-loss | [43] |
| Arches Cluster | Massive O/B stars | ~25,000 | >100 stars, ages 2–4 Myr, core density ~several × 10^5 stars/pc³ | [44][47] |
| Quintuplet Cluster | Massive stars (incl. WR, LBVs) | ~25,000 | ~100 stars, total M ≈ 10,000 M⊙, hosts Pistol Star | [45][48][46] |
