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A visual bandlight curve for Zeta1 Scorpii, adapted from Sterken et al. (1997).[12] The inset plot shows the long term variability. The purple arrow shows the brightness reported by al-Sufi in A.D. 962.
ζ1 Scorpii's primary is a luminous blue variable according to its luminosity and spectral appearance,[13] yet is has not shown the characteristic types of variability, hence is classified as a dormant LBV.[5] It has around 36 times as massive as the Sun[4] and is one of the most luminous stars known in the Galaxy, with an estimated bolometric luminosity between 1 and 1.6 million times that of the Sun and a radius around 160 times that of the Sun.[7] The stellar wind from this supergiant is expelling matter from the star at the rate of 1.55 × 10−6solar masses per year, or roughly the equivalent to the Sun's mass every 640,000 years.[4]
The secondary has been detected using interferometry, and its discovery was announced in 2021. As of 2021[update], it has an angular separation of 11.54±0.10 mas along a position angle of 283.22°+0.76° −0.34°. It is 6.3 magnitudes fainter than the primary.[7]
ζ1 Scorpii forms a naked eye double with ζ2 Scorpii, but the stars are merely coincidentally near in the line of sight from Earth. ζ2 is a mere 135 light-years distant and much less luminous in real terms. ζ1 Scorpii can also be distinguished from ζ2, due to the latter's orange hue especially in long-exposure photographs.
^ abcKozok, J. R. (September 1985). "Photometric observations of emission B-stars in the southern Milky Way". Astronomy and Astrophysics Supplement Series. 61: 387–405. Bibcode:1985A&AS...61..387K.
^ ab"Query= zet 1 Sco". General Catalogue of Variable Stars. Lomonosov Moscow State University. Archived from the original on 2012-03-07. Retrieved November 20, 2009.
^Evans, D. S. (June 20–24, 1966). "The Revision of the General Catalogue of Radial Velocities". In Batten, Alan Henry; Heard, John Frederick (eds.). Determination of Radial Velocities and their Applications, Proceedings from IAU Symposium no. 30. Vol. 30. University of Toronto: International Astronomical Union. p. 57. Bibcode:1967IAUS...30...57E.
^Bernacca, P. L.; Perinotto, M. (1970). "A catalogue of stellar rotational velocities". Contributi Osservatorio Astronomico di Padova in Asiago. 239 (1): 1. Bibcode:1970CoAsi.239....1B.