MISCLASSIFIED
MILKY WAY
|
GR Sgr | IRAS - | GSC2.4.2 S9TI042314 | AAVSO 000-BCC-196 |
SIMBAD V* GR Sgr | Pan-STARRS 77302757437844551 | SAO - | VSX 27900 |
GAIA DR3 4053113908177988608 | SkyMapper 182258.52-253447.3 | WRAY - | GCVS GR Sgr |
2MASS J18225850-2534473 | HIP - | Hen - | BD - |
WISE - | TYC - | ESO - | HD - |
Bidelman (1954) | - | Allen (1984) | - | Belzcyński et al. (2001) | - |
Gaposchkin (1957) | - | Kenyon (1986) | - | Akras et al. (2019) | - |
Boyarchuk (1969) | - | Vaidis (1988, 1991) | - |
Right ascension (°) | 275.7438Ref | Parallax (mas) | 0.717±0.050Ref | Reddening E(B-V) (mag) | 0.46±0.02Ref, Note |
Declination (°) | -25.5798Ref | Distance (kpc) | 1.35Ref, Note, 1.55Ref, Note | ||
Galactic longitude (°) | 7.0004Ref | Proper motion in α (mas/yr) | 2.19±0.06Ref | ||
Galactic latitude (°) | -5.5917Ref | Proper motion in δ (mas/yr) | -1.68±0.04Ref |
Suggested to be a symbiotic system based on a low-resolution spectrum by Bianchini et al. (1992), the presence of a giant star in the system was claimed by Pagnotta & Schaefer (2014), referring to Hoard et al. (2002). However, they proposed that the secondary is a MS star, classifying the target as a CV. Additionally, Tappert et al. (2015) suggested that the donor is likely an MS star based on its location on the color-magnitude diagram, and they detected semi-regular variability with a period of 225 days. Tappert et al. (2015) claimed that the system maintains a high mass transfer rate.