V1017 Sgr

MISCLASSIFIED MILKY WAY
 
Constellation
Sagittarius
Equatorial coordinates
α = 18 32 04.480
δ = -29 23 12.760
Galactic coordinates
l = 4.4908°
b = -9.1090°

Suspected 1986Ref
Re-classified 1992Ref
Type CVRef

Identifiers

V1017 Sgr IRAS - GSC2.4.2 S9VC026532 AAVSO 000-BCC-576
SIMBAD V* V1017 Sgr Pan-STARRS 72732780186636075 SAO - VSX 28717
GAIA DR3 4048251562703375488 SkyMapper 183204.48-292312.6 WRAY - GCVS V1017 Sgr
2MASS J18320447-2923125 HIP - Hen - BD -
WISE - TYC - ESO - HD -

Symbiotic Catalogs

Bidelman (1954) - Allen (1984) - Belzcyński et al. (2001) V1017 Sgr (Misc.)
Gaposchkin (1957) - Kenyon (1986) V1017 Sgr (Conf.) Akras et al. (2019) -
Boyarchuk (1969) - Vaidis (1988, 1991) V1017 Sgr (Conf.)

Position

Right ascension (°) 278.0187Ref Parallax (mas) 0.817±0.023Ref Reddening E(B-V) (mag) 0.23±0.0Ref, Note
Declination (°) -29.3869Ref Distance (kpc) 1.17Ref, Note, 1.17Ref, Note    
Galactic longitude (°) 4.4908Ref Proper motion in α (mas/yr) 5.23±0.03Ref    
Galactic latitude (°) -9.1090Ref Proper motion in δ (mas/yr) -10.37±0.02Ref    

Links

SIMBAD   CDS Portal


Notes

Considered as a symbiotic binary in some articles, possibly after inclusion in Kenyon (1986), the object was later deleted from the list of symbiotic stars by Belczyński et al. (2000). Known as a classical nova, Nova Sagitarii 1919, it has also exhibited dwarf nova outbursts in the last century (Sekiguchi, 1992). The study by Sekiguchi (1992) determined an orbital period of 5.7 days, with the secondary component being more evolved, resembling a G5 III star.


References


Last updated: March 18, 2022