MISCLASSIFIED
MILKY WAY
|
V723 Sco | IRAS - | GSC2.4.2 S8BI189249 | AAVSO 000-BBZ-439 |
SIMBAD V* V723 Sco | Pan-STARRS - | SAO - | VSX 33539 |
GAIA DR3 4040677984976915200 | SkyMapper - | WRAY - | GCVS V0723 Sco |
2MASS - | 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 (°) | 267.5221Ref | Parallax (mas) | 0.447±0.180Ref | Reddening E(B-V) (mag) | 0.61±0.05Ref, Note |
Declination (°) | -35.3992Ref | Distance (kpc) | 4.38Ref, Note, 7.07Ref, Note | ||
Galactic longitude (°) | 354.9463Ref | Proper motion in α (mas/yr) | -6.87±0.21Ref | ||
Galactic latitude (°) | -4.1433Ref | Proper motion in δ (mas/yr) | -6.68±0.14Ref |
Harrison (1992) proposed that V723 Sco (Nova Sco 1952 b) shares characteristics with the RS Oph group of recurrent novae, drawing on the shape of its light curve. Notably, it was not detected in WISE data (Evans et al., 2014). The nature of the donor star has been debated, with Saito et al. (2013) classifying it as a main-sequence star, Pagnotta & Schaefer (2014) suggesting a giant companion based on infrared colors, and Mróz et al. (2015) identifying the donor as a red giant through its position on the color-magnitude diagram.