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B Persei

Star in the constellation Perseus From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

B Persei
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b Persei (also known as HD 26961) is a spectroscopic triple star in the constellation Perseus. Its apparent magnitude is 4.60, making it visible to the naked eye.[6] It is about 320 light years away.[1]

Quick Facts Constellation, Right ascension ...
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Light curves for b Persei. The top panel, plotted from TESS data,[13] shows the variability of the inner binary pair. The lower panels, plotted from AAVSO data,[14] show two eclipses.

In addition to the primary, an A-type giant, there is a smaller and cooler companion in a 1.53 day orbit, probably an F-class star around absolute magnitude 3.0, and a more distant companion (star C or Ac) in an orbit calculated to be 702 days long.[6] The close binary pair forms a rotating ellipsoidal variable with a 1.53 day period. Star C forms an Algol-type variable system with the close binary, showing both primary eclipses (when star C passes in front of the inner pair) and secondary eclipses (when the inner pair passes in front of star C).[15] Timings of the eclipses show a 704.5-day period.[12]

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