HD 164595

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HD 164595
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Position of star HD 164595 in the constellation Hercules
Observation data
Epoch J2000      Equinox J2000
Constellation Hercules
Right ascension 18h 00m 38.894s[1]
Declination +29° 34′ 18.92″[1]
Apparent magnitude (V) 7.08[2]
Characteristics
Spectral type G2V D[1]
Details
Mass 0.99[3] M
Surface gravity (log g) 4.44 ± 0.05[3] cgs
Temperature 5790 ± 40[3] K
Metallicity [Fe/H] −0.06[3] dex
Age 4.5[3] Gyr
Other designations
HD 164595, HIP 88194, SAO 85632, BD+29 3165.
Database references
SIMBAD data
Data sources:
Hipparcos Catalogue

HD 164595[1] is a G-type star located in the constellation of Hercules, 28.927 parsecs (94.35 light-years) from Earth that is notably similar to the Sun.[3][4] With an apparent magnitude of 7.075,[1] the star can be found with binoculars or a small telescope in the constellation Hercules.

HD 164595 has one known planet, HD 164595 b, which orbits HD 164595 every 40 days.[5] The planet has a mass equivalent of 16 Earths.[5]

It is the same stellar classification as the Sun: G2V. It has a similar temperature, at 5790 K compared with 5778 K for the Sun. It has a lower logarithm of metallicity ratio, at −0.06 compared with 0.00, and a slightly younger age, at 4.5 versus 4.6 billion years.[6][7][lower-alpha 1]

In 2016, HD 164595 briefly attracted media attention after it was reported that a possible SETI signal had been detected from the direction of the star in the previous year. The signal was only heard once and never confirmed by other telescopes, and is thought to have been due to terrestrial interference.

Signal observation and SETI

On 15 May 2015, a brief, single radio signal at 11 GHz (2.7 cm wavelength)[9] was observed in the direction of HD 164595 by a team led by N. N. Bursov[10] involving Claudio Maccone at the RATAN-600 radio observatory. The signal may be due to terrestrial radio-frequency interference or gravitational lensing from a more distant source.[11][12] It was observed only once (for two seconds), by a single team, at a single telescope, giving it a Rio Scale[13] score of 1 (insignificant) or 2 (low). Discussions in the media from 29 August 2016 onwards featured speculation that the signal could be caused by an isotropic beacon from a Type II civilization.[14][15]

The senior astronomer of the SETI Institute, Seth Shostak, stated that confirmation by another telescope is required.[16] Astronomer Nicholas Suntzeff of Texas A&M University stated that the signal is in a military frequency band, and that it could have been a satellite downlink, implying that some such systems may be kept secret and therefore would be unknown to SETI scientists.[9]

SETI and METI studies followed with the Allen Telescope Array and the Boquete Optical SETI Observatory.[17][16] Also, scientists at Berkeley SETI Research Center at the University of California, Berkeley observed HD 164595 using the Green Bank Telescope as part of the Breakthrough Listen program. No signal was detected at the position and frequency of the transient reported by the RATAN group.[18][19]

The Special Astrophysical Observatory of the Russian Academy of Sciences has since released an official statement that the signal is of a "most probable terrestrial origin".[20]

Sun comparison

This chart compares the Sun to HD 164595.

Identifier J2000 Coordinates Distance
(ly)
Stellar
class
Temperature
(K)
Metallicity
(dex)
Age
(Gyr)
Notes
Right ascension Declination
Sun 00 G2V 5778 +0.00 4.6 [7]
HD 164595[1] 18h 00m 38.9s +29° 34′ 19″ 91 G2V 5790 −0.06 4.5 [6]

See also

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Footnotes

  1. An exact solar twin would be a G2V star with a 5778 K temperature, be 4.6 billion years old, with the correct metallicity and a 0.1% solar luminosity variation.[8][7]

References

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Coordinates: Sky map 18h 00m 38.894s, +29° 34′ 18.92″