HD 196885 is a binary star system in the northern constellation of Delphinus. It comprises a pair of stars HD 196885 A and HD 196885 B on a 69-years eccentric orbit.[6]
The primary star is near the lower limit of visibility to the naked eye with an apparent visual magnitude of 6.39.[2] It is located at a distance of 110.9 light years from the Sun.[5] It is drifting closer with a radial velocity of −30 km/s, and is expected to come to within 52.5 light-years in 836,000 years.[2]
The secondary, component B, is a red dwarf star separated by 0.6 arcseconds from the primary star that was discovered in 2006 with NaCo at VLT.[8][4] It has a class in the range M1V to M3V[4] with 51% of the Sun's mass.[6]
The star BD+10 4351B, located 192 arcseconds away from HD 196885 is located at the same distance and may be a physically bound companion star, in which case HD 196885 is a trinary system.[9] If it is bound, then the separation is at least 6,600 AU (the separation along the line-of-sight is unknown, so this value represents a lower limit on the true separation).[citation needed]
Planetary system
In 2004, a planet was announced to be orbiting the star HD 196885 A in a 386-day orbit.[10] Follow-up work published in 2008 did not confirm the original candidate but instead found evidence of a planet in a 3.63 years.[11] Perturbation by the secondary star in this system may have driven the planet into a high inclination orbit.[12] The planetary existence was confirmed and parameters were refined by 2022.[6]
^Gray, R. O.; et al. (2001), "The Physical Basis of Luminosity Classification in the Late A-, F-, and Early G-Type Stars. I. Precise Spectral Types for 372 Stars", The Astronomical Journal, 121 (4): 2148, Bibcode:2001AJ....121.2148G, doi:10.1086/319956, S2CID117076031