BO Carinae

BO Carinae

BO Carinae is the brightest red star, towards upper left, in this image of the Carina Nebula.
Credit: ESO
Observation data
Epoch J2000      Equinox J2000
Constellation Carina
Right ascension 10h 46m 00.53s
Declination 59° 29 19.5
Apparent magnitude (V) 7.18 - 8.50
Characteristics
Spectral type M4 Ib
Variable type Lc
Astrometry
Proper motion (μ) RA: −7.334±0.027 mas/yr
Dec.: −1.420±0.028 mas/yr
Parallax (π)0.6020±0.0259 mas
Distance5,400 ± 200 ly
(1,660 ± 70 pc)
Absolute magnitude (MV)–5.53
Details
Radius790 R
Luminosity78,000 L
Temperature3,525 K
Other designations
BO Car, IDS 10419-5858, IRAS 10438-5913, 2MASS J10455065-5929193, AAVSO 1042-58, SAO 238447, CD-58 3547, HD 93420
Database references
SIMBADdata

BO Carinae, also known as HD 93420, is an irregular variable star in the constellation Carina.

BO Car has a maximum apparent magnitude of +7.18. Its distance and membership is uncertain, but its possible membership to the star cluster Trumpler 15 allows a distance estimate of approximately 2,500 parsecs (8,150 light-years). The Gaia Data Release 2 parallax of 0.73±0.08 mas suggests a closer distance, but the value is considered unreliable due to excess astrometric noise.

BO Car is a red supergiant of spectral type M4Ib with an effective temperature of 3,525 K, a radius of 790 solar radii. Its bolometric luminosity is 78,000 L. Mass-loss is on the order of 0.3×10−9 solar masses per year.

In 1919, William Matthew Worssell of the Union Observatory announced that the star, then known as CPD-58 2683, is a variable star. It was given its variable star designation, BO Carinae, in 1921. Billed as an irregular variable like TZ Cassiopeiae or V528 Carinae; its apparent brightness fluctuates between magnitude +7.18 and +8.50 without clear periodicity. Some observers have found BO Car not to be variable, but more extensive studies find small amplitude variations with a possible period of 145 days.

Multiple star catalogues list an 11th-magnitude star as a companion to BO Car. The separation was 14.2 in 2015, and slowly increasing. The companion is a distant blue giant.