Centaurus is a large constellation with many bright stars, two stars brighter than magnitude 1, and a number of the best-known deep-sky objects, although the
Milky Way does not lie within its borders.
Stars and (right)
Beta Centauri. The faint red star in the center of the red circle is
Proxima Centauri. . This image is reversed from what one sees looking at the sky — it is as though one is looking at the "
celestial sphere" from the outside. Centaurus contains several very bright stars. Its alpha and beta stars are used as "southern pointer stars" to help observers find the constellation
Crux. Centaurus has 281 stars above magnitude 6.5, meaning that they are visible to the unaided eye, the most of any constellation.
Alpha Centauri, the closest star system to the Sun, has a high
proper motion; it will be a mere half-degree from Beta Centauri in approximately 4000 years. Alpha Centauri is a
triple star system composed of a binary system orbited by Proxima Centauri, currently the nearest star to the Sun. Traditionally called Rigil Kentaurus (from Arabic رجل قنطورس, meaning "foot of the centaur") or Toliman (from Arabic الظليمين meaning "two male ostriches"), the system has an overall magnitude of −0.28 and is 4.4
light-years from Earth. The primary and secondary are both yellow-hued stars; the first is of magnitude −0.01 and the second: 1.35. Proxima, the tertiary star, is a
red dwarf of magnitude 11.0; it appears almost 2 degrees away from the close pairing of Alpha and has a period of approximately one million years. Also a
flare star, Proxima has minutes-long outbursts where it brightens by over a magnitude. The Alpha couple revolve in 80-year periodicity and will next appear closest as seen from Earth's telescopes in 2037 and 2038, together as they appear to the naked eye they present the
third-brightest "star" in the night sky. One other
first magnitude star Beta Centauri is in the constellation in a position beyond Proxima and toward the narrow axis of Crux, thus with Alpha forming a far-south limb of the constellation. Also called Hadar and Agena, it is a double star; the primary is a blue-hued giant star of magnitude 0.6, 525 light-years from Earth. The secondary is of magnitude 4.0 and has a modest separation, appearing only under intense magnification due to its distance. The northerly star
Theta Centauri, officially named Menkent, is an orange giant star of magnitude 2.06. It is the only bright star of Centaurus that is easily visible from mid-northern latitudes. The next bright object is
Gamma Centauri, a
binary star which appears to the naked eye at magnitude 2.2. The primary and secondary are both blue-white hued stars of magnitude 2.9; their period is 84 years. Centaurus also has many dimmer double stars and binary stars.
3 Centauri is a double star with a blue-white hued primary of magnitude 4.5 and a secondary of magnitude 6.0. The primary is 344 light-years away. Centaurus is home to many
variable stars.
R Centauri is a
Mira variable star with a minimum magnitude of 11.8 and a maximum magnitude of 5.3; it is about 1,250 light-years from Earth and has a period of 18 months.
V810 Centauri is a
semiregular variable.
BPM 37093 is a
white dwarf star whose
carbon atoms are thought to have formed a crystalline structure. Since
diamond also consists of carbon arranged in a crystalline lattice (though of a different configuration), scientists have nicknamed this star "Lucy" after the Beatles song "
Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds."
PDS 70, (V1032 Centauri) a low mass T Tauri star is found in the constellation Centaurus. In July 2018 astronomers captured the first conclusive image of a
protoplanetary disk containing a nascent
exoplanet, named
PDS 70b.
Deep-sky objects ω Centauri (NGC 5139), despite being listed as the constellation's "omega" star, is in fact a naked-eye
globular cluster, 17,000 light-years away with a diameter of 150 light-years. It is the largest and brightest globular cluster in the
Milky Way; at ten times the size of the next-largest cluster, One of the closest
galaxy clusters to Earth is the
Centaurus Cluster at 160 million light-years away, having
redshift 0.0114. It has a cooler, denser central region of gas and a hotter, more diffuse outer region. The
intracluster medium in the Centaurus Cluster has a high concentration of metals (elements heavier than helium) due to a large number of
supernovae. This cluster also possesses a plume of gas whose origin is unknown. ==History==