is shown in blue. Below, an enlarged view of the region in the white box shows the location of Epsilon Eridani at the intersection of the two lines.|alt=The upper photograph shows a region of many point-like stars with coloured lines marking the constellations. The lower image shows several stars and two white lines.
Cataloguing Epsilon Eridani has been known to astronomers since at least the 2nd century AD, when
Claudius Ptolemy (a
Greek astronomer from
Alexandria,
Egypt) included it in his catalogue of more than a thousand stars. The catalogue was published as part of his astronomical treatise the
Almagest. The constellation
Eridanus was named by Ptolemy—, and Epsilon Eridani was listed as its thirteenth star. Ptolemy called Epsilon Eridani (here is the number four). This refers to a group of four stars in Eridanus:
γ,
π,
δ and ε (10th–13th in Ptolemy's list). ε is the most western of these, and thus the first of the four in the apparent daily motion of the sky from east to west. Modern scholars of Ptolemy's catalogue designate its entry as
"P 784" (in order of appearance) and
"Eri 13". Ptolemy described the star's
magnitude as 3. Epsilon Eridani was included in several star catalogues of
medieval Islamic astronomical treatises, which were based on Ptolemy's catalogue: in
Al-Sufi's
Book of Fixed Stars, published in 964,
Al-Biruni's ''Mas'ud Canon'', published in 1030, and
Ulugh Beg's
Zij-i Sultani, published in 1437. Al-Sufi's estimate of Epsilon Eridani's magnitude was 3. Al-Biruni quotes magnitudes from Ptolemy and Al-Sufi (for Epsilon Eridani he quotes the value 4 for both Ptolemy's and Al-Sufi's magnitudes; original values of both these magnitudes are 3). Its number in order of appearance is 786. Ulugh Beg carried out new measurements of Epsilon Eridani's coordinates in
his observatory at
Samarkand, and quotes magnitudes from Al-Sufi (3 for Epsilon Eridani). The modern designations of its entry in Ulugh Beg's catalogue are
"U 781" and
"Eri 13" (the latter is the same as Ptolemy's catalogue designation). In 1598 Epsilon Eridani was included in
Tycho Brahe's star catalogue, republished in 1627 by
Johannes Kepler as part of his
Rudolphine Tables. This catalogue was based on Tycho Brahe's observations of 1577–1597, including those on the island of
Hven at his observatories of
Uraniborg and
Stjerneborg. The sequence number of Epsilon Eridani in the constellation Eridanus was 10, and it was designated ; the meaning is the same as Ptolemy's description. Brahe assigned it magnitude 3. Epsilon Eridani's
Bayer designation was established in 1603 as part of the
Uranometria, a star catalogue produced by German celestial cartographer
Johann Bayer. His catalogue assigned letters from the
Greek alphabet to groups of stars belonging to the same visual magnitude class in each constellation, beginning with alpha (α) for a star in the brightest class. Bayer made no attempt to arrange stars by relative brightness within each class. Thus, although Epsilon is the fifth letter in the Greek alphabet, the star is the
tenth brightest in Eridanus. In addition to the letter ε, Bayer had given it the number 13 (the same as Ptolemy's catalogue number, as were many of Bayer's numbers) and described it as . Bayer assigned Epsilon Eridani magnitude 3. In 1690 Epsilon Eridani was included in the star catalogue of
Johannes Hevelius. Its sequence number in constellation Eridanus was 14, its designation was , and it was assigned magnitude 3 or 4 (sources differ). The star catalogue of English astronomer
John Flamsteed, published in 1712, gave Epsilon Eridani the
Flamsteed designation of 18 Eridani, because it was the eighteenth catalogued star in the constellation of Eridanus by order of increasing
right ascension. In 1818 Epsilon Eridani was included in
Friedrich Bessel's catalogue, based on
James Bradley's observations from 1750 to 1762, and at magnitude 4. It also appeared in
Nicolas Louis de Lacaille's catalogue of 398 principal stars, whose 307-star version was published in 1755 in the , and whose full version was published in 1757 in , Paris. In its 1831 edition by
Francis Baily, Epsilon Eridani has the number 50. Lacaille assigned it magnitude 3. In 1801 Epsilon Eridani was included in ,
Joseph Jérôme Lefrançois de Lalande's catalogue of about 50,000 stars, based on his observations of 1791–1800, in which observations are arranged in time order. It contains three observations of Epsilon Eridani. In 1847, a new edition of Lalande's catalogue was published by Francis Baily, containing the majority of its observations, in which the stars were numbered in order of
right ascension. Because every observation of each star was numbered and Epsilon Eridani was observed three times, it got three numbers: 6581, 6582 and 6583. (Today numbers from this catalogue are used with the prefix "Lalande", or "Lal".) Lalande assigned Epsilon Eridani magnitude 3. Also in 1801 it was included in the catalogue of
Johann Bode, in which about 17,000 stars were grouped into 102 constellations and numbered (Epsilon Eridani got the number 159 in the constellation Eridanus). Bode's catalogue was based on observations of various astronomers, including Bode himself, but mostly on Lalande's and Lacaille's (for the southern sky). Bode assigned Epsilon Eridani magnitude 3. In 1814
Giuseppe Piazzi published the second edition of his star catalogue (its first edition was published in 1803), based on observations during 1792–1813, in which more than 7,000 stars were grouped into 24 hours (0–23). Epsilon Eridani is number 89 in hour 3. Piazzi assigned it magnitude 4. In 1918 Epsilon Eridani appeared in the
Henry Draper Catalogue with the designation HD 22049 and a preliminary spectral classification of K0.
Detection of proximity Based on observations between 1800 and 1880, Epsilon Eridani was found to have a large
proper motion across the
celestial sphere, which was estimated at three
arcseconds per year (
angular velocity). This movement implied it was relatively close to the Sun, making it a star of interest for the purpose of
stellar parallax measurements. This process involves recording the position of Epsilon Eridani as Earth moves around the Sun, which allows a star's distance to be estimated. From 1881 to 1883, American astronomer
William L. Elkin used a
heliometer at the
Royal Observatory at the Cape of Good Hope, South Africa, to compare the position of Epsilon Eridani with two nearby stars. From these observations, a parallax of was calculated. By 1917, observers had refined their parallax estimate to 0.317 arcseconds. The modern value of 0.3109 arcseconds is equivalent to a distance of about .
Circumstellar discoveries Based on apparent changes in the position of Epsilon Eridani between 1938 and 1972,
Peter van de Kamp proposed that an unseen companion with an orbital period of 25 years was causing gravitational
perturbations in its position. This claim was refuted in 1993 by
Wulff-Dieter Heintz and the false detection was blamed on a systematic error in the
photographic plates. Launched in 1983, the
space telescope IRAS detected
infrared emissions from stars near to the Sun, including an
excess infrared emission from Epsilon Eridani. The observations indicated a disk of fine-grained
cosmic dust was orbiting the star; this
debris disk has since been extensively studied. Evidence for a planetary system was discovered in 1998 by the observation of asymmetries in this dust ring. The clumping in the dust distribution could be explained by gravitational interactions with a planet orbiting just inside the dust ring. In 1987, the detection of an orbiting planetary object was announced by Bruce Campbell, Gordon Walker and Stephenson Yang. From 1980 to 2000, a team of astronomers led by
Artie P. Hatzes made
radial velocity observations of Epsilon Eridani, measuring the
Doppler shift of the star along the line of sight. They found evidence of a planet orbiting the star with a period of about seven years. Although there is a high level of noise in the radial velocity data due to magnetic activity in its
photosphere, any periodicity caused by this magnetic activity is expected to show a strong correlation with variations in
emission lines of ionized calcium (the
Ca II H and K lines). Because no such correlation was found, a planetary companion was deemed the most likely cause. This discovery was supported by
astrometric measurements of Epsilon Eridani made between 2001 and 2003 with the
Hubble Space Telescope, which showed evidence for
gravitational perturbation of Epsilon Eridani by a planet.
SETI and proposed exploration In 1960, physicists
Philip Morrison and
Giuseppe Cocconi proposed that
extraterrestrial civilisations might be using radio signals for communication.
Project Ozma, led by astronomer
Frank Drake, used the
Tatel Telescope to search for such signals from the nearby
Sun-like stars Epsilon Eridani and
Tau Ceti. The systems were observed at the
emission frequency of neutral hydrogen, 1,420 MHz (21 cm). No signals of intelligent extraterrestrial origin were detected. Drake repeated the experiment in 2010, with the same negative result. Despite this lack of success, Epsilon Eridani made its way into science fiction literature and television shows for many years following news of Drake's initial experiment. In
Habitable Planets for Man, a 1964
RAND Corporation study by space scientist Stephen H. Dole, the probability of a
habitable planet being in orbit around Epsilon Eridani were estimated at 3.3%. Among the known nearby stars, it was listed with the 14 stars that were thought most likely to have a habitable planet.
William I. McLaughlin proposed a new strategy in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (
SETI) in 1977. He suggested that widely observable events such as
nova explosions might be used by intelligent extraterrestrials to synchronise the transmission and reception of their signals. This idea was tested by the
National Radio Astronomy Observatory in 1988, which used outbursts of
Nova Cygni 1975 as the timer. Fifteen days of observation showed no anomalous radio signals coming from Epsilon Eridani. Because of the proximity and Sun-like properties of Epsilon Eridani, in 1985 physicist and author
Robert L. Forward considered the system as a plausible target for
interstellar travel. The following year, the
British Interplanetary Society suggested Epsilon Eridani as one of the targets in its
Project Daedalus study. The system has continued to be among the targets of such proposals, such as
Project Icarus in 2011. Based on its nearby location, Epsilon Eridani was among the target stars for
Project Phoenix, a 1995
microwave survey for signals from extraterrestrial intelligence. The project had checked about 800 stars by 2004 but had not yet detected any signals. == Properties ==