Stars Bright stars Lacaille gave eleven stars in the constellation
Bayer designations, using the
Greek alphabet to label them Alpha through to Lambda Mensae (excluding Kappa).
Gould later added Kappa, Mu, Nu, Xi and Pi Mensae. Stars as dim as these were not generally given designations; however, Gould felt their closeness to the South Celestial Pole warranted their naming.
Alpha Mensae is the brightest star with a barely visible
apparent magnitude of 5.09, making it the only constellation with no star above magnitude 5.0. Overall, there are 22 stars within the constellation's borders brighter than or equal to
apparent magnitude 6.5. It came to within 11 light-years from Earth around 250,000 years ago and would have been considerably brighter back then—nearly of second magnitude. An
infrared excess has been detected around this star, indicating the presence of a
circumstellar disk at a radius of over 147
astronomical units (AU). The estimated temperature of this dust is below 22 K. However, data from
Herschel Space Observatory failed to confirm this excess, leaving the finding in doubt. No planetary companions have yet been discovered around it. It has a
red dwarf companion star at an
angular separation of 3.05
arcseconds; equivalent to a
projected separation of roughly 30 AU. •
Gamma Mensae is the second-brightest star in the constellation, at magnitude 5.19. becoming an orange giant of spectral type K2III. •
Beta Mensae is slightly fainter at magnitude 5.31. and lies in front of the Large Magellanic Cloud. •
Zeta and
Eta Mensae have infrared excesses suggesting they too have circumstellar disks of dust. lying 650 ± 10 light-years away from Earth. Incorporating more accurate
Hipparcos data yields a mass range for the companion to be anywhere from 10.27 to 29.9 times
that of Jupiter. This confirms its substellar nature with the upper limit of mass putting it in the
brown dwarf range. The discovery of a second substellar companion—a
super-Earth—was announced on 16 September 2018. It takes 6.27 days to complete its orbit and is the first exoplanet detected by the
Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) submitted for publication.
Planet-hosting stars •
HD 38283 (Bubup) is a Sun-like star of spectral type F9.5V of magnitude 6.7, •
HD 39194 is an orange dwarf of spectral type K0V and magnitude 8.08, located 86.21 ± 0.09 light-years distant.
Variable stars •
TZ Mensae is an
eclipsing binary that varies between magnitude 6.2 and 6.9 every 8.57 days. •
UX Mensae is another eclipsing binary system composed of two young stars around 1.2 times as massive as the Sun and 2.2 ± 0.5 billion years of age, orbiting each other every 4.19 days. The system is 338.2 ± 0.9 light-years distant. •
YY Mensae is an orange giant of spectral type K1III around 2.2 times as massive as the Sun, with 12.7 times its diameter and 70 times its luminosity. A rapidly rotating star with a period of 9.5 days, it is a strong emitter of X-rays and belongs to a class of star known as
FK Comae Berenices variables. These stars are thought to have formed with the merger of two stars in a contact binary system. With an apparent magnitude of 8.05, it is 707 ± 6 light-years distant. •
TU Mensae is another cataclysmic variable composed of a red dwarf and white dwarf. The orbital period of 2 hours 49 minutes is one of the longest for cataclysmic variable systems exhibiting brighter outbursts, known as
superhumps. The normal outbursts result in an increase in brightness lasting around a day every 37 days, while the superhumps last 5–20 days and take place every 194 days. •
AO Mensae is a faint star of magnitude 9.8. An
orange dwarf that has 80% the size and mass of the Sun, it is also a
BY Draconis variable. These are a class of stars with
starspots prominent enough that the star changes brightness as it rotates. It is a member of the
Beta Pictoris moving group, a loose association of young stars moving across the galaxy.
Deep-sky objects The
Large Magellanic Cloud lies partially within Mensa's boundaries, although most of it lies in neighbouring Dorado. Among its stars within Mensa are
W Mensae, an unusual yellow-white supergiant that belongs to a rare class of star known as a
R Coronae Borealis variable,
HD 268835, a blue
hypergiant that is girded by a vast circumstellar disk of dust, and
R71, a
luminous blue variable star that brightened in 2012 to over a million times as luminous as the Sun. Also within the galaxy is
NGC 1987, a
globular cluster estimated to be around 600 million years old that has a significant number of red ageing stars, and
NGC 1848, a 27 million year old
open cluster. Mensa contains several described open clusters, most of which can be only be clearly observed from large telescopes.
PKS 0637-752 is a distant quasar with a calculated
redshift of z = 0.651. It was chosen as the first target of the then newly-operational
Chandra X-Ray Observatory in 1999. The resulting images revealed a gas jet approximately 330,000 light-years long. It is visible at
radio, optical and
x-ray wavelengths. ==Notes==