Stars Carina contains
Canopus, a white-hued
bright giant that is the second-brightest
star in the night sky at magnitude −0.72. Alpha Carinae, as Canopus is formally designated, is 313
light-years from Earth. Its traditional name comes from the mythological
Canopus, who was a navigator for
Menelaus, king of Sparta. There are several other stars above magnitude 3 in Carina.
Beta Carinae, traditionally called Miaplacidus, is a blue-white-hued star of magnitude 1.7, 111 light-years from Earth.
Epsilon Carinae (Avior) is an orange-hued giant star similarly bright to Miaplacidus at magnitude 1.9; it is 630 light-years from Earth. Another fairly bright star is the blue-white-hued
Theta Carinae; it is a magnitude 2.7 star 440 light-years from Earth. Theta Carinae is also the most prominent member of the cluster
IC 2602.
Iota Carinae is a white-hued supergiant star of magnitude 2.2, 690 light-years from Earth.
Eta Carinae is the most prominent
variable star in Carina, with a mass of approximately 100
solar masses and 4 million times as bright as the Sun. It was first discovered to be unusual in 1677, when its magnitude suddenly rose to 4, attracting the attention of
Edmond Halley. Eta Carinae is inside NGC 3372, commonly called the
Carina Nebula. It had a long outburst in 1827, when it brightened to magnitude 1, only fading to magnitude 1.5 in 1828. Its most prominent outburst made Eta Carinae the equal of
Sirius; it brightened to magnitude −1.5 in 1843. In the decades following 1843 it appeared relatively placid, having a magnitude between 6.5 and 7.9. However, in 1998, it brightened again, though only to magnitude 5.0, a far less drastic outburst. Eta Carinae is a
binary star, with a companion that has a period of 5.5 years; the two stars are surrounded by the
Homunculus Nebula, which is composed of gas that was ejected in 1843. There are several less prominent variable stars in Carina.
l Carinae is a
Cepheid variable noted for its brightness; it is the brightest Cepheid that is variable to the unaided eye. It is a yellow-hued supergiant star with a minimum magnitude of 4.2 and a maximum magnitude of 3.3; it has a period of 35.5 days.
V382 Carinae is a
yellow hypergiant, one of the rarest types of stars. It is a
slow irregular variable, with a minimum magnitude of 4.05 and a maximum magnitude of 3.77. As a hypergiant, V382 Carinae is a luminous star, with 212,000 times more luminosity than the Sun and over 480 times the Sun's size. Two bright
Mira variable stars are in Carina:
R Carinae and
S Carinae; both stars are
red giants. R Carinae has a minimum magnitude of 10.0 and a maximum magnitude of 4.0. Its period is 309 days and it is 416 light-years from Earth. S Carinae is similar, with a minimum magnitude of 10.0 and a maximum magnitude of 5.0. However, S Carinae has a shorter period—150 days, though it is much more distant at 1,300 light-years from Earth. Carina is home to several
double stars and
binary stars.
Upsilon Carinae is a binary star with two blue-white-hued giant components, 1,600 light-years from Earth. The primary is of magnitude 3.0 and the secondary is of magnitude 6.0; the two components are distinguishable in a small amateur telescope. Two asterisms are prominent in Carina. The 'Diamond Cross' is composed of the stars
Beta,
Theta,
Upsilon and
Omega Carinae. The Diamond Cross is visible south of 20ºN
latitude, and is larger but fainter than the Southern Cross in
Crux. Flanking the Diamond Cross is the
False Cross, composed of four stars, with two stars in Carina,
Iota Carinae and
Epsilon Carinae, and two stars in Vela,
Kappa Velorum and
Delta Velorum. It is often mistaken for the Southern Cross, causing errors in
astronavigation.
Deep-sky objects Carina is known for its
namesake nebula, NGC 3372, discovered by French astronomer
Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille in 1751, which contains several
nebulae. The Carina Nebula overall is an extended
emission nebula approximately 8,000 light-years away and 300 light-years wide that includes vast
star-forming regions. It has an overall magnitude of 8.0 and an apparent diameter of over 2 degrees. Its central region is called the Keyhole, or the
Keyhole Nebula. This was described in 1847 by
John Herschel, and likened to a keyhole by Emma Converse in 1873. The Keyhole is about seven light-years wide and is composed mostly of
ionized hydrogen, with two major star-forming regions. The
Homunculus Nebula is a
planetary nebula visible to the naked eye that is being ejected by the erratic
luminous blue variable star
Eta Carinae, the most massive visible star known. Eta Carinae is so massive that it has reached the theoretical upper limit for the mass of a star and is therefore unstable. It is known for its outbursts; in 1840 it briefly became one of the brightest stars in the sky due to a particularly massive outburst, which largely created the Homunculus Nebula. Because of this instability and history of outbursts, Eta Carinae is considered a prime
supernova candidate for the next several hundred thousand years because it has reached the end of its estimated million-year life span.
NGC 2516 is an open cluster that is both quite large (approximately half a degree square) and bright, visible to the unaided eye. It is located 1,100 light-years from Earth and has approximately 80 stars, the brightest of which is a
red giant star of magnitude 5.2.
NGC 3114 is another open cluster approximately of the same size, though it is more distant at 3,000 light-years from Earth. It is more loose and dim than NGC 2516, as its brightest stars are only 6th magnitude. The most prominent open cluster in Carina is
IC 2602, also called the "Southern
Pleiades". It contains
Theta Carinae, along with several other stars visible to the unaided eye. In total, the cluster possesses approximately 60 stars. The Southern Pleiades is particularly large for an open cluster, with a diameter of approximately one degree. Like IC 2602,
NGC 3532 is visible to the unaided eye and is of comparable size. It possesses approximately 150 stars that are arranged in an unusual shape, approximating an
ellipse with a dark central area. Several prominent orange giants are among the cluster's bright stars, of the 7th magnitude. Superimposed on the cluster is
Chi Carinae, a yellow-white-hued star of magnitude 3.9, far more distant than NGC 3532. Carina also contains the naked-eye
globular cluster NGC 2808.
Epsilon Carinae and
Upsilon Carinae are double stars visible in small telescopes. One noted
galaxy cluster is 1E 0657-56, the
Bullet Cluster. At a distance of 4 billion light-years (
redshift 0.296), this galaxy cluster is named for the
shock wave seen in the
intracluster medium, which resembles the shock wave of a supersonic bullet. The bow shock visible is thought to be due to the smaller galaxy cluster moving through the intracluster medium at a relative speed of 3,000–4,000 kilometers per second to the larger cluster. Because this
gravitational interaction has been ongoing for hundreds of millions of years, the smaller cluster is being destroyed and will eventually merge with the larger cluster.
Meteor showers Carina contains the radiant of the
Eta Carinids meteor shower, which peaks around January 21 each year. == Equivalents ==