Sakurai's Object is a highly evolved post-
asymptotic giant branch star which has, following a brief period on the
white dwarf cooling track, undergone a
helium shell flash (also known as a very late thermal pulse). The star is thought to have a mass of around . Prior to its reignition V4334 Sgr is thought to have been cooling towards a white dwarf with a temperature around 100,000 K and a luminosity around . The luminosity rapidly increased about a hundred-fold and then the temperature decreased to around 10,000 K. The star developed the appearance of an F class supergiant (F2 Ia). The apparent temperature continued to cool to below 6,000 K and the star was gradually obscured at optical wavelengths by the formation of carbon dust, similar to an
R CrB star. V605, discovered in 1919, is the only other known star observed during the high luminosity phase of a very late thermal pulse, and Sakurai's Object is modeled to increase in temperature in the next few decades to match the current state of V605.
Infrared observations showed that the dust cloud around the star is primarily
carbon in an
amorphous form. In 2009 it was discovered that the dust shell is strongly
asymmetrical, as a disc with a
major axis oriented at an angle of 134°, and
inclination of around 75°. The disc is thought to be growing more
opaque due to the fast spectral evolution of the source towards lower temperatures.
Planetary nebula Sakurai's Object is surrounded by a
planetary nebula created following the star's
red giant phase around 8300 years ago. It has been determined that the nebula has a diameter of 44
arcseconds and expansion velocity of roughly 32 km/s.
Similarities to other stars Research in 1996 revealed that Sakurai's Object possessed the characteristics of a
R Coronae Borealis variable star with the anomaly of
Carbon-13 (13C) deficit. Also, the
metallicity of Sakurai's object in 1996 was similar to that of V605 Aquilae in 1921. However, it is expected that Sakurai's object will grow in its metallicity to match that of V605 Aquilae. ==Significance in astronomical research==