Stars John Flamsteed labeled 41 stars for the constellation.
Francis Baily intended to give
Bayer designations to some of the stars but because none of them were above magnitude 4.5, he left them unlettered.
Bright stars •
Alpha Sextantis is the brightest star in the constellation and the only star above the fifth
magnitude with an apparent magnitude of 4.49. It is an ageing
A-type star of spectral class A0 III located 280
light-years away from the
Solar System. At the age of 385
million years, it is exhausting
hydrogen at its core and leaving the
main sequence. •
γ Sextantis is the second brightest star in the constellation with an apparent magnitude of 5.05. It is a
binary star consisting of two
A-type main-sequence stars with classes of A1 V and A4 V respectively. The stars take 77.55 years to circle each other in an eccentric orbit and the system is located 280 light-years away from the Solar System. it is said to be 364 light-years distant. Beta Sextantis is a
B-type main-sequence star of spectral class B6 V and it has been used as a standard in the
MK spectral classification system. It is suspected to be a
Alpha2 Canum Venaticorum variable with a period of 15.4
days.
Multiple star systems Sextans contains a few notable multiple star systems within its boundaries.
35 Sextantis is a triple star system consisting of two evolved
K-type giants of equal mass, with both stars being twice as massive as the Sun. The secondary is itself a single-lined
spectroscopic binary consisting of a companion and itself. The outer pair has a separation of 6.8" and both stars take roughly 23,000 years to orbit each other while the B subsystem takes 1,528 days to circle each other in a relatively
eccentric orbit. There are a few notable
variable stars, including
25,
23 Sextantis, and
LHS 292.
NGC 3115, an edge-on
lenticular galaxy, is the only noteworthy
deep-sky object. It also lies near the ecliptic, which causes the
Moon, and some of the planets to occasionally pass through it for brief periods of time. The constellation is the location of the field studied by the
COSMOS project, undertaken by the
Hubble Space Telescope. ==COSMOS project==