The double star ζ Reticuli is located in the western part of the small
Reticulum constellation, about 25
′ from the constellation's border with
Horologium. In dark southern skies, the two stars can be viewed separately with the naked eye, or with a pair of binoculars. ζ1 Reticuli has an
apparent magnitude of 5.52, placing it on the border between 5th- and 6th-magnitude stars. ζ2 Reticuli is slightly brighter at magnitude 5.22. The two stars are located at similar distances from the Sun and share the same motion through space, confirming that they are gravitationally bound and form a wide binary star system. They have an angular separation of 309.2
arcseconds (5.2
arcminutes); far enough apart to appear as a close pair of separate stars to the naked eye under
suitable viewing conditions. The distance between the two stars is at least (0.06 light-year, or almost a hundred times the average distance between
Pluto and the Sun), so their orbital period is 170,000 years or more. Both stars share similar physical characteristics to the Sun, so they are considered
solar analogs. Their
stellar classification is nearly identical to that of the Sun. ζ1 has 95% of the
Sun's mass and 92% of the
Sun's radius. ζ2 is slightly larger and more luminous than ζ1, with 91% of the Sun's mass and 98% of the Sun's radius. The two stars are somewhat deficient in
metals, having only 60% of the proportion of elements other than hydrogen and helium as compared to the Sun. For reasons that remain uncertain, ζ1 has an anomalously low abundance of
beryllium. Two possible explanations are: during the star's formation it underwent multiple intense bursts of mass accretion from a rapidly rotating protostellar cloud, or else the star underwent rotational mixing brought on by a period of rapid rotation during the star's youth. Both stars were considered unusual because they were thought to have had a lower
luminosity than is normal for
main-sequence stars of their age and surface temperature. That is, they lie below the main-sequence curve on the
Hertzsprung–Russell diagram for newly formed stars. However, this was challenged, after using the much more accurate parallaxes from the
Hipparcos catalogue (ESA, 1997), it was calculated that the stars actually have higher luminosities and so are shifted upwards, putting them in the main sequence. Most stars will evolve above this curve as they age. ζ1 has an intermediate level of magnetic activity in its
chromosphere with an erratic variability. A long-term activity cycle of ~4.2 years has been tentatively identified. ζ2 is more sedate, showing a much lower level of activity with a ~7.9-year
cycle, which may indicate it is in a
Maunder Minimum state. Although the kinematics of this system suggest that they belong to a population of older stars, the properties of their stellar
chromospheres suggests that they are only about 2 billion years old. This star system belongs to the
Zeta Herculis Moving Group of stars that share a common motion through space, suggesting that they have a common origin. In the
galactic coordinate system, the components of the
space velocity for this system are equal to for ζ1 and for ζ2. They are currently following an orbit through the
Milky Way galaxy that has an
eccentricity of 0.24. This orbit will carry the system as close as and as far as from the
Galactic Center. The
inclination of this orbit will carry the stars as much as from the plane of the galactic disk. This likely puts them outside the
thick disk population of stars. ==Alleged debris disk==