Kappa Herculis


Kappa Herculis is an optical double star in the constellation of Hercules. The two components, Kappa Herculis A and B, were 27.3 arc seconds apart in 2000. Based on parallax measurements from the Hipparcos mission, κ Her A is about 113 parsecs from the Sun and κ Her B is 600 parsecs.
A faint third component Kappa Herculis C is just over 1 arc-minute away. It is at the same distance as κ Her A and has an almost-identical space motion.
The star 8 Herculis forms a naked-eye pair with Kappa Herculis away.

Nomenclature

κ Herculis is the system's Bayer designation. The designations of the components as Kappa Herculis A, B and C derive from the convention used by the Washington Multiplicity Catalog for multiple star systems, and adopted by the International Astronomical Union.
The system bore the traditional names of "Marsic", "Marfik" or "Marfak", all of which come from the Arabic لمرفق Al-Mirfaq meaning "the elbow", a name it shared with Lambda Ophiuchi. The Working Group on Star Names approved the name Marsic for the component Kappa Herculis A on February 1, 2017, and Marfik for the primary component of Lambda Ophiuchi on September 12, 2016, and they are both now so included in the List of IAU-approved Star Names.
In Chinese, 天市右垣, meaning Right Wall of Heavenly Market Enclosure, refers to an asterism which represents eleven old states in China and marks the right borderline of the enclosure, consisting of Kappa Herculis, Beta Herculis, Gamma Herculis, Gamma Serpentis, Beta Serpentis, Delta Serpentis, Alpha Serpentis, Epsilon Serpentis, Delta Ophiuchi, Epsilon Ophiuchi and Zeta Ophiuchi. Consequently, the Chinese name for Kappa Herculis itself is 天市右垣三, representing the state of Jin , together with 36 Capricorni in Twelve States.

Properties

Kappa Herculis A is a giant star with stellar classification G8III. With a mass of and radius that is, the star boasts a bolometric luminosity that is. Its slightly companion is cooler and about a third of the luminosity.
Kappa Herculis is a suspected variable star with a reported magnitude range of 4.70 to 5.02.