A system of three stars, the → close binary
Alpha Centauri A (→ spectral type G2 V)
and Alpha Centauri B (K1 V), and a small and faint → red dwarf,
Alpha Centauri C (M6 Ve), better known as → Proxima Centauri.
To the unaided eye,
the two main components (AB) appear as a single object with an
→ apparent visual magnitude
of -0.27, forming the brightest star in the southern
constellation → Centaurus
and the third brightest star in the night sky, after
→ Sirius and → Canopus.
The individual visual magnitudes of the components A, B, and Proxima are +0.01, +1.33,
and +11.05, respectively. The masses of A and B are 1.100 and 0.907 Msun, respectively.
Their → effective temperatures are (A) 5,790 K and (B)
5,260 K; their luminosities (A) 1.519 Lsun and (B) 0.500 Lsun.
The binary members are separated in average by only 23
→ astronomical units.
They revolve around a common center of mass with a period of about 80 years.
Both have a distance of 4.37 → light-years.
Proxima Centauri, lying about 15,000 AU apart from AB, is
→ gravitationally bound to them.
It has a mass of 0.1 Msun, a radius of 0.1 Rsun, a luminosity
of about 0.001 Lsun, and an → effective temperature
of ~ 3,000 K.
See also: → alpha;
→ Centaurus; → system.