Light curves showing the eclipses of HS Hydrae on three different years. The top plot is from data published by Gyldenkerne et al.,[1] the center plot shows Hipparcos data,[2] and the bottom plot shows TESS data.[3]
This star was determined to be an Algol variable as part of a survey of bright southern stars by W. Strohmeierand and associates in 1965, demonstrating it is a binary system with an orbital inclination close to the line of sight from the Earth.[13]D. M. Popper found an eclipse periodicity of 1.568024 days for the pair with a combined estimated class of F3–F4.[14] A longer-term analysis of the system's radial velocities in 1997 showed a third member of the system is likely orbiting the inner pair. This is probably a small red dwarf with about half the mass of the Sun and an orbital period of ~190 days.[9]
In 1997, observations with the Hipparcos satellite showed the depth of both eclipses was lower than they were 20 years earlier. In 2012, P. Zasche and A. Paschke showed that the inclination of the orbital plane for the inner pair had changed by 15° since its discovery. The third member of the system is causing the orbit of the inner pair to precess, resulting in a change of inclination of 7.8° over the same period.[15] By 2022, the eclipses have come to an end, with the final observed events captured by the TESSspace telescope in 2019. Examination of earlier data showed that the eclipses had begun in the early 1920s, and the system is predicted to resume eclipses in 2195.[12]
The combined stellar classification of this system is F5V,[6] matching an F-type main-sequence star. The inner pair form a detached binary system[7] that show ellipsoidal variation due to tidal interaction.[12] The primary member, designated component A, has 1.31[10] times the mass and 1.28[9] times the radius of the Sun. The marginally smaller secondary, component B, has 1.27[10] times the mass with 1.22[9] times the radius of the Sun. The unseen third member, component C, has about 56% of the Sun's mass.[10]
^ abHouk, Nancy; Smith-Moore, M. (1978), Michigan catalogue of two-dimensional spectral types for the HD stars, vol. 4, Ann Arbor: Dept. of Astronomy, University of Michigan, Bibcode:1988mcts.book.....H.
Davenport, J. R. A.; Windemuth, D.; Warmbein, K.; Howard, E. L.; Klein, C.; Birky, J. (November 2021), "125 years light curve of HS Hydrae with DASCH", VizieR On-line Data Catalog: J/AJ/162/189, Bibcode:2021yCat..51620189D, doi:10.26093/cds/vizier.51620189.