V723 Monocerotis

V723 Monocerotis

A visual band light curve for V723 Monocerotis, adapted from Jayasinghe et al. (2021)
Observation data
Epoch J2000.0      Equinox J2000.0
Constellation Monoceros
Right ascension 06h 29m 04.659s
Declination −05° 34 20.23
Apparent magnitude (V) 8.21 - 8.42
Characteristics
Spectral type G0II
Variable type Ellipsoidal
Astrometry
Proper motion (μ) RA: −1.347 mas/yr
Dec.: 16.140 mas/yr
Parallax (π)2.1748±0.0331 mas
Distance1,500 ± 20 ly
(460 ± 7 pc)
Absolute magnitude (MV)+0.93
Orbit
Period (P)59.9398 d
Eccentricity (e)0 (fixed)
Inclination (i)87.0+1.7
−1.4
°
Argument of periastron (ω)
(secondary)
0 (fixed)°
Details
Stripped giant star
Mass0.44±0.06 M
Radius22.5±1.0 R
Luminosity105 L
Surface gravity (log g)1.3 cgs
Temperature3,800±100 K
Metallicity [Fe/H]−0.5 dex
Rotational velocity (v sin i)15±2 km/s
Age5.4+5.1
−2.6
 Gyr
Subgiant
Mass2.8±0.3 M
Radius8.3±0.4 R
Luminosity70 L
Surface gravity (log g)~3 cgs
Temperature5,800±200 K
Metallicity [Fe/H]−0.5 dex
Rotational velocity (v sin i)70±10 km/s
Other designations
V723 Mon, BD−05 1649, HD 45762, HIP 30891, SAO 133321, PPM 189220
Database references
SIMBADdata

V723 Monocerotis is a binary star in the constellation Monoceros. It is an ellipsoidal variable about 1,500 light-years distant, too faint to be seen to the naked eye, with a variable apparent magnitude between 8.21 and 8.42.

It was proposed in 2021 to be a binary system including a lower mass gap black hole candidate nicknamed "The Unicorn". Located 1,500 light years from Earth, it would be the closest known black hole, and among the smallest ever found wih a mass 3 times the mass of the Sun, corresponding to a Schwarzschild radius of 9 kilometers.

Follow-up work in 2022 argued that V723 Monocerotis does not contain a black hole, but is a mass-transfer binary containing a red giant that has been stripped of much of its mass, and a subgiant star. Its primary, the stripped red giant, has 25 times the Sun's radius but an unusually low mass of 0.44 solar masses, result of mass transfer. The secondary star is 2.8 times more massive than the Sun and 8.3 times larger, a subgiant approaching the base of the red giant branch. The primary is more than a 100 times as luminous as the Sun, while the secondary is about 70 times as luminous.