April 2025 - Double Star of the Month
With Arcturus riding high in the Spring sky, STF 1825 (14 16 32.84 +20 07 18.7) can be easily found as it is just 1.5 degrees north and a little west of the bright, orange giant star. The components have magnitudes 6.5 and 8.4 and the current separation is 4".4 so it is a relatively easy object for the small telescope.

The very slow orbital motion is reflected in the fact that my two sets of measures made in 1993 and 2019 show a difference in position angle of just 2 degrees. This is a relatively nearby system as the parallax determined by Gaia DR3 shows, the distance is 108 light-years and both stars are moving across the sky at more than 0.1 arc-second per year.
In Centaurus, near the border with Lupus, and about 9 degrees north and slightly west of Hadar (beta Centauri, V = 0.6) is HJ 4651 (14 09 35.03 -51 30 16.8), a wide and unequal pair of unassociated stars. The magnitudes are 6.0 and 8.9 and the current separation is 65". The primary star is the eclipsing binary V869 Cen and is almost four times nearer to the Sun than its fainter companion.

Of more direct interest but certainly a more difficult object is SLR 19 which is to be found 1.5 degrees north and a little preceeding HJ 4651. It is an almost equally bright pair which was first observed by R. P. Sellors in Australia using the 11.5-inch refractor at Sydney Observatory. The motion to date amounts to 45 degrees and an orbit by Izmailov gives a period of 415 years which predicts a closest separation of 0".6 in 2054. The predicted position for 2026.0 is 337 degrees and 0".9 and the magnitudes are 7.1 and 7.4.
Bob Argyle - Double Star Section Director
If you'd like to try out the Clear Skies Observing Guides (CSOG), you can download observing guide for the current Double Stars of the Month without the need to register. CSOG are not associated with the Webb Deep-Sky Society but the work of Victor van Wulfen.