Z Andromedae
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Z Andromedae
Summary
Z Andromedae is a spectroscopic binary[1]. It draws 12 Wikipedia views per month (spectroscopic_binary category, ranking #22 of 110).[2]
Key Facts
- Z Andromedae's instance of is recorded as spectroscopic binary[3].
- Z Andromedae's instance of is recorded as symbiotic binary[4].
- Z Andromedae's instance of is recorded as astrophysical X-ray source[5].
- Z Andromedae's instance of is recorded as emission-line star[6].
- Z Andromedae's instance of is recorded as long-period variable star[7].
- Z Andromedae's instance of is recorded as near-infrared source[8].
- Z Andromedae's instance of is recorded as variable star[9].
- Z Andromedae's instance of is recorded as pulsating variable star[10].
- Z Andromedae's constellation is recorded as Andromeda[11].
- Z Andromedae's spectral class is recorded as M2III+B1eq[12].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as 2MASS J23333994+4849059[13].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as GSC 03645-02066[14].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as HD 221650[15].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as HIP 116287[16].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as SAO 53146[17].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as IRAS 23312+4832[18].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as TYC 3645-2066-1[19].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as PLX 5697[20].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as BD+48 4093[21].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as GCRV 14773[22].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as HIC 116287[23].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as JP11 3636[24].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as PPM 64386[25].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as Z And[26].
- Z Andromedae's catalog code is recorded as PLX 5697.00[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Things named for Z Andromedae include symbiotic binary[28], an astronomical object type[29].
Why It Matters
Z Andromedae draws 12 Wikipedia views per month (spectroscopic_binary category, ranking #22 of 110).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[30] It is known by 17 alternative names across languages and contexts.[31]
Entities named for it include symbiotic binary[28], an astronomical object type[29].