HD 117618
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HD 117618, named Dofida by the IAU,<ref name="IAU Approved"/> is a single,<ref name=Raghavan2006/> yellow-hued star in the southern constellation of Centaurus. With an apparent visual magnitude of 7.17,<ref name=Anderson2012/> it is too faint to be visible to the naked eyes of a typical observer. The distance to this star, as determined from its annual parallax shift of Template:Val as seen from Earth's orbit,<ref name=vanLeeuwen2007/> is about 124 light years. It is moving further away with a heliocentric radial velocity of around +1.6 km/s.<ref name=Anderson2012/>
This star is similar to the Sun, being a G-type main-sequence star with a stellar classification of G0 V.<ref name=Gray2006/> It is about 10% more massive and 17% larger than the Sun, with an estimated age of roughly four billion years<ref name=Bonfanti2016/> and a projected rotational velocity of 3.67 km/s.<ref name=Delgado_Mena2015/> The star is radiating 1.6 times the Sun's luminosity from its photosphere at an effective temperature of 6,019 K.<ref name=Bonfanti2016/>
NameEdit
HD 117618, and its planet HD 117618b, were chosen as part of the 2019 NameExoWorlds campaign organised by the International Astronomical Union, which assigned each country a star and planet to be named. HD 117618 was assigned to Indonesia. The winning proposal named the star "Dofida" meaning our star in Nias language, and its planet "Noifasui" meaning revolve around in Nias language (derived from the word ifasui, meaning to revolve around, and no, indicating that the action occurred in the past and continued to the present time).<ref name="IAU Approved"/>
Planetary systemEdit
In 2005, the Anglo-Australian Planet Search program announced the discovery of a low-mass planet in orbit around HD 117618. This object was found through measurements of radial velocity variation, which were larger than those produced by the intrinsic jitter of the host star. The best Keplerian fit to the data gave a periodicity of 25.8 days with an eccentricity of around 0.37 and a semimajor axis of Template:Val. The lower bound on the object's mass was estimated to be Template:Val.<ref name=Tinney2005/> These values were subsequently refined, as shown in the table below.<ref name="Butler2006"/>
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