Epsilon Corvi (ε Crv, ε Corvi) is a star in the southern constellation of Corvus. It has the traditional name Minkar, from Arabic منقار minqar meaning "beak [of the crow]"[1] The apparent visual magnitude is +3.0 and it is located at a distance of 318abbr=offNaNabbr=off from Earth.
In Chinese, Chinese: 軫宿 (Chinese: Zhěn Sù), meaning Chariot (asterism), refers to an asterism consisting of ε Corvi, γ Corvi, δ Corvi and β Corvi.[2] Consequently, ε Corvi itself is known as Chinese: 軫宿二 (Chinese: Zhěn Sù èr, English: the Second Star of Chariot.).[3]
Epsilon Corvi is a red giant with a stellar classification of K2 III, having consumed the hydrogen at its core and evolved away from the main sequence. It has about three times the Sun's mass. The interferometry-measured angular diameter of this star is about 4.99 mas, which, at its estimated distance, equates to a physical radius of about 52 times the radius of the Sun. The effective temperature of the outer envelope is, giving it an orange hue that is characteristic of a K-type star. Around 4 times as massive as the Sun, it spent much of its life as a main sequence star of spectral type B5V.