Tau Scorpii, Latinized from τ Scorpii, formally known as Paikauhale, is a star in the southern zodiac constellation of Scorpius. The apparent visual magnitude of Tau Scorpii is +2.8, while parallax measurements yield a distance estimate of roughly 470 light-years (150 parsecs) from Earth.
Compared to the Sun, Tau Scorpii is a massive OB star with 15 times the Sun's mass and more than six times the radius of the Sun. It is radiating about 20,400 times the Sun's luminosity from its outer envelope at an effective temperature of 31,440 K. This gives it the blue-white hue characteristic of B-type stars. As yet there is no evidence of a companion in orbit around τ Sco. It is a magnetic star whose surface magnetic field was mapped by means of Zeeman–Doppler imaging. Tau Scorpii is rotating relatively slowly with a period of 41 days.
The spectrum of this star shows triply ionized oxygen (O IV) that is being generated by X-rays and the Auger ionization effect. Observations with the ROSAT space telescope showed it has a higher energy (harder) X-ray spectrum than is usual for B0 V stars. Over the energy range 0.8–1.2 keV, its X-ray luminosity is Lx = with a large Lx to Lbol of log Lx/Lbol = –6.53 from ASCA measurements. ROSAT measurements showed a log Lx/Lbol ≃ –5.93 for the range 0.1–2.4 keV. The hard component of the X-ray spectrum from τ Sco as studied with XMM-Newton supports the presence of in-falling clumps of plasma in τ Sco.
This star is a proper motion member of the Upper Scorpius subgroup of theScorpius–Centaurus OB association,the nearest such co-moving association of massive stars to the Sun.[1] The Upper Scorpius subgroup contains thousands of young stars with mean age 11 million years at average distance of 470 light years (145 parsecs)[1] A more recent analysis[1] of the HR diagram position for Tau Scorpii estimates its effective temperature to be with a luminosity of, consistent with an isochronal age of 5 million years and an estimated mass of 14.5–14.7 solar masses.
τ Scorpii (Latinised to Tau Scorpii) is the star's Bayer designation.
Tau Scorpii and Sigma Scorpii together bore the traditional name Al Niyat (or Alniyat) derived from the Arabic النياط al-niyāţ "the arteries" and referring to their position flanking the star Antares, the scorpion's heart, with Tau Scorpii being the star to the south.[2]
Paikauhale is the Hawaiian name for Tau Scorpii.[3] [4] In the Hawaiian dictionary by Pukuʻi & Elbert (1986), the word paikauhale in Hawaiian pronounced as /ˈpəiˈkəuˈhale/ is defined as to go gadding about from house to house. In another Hawaiian dictionary (H.W. Kent, 1993, "Treasury of Hawaiian Words in One Hundred and One Categories", p.367), paikauhale is defined as Vagabond owning no home; house-to-house wanderer.
In 2016, the IAU organized a Working Group on Star Names (WGSN)[5] to catalog and standardize proper names for stars. The WGSN approved the name Paikauhale for the star A on 10 August 2018 and it is now so included in the List of IAU-approved Star Names.[6] The name Alniyat was given to Sigma Scorpii.
The indigenous Boorong people of northwestern Victoria saw this star (together with σ Sco) as wives of Djuit (Antares).[7]
In Chinese, Chinese: 心宿 (Chinese: Xīn Xiù), meaning Heart, refers to an asterism consisting of τ Scorpii, σ Scorpii and Antares.[8] Consequently, the Chinese name for τ Scorpii itself is Chinese: 心宿三 (Chinese: Xīn Xiù sān), "the Third Star of Heart".[9]