Tau Orionis (ÃÂ Ori, ÃÂ Orionis) is a binary star in the constellation Orion. If an imaginary line is drawn north-west between the stars Rigel and Mintaka, Tau Orionis can be found roughly one-sixth of the way to Mintaka. It is visible to the naked eye with a combined apparent visual magnitude of 3.58. Based upon an annual parallax shift of 6.6 mas, it is located around 490 light years distant.
This is a spectroscopic binary system with an orbital period of 90 days and a very high eccentricity of 0.834. It is a heartbeat star, showing variations on its apparent magnitude during the close periastron passage. The components have masses of and a combined stellar classification of B5 III. The star has a peculiar velocity through space of 16.9 km/s.
Tau Orionis has three visual companions: magnitude 11.0 component B at an angular separation of 33.30â³ along a position angle of 251ð; magnitude 10.9 component C lying some 3.80â³ from component B; and magnitude 10.9 component D at 36.0â³ from àOri along a position angle of 51ð, all as of 2011.
According to Richard H. Allen, this star, along with ò Eri, û Eri and àEri were Al Kursiyy al Jauzah, "the Chair (or "Footstool") of the Central One". However, per the catalogue of stars in the Technical Memorandum 33-507 - A Reduced Star Catalog Containing 537 Named Stars, Al Kursiyy al Jauzah were the title for just three stars: ò Eri as Cursa, àEri as Al Kursiyy al Jauzah I and û Eri as Al Kursiyy al Jauzah II, excluding this star.
In Chinese, (), meaning Jade Well, refers to an asterism consisting of àOrionis, ò Eridani, û Eridani and àEridani. Consequently, the Chinese name for àOrionis itself is (, .). From this Chinese title, the name Yuh Tsing is derived.