This orange giant is easy to identify due to its location in an otherwise dark section of the celestial sphere.
Based on parallax measurements, it lies at an estimated distance of 96.3 light-years (29.5 parsecs) from the Sun.
The luminosity class 'III' means that it is a giant, a star that has consumed the hydrogen at its core and evolved away from the main sequence.
This is a much longer duration than for comparable solar flare activity on the Sun, which typically last for periods measured in hours.
[22] 土司空 (Tǔsīkōng), westernized into Too Sze Kung by R.H. Allen and the meaning is "Superintendent of Earthworks.