[2] Based upon an annual parallax shift of 17.25 mas,[1] it is about 189 light years distant from the Sun.
This is an evolving A-type subgiant star with a stellar classification of A2 IV.
[12] At an estimated distance of this star, this yields a physical size of about 5.1 times the radius of the Sun.
This rotation rate is giving the star an oblate shape, with an equatorial bulge that is 11% larger than the polar radius.
[13] The Washington Visual Double Star Catalog lists five visual companions within 100″; the closest and brightest such companion is the magnitude 8.6 θ Geminorum E at an angular separation of 2.4″ along a position angle of 295°, as of 2010.