The magnitude 5.08[4] primary member, designated component A, is a single-lined spectroscopic binary system in a circular orbit with a period of 3.7887 days.[10] The visible member has a stellar classification of A9 IV or A V, depending on the source.[11] In 1966, Ivan John Danziger and Robert John Dickens discovered that 14 Aurigae star is a variable star.[12] It is a Delta Scuti variable with an amplitude of 0.08 magnitude and a period of 2.11 hours.[6] It is 609 million years old with 1.64 times the mass of the Sun.[7]
Component B lies about 10″ to the north of the primary and is merely a visual companion. However, component C, an F-typemain sequence star of magnitude 7.86,[4] shares a common proper motion with component A and thus they form a system. This member is also a single-lined spectroscopic binary, having a period of 2.9934 days. The final member of the system, now designated component Cb, is a white dwarf star that is separated from the C, or rather Ca pair by 2″. If it is indeed bound to Ca, its orbital period is around 1,300 years.[11]
^ abcDavid, Trevor J.; Hillenbrand, Lynne A. (2015). "The Ages of Early-Type Stars: Strömgren Photometric Methods Calibrated, Validated, Tested, and Applied to Hosts and Prospective Hosts of Directly Imaged Exoplanets". The Astrophysical Journal. 804 (2): 146. arXiv:1501.03154. Bibcode:2015ApJ...804..146D. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/804/2/146. S2CID33401607.