This is a single-lined spectroscopic binary with an orbital period of 23.96924 days.[3] The visible component is an orange-hued K-typegiant star with a stellar classification of K0 III,[3] indicating it has exhausted the supply of hydrogen at its core then cooled and expanded off the main sequence. It is around eight billion years old with 26% more mass than the Sun and has expanded to 11 times the Sun's radius. It is radiating roughly 30 times the luminosity of the Sun from its photosphere at an effective temperature of 4,620 K.[5]
The star is "covered with large high-latitude and even polar spots and with occasional small equatorial spots".[5] XX Tri is notable for having a huge starspot larger than the diameter of the Sun, discovered using Doppler imaging.[9] For its size, the star has a relatively rapid rotation rate of about 24 days. It has a weak, Sun-like differential rotation. The star appears to show a magnetic activity cycle of 26±6 years, although only a single cycle has been observed as of 2015.
^ abcdeK. G., Strassmeier; K., Olah (June 1992). "On the starspot temperature of HD 12545". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 259 (2). SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System: 595–599. Bibcode:1992A&A...259..595S. ISSN0004-6361.
^Sinnott, Roger W.; Perryman, Michael A. C. (1997). Millennium Star Atlas. Vol. 1. Sky Publishing Corporation and the European Space Agency. p. 123. ISBN0-933346-84-0.