The brightest components of Sigma Coronae Borealis form a visual binary first resolved in the 19th century, and are designated σ Corona Borealis A and B. More recently, the designations σ2 and σ1 Corona Borealis have come into use. Somewhat confusingly, the brighter component A is referred to as σ2 because it has the higher right ascension. A third component, while being separated by , has a similar parallax and proper motion to the brighter stars and is physically associated. It is known in the Washington Double Star Catalog, a compilation of observations of double stars, as component E, but it is usually called Sigma Coronae Borealis C. Sigma1 Corona Borealis is a G-type main-sequence star like the Sun, and has similar parameters: a mass roughly equal to that of the Sun, and an effective temperature of 5950 K. A visual orbit has been calculated, with a period of about 730 years and a high eccentricity of 0.72. Sigma2 Corona Borealis itself is a close binary. Here, the two stars are extremely close and orbit fairly quickly, every 1.14 days. This tiny separation of only 0.0279 au has allowed the two stars to exert tidal forces on each other, leading to synchronization of their rotation. They have also been classified as RS Canum Venaticorum variables —young, active stars that show variability in their apparent magnitude due to starspots on their surfaces. Despite Sigma2 Corona Borealis's two stars being separated only by about the diameter of each star, they were resolved using the CHARAoptical interferometer at the Mount Wilson Observatory. As of 2006, it is the shortest-period binary ever to be resolved. The primary is 13.7% more massive than the Sun, while the secondary is 9.0% more massive than the Sun, and both are 24.4% wider than the Sun. σ Coronae Borealis C, also known as HIP 79551, appears as a red dwarf with a spectral type of M2.5V. It too is a binary star, with a companion in a 52-year orbit. The companion has a mass of and has been detected through astrometry.
Optical companions
The Washington Double Star Catalog, a compilation of observations of double stars, lists several components to the main system. Two of those are listed in the WDS as components C, and D. As of 1984, component C was separated from the primary by along a position angle of 103° and as of 1996, component D was separated from the primary by along a position angle of 82°. However, both of them have different proper motions through space and are not related, just optical alignments.
Variability
The spectroscopic binary σ2 CrB is an RS Canum Venaticorum variable. It varies in brightness by 0.05 magnitudes every 1.139789 days, the same as the orbital period. The brightness changes are caused by variations in surface brightness on the stars, effectively giant sunspots. Variable star designations are not given to stars with Bayer designations, but in this case only one component of σ Coronae Borealis is identified as variable, so it has the designation TZ Coronae Borealis.