Zeta1Reticuli appears to the southwest (lower right in this image), while Zeta2Reticuli is to the northeast (upper left). The two stars are extremely similar in type and in magnitude, but Zeta2Reticuli is marginally the brighter of the pair. Imagery provided by Aladin sky atlas
Zeta2 (the northerly of the two components) is fractionally larger and more luminous than its companion, and evidence suggests that it has a disc of debris in orbit. This disc is somewhat comparable to the Solar System'sAsteroid Belt, though it orbits farther from its parent star.
An analysis of the relative motion of the Zeta Reticuli system places it within a group of about ten related stars that are thought to share a common origin, but are now scattered throughout the sky. Within the same group of stars is Beta Hydri, another yellowstar in the same general area of the southern sky. The entire group is more widespread than this might suggest, and its brightest member is Zeta Herculis (from which the entire Zeta Herculis Moving Group takes its name) which lies in the northern constellation of Hercules.