To the Arabic astronomers who named this star, Nihal represented one of four cosmic camels in the act of drinking (the other three camels were represented by Arneb, together with Gamma and DeltaLeporis to the southeast. From this association, Nihal gained its name, which originally applied to all four stars, and translates as something like 'quenching their thirst'.
Nihal is a chemically complex star, showing various unusual elements, and the fact that it is an X-ray source shows that the star is also magnetically active. Nihal is at a transitional point in its evolution, moving from the fusion of hydrogen in its core to a phase of fusing helium to form carbon. So the star is developing through a bright giant phase - making it currently more than 150 times as luminous as the Sun - toward becoming a true giantstar.
This is a double star, with a faint variable companion lying less than three arcseconds away from the primarybright giant, although whether Nihal is a true binary, or merely a close optical double, has yet to be established with certainty.