Constellation
(astronomy)
Constellation
(astronomy), in astronomy, any
of 88 imagined groupings of bright stars that appear on the
celestial sphere and that are
named after religious or mythological figures, animals, or
objects. The term also refers to the delimited areas on the
celestial sphere that contain the named groups of stars.
The
oldest known drawings of constellations are motifs on seals,
vases, and gaming boards from the Sumerians, indicating that
constellations may have been developed as early as 4000 BC.
The constellation Aquarius was named by the Sumerians after
their god of heaven An, who pours the waters of immortality
upon the earth.
The
division of the zodiac into 12 equal
signs was known around 450 BC by the Babylonians. The northern
constellations known today are little different from those
known by the Chaldeans and the ancient Egyptians, Greeks,
and Romans. Homer and Hesiod mentioned constellations,
and the Greek poet Aratus of Soli (circa 315-c. 245
BC) gave a verse description of 44 constellations in his Phaenomena.
The Alexandrian astronomer and mathematician Ptolemy,
in his Almagest, described 48 constellations, of which
47 are known today by the same name.
In
the past many other peoples have grouped stars in constellations,
although their arrangements usually did not correspond to
those of the ancients. Some Chinese constellations, however,
resemble those of the ancients, indicating the possibility
of a common origin.
At
the end of the 16th century the first explorers of the South
Seas mapped the southern sky, which was largely unknown to
the ancients. New constellations were added by a Dutch navigator,
Pieter Dirckz Keyser, who participated in the exploration
of the East Indies in 1595. Subsequently, other southern constellations
were added by the German astronomer Johann Bayer, who
published the first extensive star atlas in the Western world,
the Uranometria; by Johannes Hevelius; and by
the French astronomer Nicolas Louis Lacaille. Many
others proposed new constellations, but astronomers finally
settled on a list of 88. The boundaries of constellations,
however, remained a matter of discussion until 1930, when
definitive boundaries were fixed by the International Astronomical
Union.
The
genitive forms of the names of constellations, preceded by
a Greek letter, are used to designate about 1300 bright stars;
this system was introduced by Johann Bayer. The famous star
Algol in the constellation Perseus, for example,
is called Beta Persei.
|
|
Ancient
people and astronomers often saw designs or groupings
in the stars and named them after various religious figures,
animals, and objects. This table lists some of the more
prominent constellations and translates their names. |
"Constellation
(astronomy)," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2001
http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved.