Sagittarius (constellation)
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Sagittarius | |
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click for larger image |
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Abbreviation | Sgr |
Genitive | Sagittarii |
Symbology | the Archer |
Right ascension | 19 h |
Declination | −25° |
Area | 867 sq. deg. Ranked 15th |
Number of main stars | {{{numbermainstars}}} |
Number of stars | 67 |
Number of stars with planets
(BF, variable, other stars) |
{{{numberstarsplanets}}} |
Number of bright stars
(magnitude < 3) |
7 |
Number of nearby stars
(Distance < 100 ly) |
3 |
Brightest star | ε Sgr (Kaus Australis) (App. magnitude 1.9) |
Nearest Star | λ Sag (Kaus Borealis) (Distance: 77 ly) |
Meteor showers | |
Bordering constellations |
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Visible at latitudes between +55° and −90° Best visible at 21:00 (9 p.m.) during the month of August |
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- For the astrological sign, see Sagittarius (astrology).
Sagittarius (IPA: /ˌsædʒiˈteɪriəs/, Latin: archer, symbol , Unicode ♐) is a constellation of the zodiac, commonly depicted as a centaur drawing a bow. Sagittarius lies between Ophiuchus to the west and Capricornus to the east.
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[edit] Notable features
The constellation's brighter stars (from left to right on the map: τ, ζ, σ, φ, λ, ε, δ, η and γ2 Sagittarii) form an easily recognizable asterism called the Teapot. The Milk Dipper is part of the Teapot. The stars δ Sgr (Kaus Media), ε Sgr (Kaus Australis), ζ Sgr (Ascella), and φ Sgr form the body of the pot; λ Sgr (Kaus Borealis) is the point of the lid; γ2 (Alnasl) is the tip of the spout; and σ Sgr (Nunki) and τ Sgr the handle. [1] [2]
α Sgr (Rukbat) isn't the brightest star of the constellation, having a magnitude of only 3.96 (not shown on the map as it is located below the map's southwestern corner, north is up).
[edit] Notable deep-sky objects
The Milky Way as seen from the earth is at its densest as it passes through Sagittarius, as this is where the galactic center lies. Consequently, Sagittarius contains many star clusters and nebulae. One of the brightest of the star clusters is M55, about 7.5° west of δ Sgr.
The constellation contains nebulae such as the Lagoon Nebula (M8), near λ Sagittarii, beautiful in telescopes; the Omega, Swan, or Horseshoe Nebula (M17), near the border with Scutum; and the Trifid Nebula (M20), a large nebula containing some very young, hot stars. The grouping of M8, M20, and NGC 6559 is often called the Sagittarius triplet.
The complex radio source Sagittarius A is also here. Astronomers believe that one of its components, known as Sagittarius A*, is associated with a supermassive black hole at the center of the galaxy.
The Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy is located just outside the Milky Way.
[edit] Mythology
Sagittarius has the rough appearance of a stick-figure archer drawing its bow, and when including the fainter stars, appears to have a horse-like body [3]. Sometimes it is called the 'Teapot' as it looks like that. The Greeks identified such a figure as a centaur, whereas earlier cultures, such as the Babylonians, identified it as the god Pabilsag (which also had wings and a lion's head).
In Greek mythology, Sagittarius was sometimes identified as Chiron, aiming his bow at the Scorpion, although the more usual identification of Chiron was with the constellation Centaurus. The constellation Sagitta was sometimes considered to be an arrow fired by Sagittarius.
Other early identifications include that of a rattle, which the constellation's brightest stars considered together vaguely resemble. As such, together with other constellations in the Zodiac sign of Sagittarius (specifically, Cygnus, Lyra, and Aquila), may be a significant part of the origin of the myth of the Stymphalian Birds, one of The Twelve Labours of Herakles.
[edit] Astrology
- Main article: Sagittarius (astrology)
The Western astrological sign Sagittarius of the tropical zodiac (November 22 - December 21) differs from the astronomical constellation and the Hindu astrological sign of the sidereal zodiac (December 18 - January 18).
[edit] Notable and named stars
BD | F | Star Names and other designations | Mag. | Ly away | Comments |
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ε | 20 | Epsilon Sagittarii, Kaus Australis | 1.79 | 145 |
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σ | 34 | Sigma Sagittarii, Nunki, Sadira, Pelag | 2.05 | 224 | |
ζ | 38 | Zeta Sagittarii, Ascella | 2.60 | 89 |
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δ | 19 | Delta Sagittarii, Kaus Media, Kaus Meridionalis, Kaus Medius, Media | 2.72 | 306 |
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λ | 22 | Lambda Sagittarii, Kaus Borealis | 2.82 | 77 |
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π | 41 | Pi Sagittarii, Albaldah, Al Baldah | 2.88 | 440 |
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γ2 | 10 | Gamma-2 Sagittarii, Alnasl, Nasl, El Nasl, Nash, Alwazl, Nushaba, Zujj al Nushshaba | 2.98 | 96 |
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η | Eta Sagittarii, Sephdar, Ira Furoris | 3.10 | 149 |
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φ | 27 | Phi Sagittarii, Nanto | 3.17 | 231 |
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τ | 40 | Tau Sagittarii, Hecatebolus, Hekatebolos | 3.32 | 120 |
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ξ2 | 37 | Xi-2 Sagittarii | 3.52 | 372 | |
ο | 39 | Omicron Sagittarii, Manubrij, Manubrium | 3.76 | 139 |
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μ | 13 | Mu Sagittarii, Polis | 3.84 | 8150 | |
ρ1 | 44 | Rho-1 Sagittarii, Cappa | 3.92 | 122 |
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β1 | Beta-1 Sagittarii, Arkab Prior | 3.96 | 378 |
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α | Alpha Sagittarii, Rukbat, Rucba, Rukbat al Rami, Alrami | 3.96 | 170 |
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ι | Iota Sagittarii | 4.12 | 189 | ||
β2 | Beta-2 Sagittarii, Arkab Posterior | 4.27 | 378 |
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θ1 | Theta-1 Sagittarii | 4.37 | 618 | ||
c | 62 | Terebellum, 62 Sagittarii, HR 7650, HD 189763 | 4.43 | 448 | |
υ | 46 | Upsilon Sagittarii | 4.52 | 1673 |
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b1 | 59 | Terebellum, 59 Sagittarii, HR 7604, HD 188603 | 4.52 | 1200 | |
3 | X Sagittarii | 4.53 | |||
h2 | 52 | 52 Sagittarii | 4.59 | ||
ω | 58 | Terebellum, Omega Sagittarii, HR 7597, HD 188376 | 4.74 | 77.6 | |
4 | 4 Sagittarii | 4.74 | |||
γ1 | Gamma-1 Sagittarii, W Sagittarii | 4.79 | 340 | ||
21 | 21 Sagittarii | 4.81 | |||
A | 60 | Terebellum, 60 Sagittarii, HR 7618, HD 189005 | 4.84 | 1850 | |
ν1 | 32 | Nu-1 Sagittarii, Ain al Rami, Facies | 4.86 | 330 |
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ψ | 42 | Psi Sagittarii | 4.86 | 270 | |
f | 56 | 56 Sagittarii | 4.87 | ||
d | 43 | 43 Sagittarii | 4.88 | ||
11 | 11 Sagittarii | 4.96 | |||
ν2 | 35 | Nu-2 Sagittarii | 5.00 | >2300 | |
g | 61 | 61 Sagittarii | 5.01 | ||
ξ1 | 36 | Xi-1 Sagittarii | 5.02 | 221 | |
χ1 | 47 | Chi-1 Sagittarii | 5.02 | 618 | |
e2 | 55 | 55 Sagittarii | 5.06 | ||
29 | 29 Sagittarii | 5.22 | |||
15 | 15 Sagittarii | 5.29 | |||
θ2 | Theta-2 Sagittarii | 5.30 | 506 | ||
e1 | 54 | 54 Sagittarii | 5.30 | ||
7 | 7 Sagittarii | 5.37 | |||
28 | 28 Sagittarii | 5.37 | |||
χ3 | 49 | Chi-3 Sagittarii | 5.45 | 244 | |
HD 183275 | 5.52 | ||||
14 | 14 Sagittarii | 5.49 | |||
24 | 24 Sagittarii | 5.49 | |||
50 | 50 Sagittarii | 5.57 | |||
18 | 18 Sagittarii | 5.58 | |||
κ1 | Kappa-1 Sagittarii | 5.60 | 371 | ||
κ2 | Kappa-2 Sagittarii | 5.64 | 359 | ||
h1 | 51 | 51 Sagittarii | 5.64 | ||
33 | 33 Sagittarii | 5.68 | |||
63 | 63 Sagittarii | 5.69 | |||
ρ2 | 45 | Rho-2 Sagittarii | 5.84 | ||
57 | 57 Sagittarii | 5.88 | |||
9 | 9 Sagittarii | 5.89 | |||
HD 169830 | 5.91 | 118.5[4] |
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16 | 16 Sagittarii | 5.96 | |||
26 | 26 Sagittarii | 6.22 | |||
HD 179949 | 6.25 | 88[5] |
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6 | 6 Sagittarii | 6.27 | |||
30 | 30 Sagittarii | 6.29 | |||
53 | 53 Sagittarii | 6.33 | |||
25 | 25 Sagittarii | 6.53 | |||
65 | 65 Sagittarii | 6.53 | |||
17 | 17 Sagittarii | 6.89 | |||
χ2 | 48 | Chi-2 Sagittarii | 7.26 | 1200 | |
Ross 154 | 10.46 | 9.56 |
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Gliese 783 | 5.31 | 19.7 |
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OGLE-TR-10 | 14.93 | 5000[6] |
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S2 |
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Pistol Star |
Source: The Bright Star Catalogue, 5th Revised Ed., The Hipparcos Catalogue, ESA SP-1200
Astronomy | Constellations of the Zodiac | Astrology |
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Aries | Taurus | Gemini | Cancer | Leo | Virgo | Libra | Scorpius | Ophiuchus | Sagittarius | Capricornus | Aquarius | Pisces |
The 48 Constellations listed by Ptolemy |
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Andromeda • Aquarius • Aquila • Ara • Argo Navis • Aries • Auriga • Boötes • Cancer • Canis Major • Canis Minor • Capricornus • Cassiopeia • Centaurus • Cepheus • Cetus • Corona Australis • Corona Borealis • Corvus • Crater • Cygnus • Delphinus • Draco • Equuleus • Eridanus • Gemini • Hercules • Hydra • Leo • Lepus • Libra • Lupus • Lyra • Ophiuchus • Orion • Pegasus • Perseus • Pisces • Piscis Austrinus • Sagitta • Sagittarius • Scorpius • Serpens • Taurus • Triangulum • Ursa Major • Ursa Minor • Virgo |
Constellations changed by Johann Bayer in the 1603 text Uranometria |
Centaurus | split into | Centaurus | Crux |
Leo | split into | Leo | Coma Berenices |
Piscis Austrinus | split into | Piscis Austrinus | Grus |
Sagittarius | split into | Sagittarius | Corona Australis |
Constellations changed by Lacaille in 1763 |
Argo Navis split into Carina | Puppis | Vela |
Eridanus split into Eridanus | Fornax |
Sagittarius | Corona Australis altered to create Telescopium |
Centaurus | Lupus altered to create Circinus |
The 88 modern Constellations |
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Andromeda • Antlia • Apus • Aquarius • Aquila • Ara • Aries • Auriga • Boötes • Caelum • Camelopardalis • Cancer • Canes Venatici • Canis Major • Canis Minor • Capricornus • Carina • Cassiopeia • Centaurus • Cepheus • Cetus • Chamaeleon • Circinus • Columba • Coma Berenices • Corona Australis • Corona Borealis • Corvus • Crater • Crux • Cygnus • Delphinus • Dorado • Draco • Equuleus • Eridanus • Fornax • Gemini • Grus • Hercules • Horologium • Hydra • Hydrus • Indus • Lacerta • Leo • Leo Minor • Lepus • Libra • Lupus • Lynx • Lyra • Mensa • Microscopium • Monoceros • Musca • Norma • Octans • Ophiuchus • Orion • Pavo • Pegasus • Perseus • Phoenix • Pictor • Pisces • Piscis Austrinus • Puppis • Pyxis • Reticulum • Sagitta • Sagittarius • Scorpius • Sculptor • Scutum • Serpens • Sextans • Taurus • Telescopium • Triangulum • Triangulum Australe • Tucana • Ursa Major • Ursa Minor • Vela • Virgo • Volans • Vulpecula |