Antlia
 Click for larger image |
| List of stars in Antlia |
| Abbreviation: |
Ant |
| Genitive: |
Antliae |
| Symbology: |
the air pump |
| Right ascension: |
10 h |
| Declination: |
−30° |
| Area: |
239 sq. deg. (62nd) |
| Main stars: |
3 |
| Bayer/Flamsteed stars: |
8 |
| Stars known to have planets: |
1 |
| Bright stars: |
0 |
| Nearby stars: |
1 |
| Brightest star: |
α Ant (4.25m) |
| Nearest star: |
DEN 1048-3956 (13.2 ly) |
| Messier objects: |
0 |
| Meteor showers: |
None |
| Bordering constellations: |
Hydra Pyxis Vela Centaurus |
Visible at latitudes between +45° and −90° Best visible at 21:00 (9 p.m.) during the month of April |
|
Antlia (pronounced /ˈæntliə/, Latin: pump, from Ancient Greek: ἀντλία - antlia, "bilge-water, filth") is a relatively new constellation as it was only created in the 18th century, being too faint to be acknowledged by the ancient Greeks. The IAU adopted it as one of the 88 modern constellations. Beginning at the north, Antlia is surrounded by the sea snake Hydra, the compass Pyxis, the sails (Vela) of the mythological ship Argo and finally the centaur Centaurus.
Notable features
Antlia is a faint constellation void of bright stars. The brightest star is α Antliae, a magnitude 4.25m orange giant.
Notable deep sky objects
- NGC 2997: Spiral galaxy of type Sc which is inclined 45° to our line of sight.
- NGC 3132: Planetary nebula, also called Eight-burst Nebula or Southern Ring Nebula. At its heart is a binary star system.
- Antlia Dwarf: This 14.8m dwarf spheroidal galaxy belongs to our Local Group of galaxies. It was only discovered as recently as 1997.[1]
History
The French astronomer Abbé Nicolas Louis de Lacaille created 14 constellations for the southern sky to fill some star-poor regions, among them Antlia. It was originally denominated Antlia pneumatica and commemorated the air pump invented by the French physicist Denis Papin.[2]
There is no mythology attached to Antlia as Lacaille discontinued the tradition of giving names from mythology to constellations and instead chose mostly names of instruments used in science.
Citations
References
External links
|
The 88 modern constellations |
|
|
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 | |
|
Constellation history |
|
|
The 48 constellations listed by Ptolemy after 150 AD |
|
|
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 | |
|
|
The 41 modern additional constellations from 1603 AD and forth |
|
|
▶ Bayer 1603: Apus · Chamaeleon · Coma Berenices · Dorado · Grus · Hydrus · Indus · Musca · Pavo · Phoenix · Triangulum Australe · Tucana · Volans · Vulpecula ▶ Plancius&Bartsch 1624: Camelopardalis · Monoceros ▶ Royer 1679: Columba · Crux ▶ Hevelius 1683: Canes Venatici · Lacerta · Leo Minor · Lynx · Scutum · Sextans · Vulpecula ▶ de Lacaille 1763: Antlia · Caelum · Canes Venatici · Carina · Circinus · Fornax · Horologium · Mensa · Microscopium · Norma · Octans · Pictor · Puppis · Pyxis · Reticulum · Sculptor · Telescopium · Vela | |
|
|
Obsolete constellations including Ptolemy's Argo Navis |
|
Anser · Antinous · Argo Navis · Asterion · Cancer Minor · Cerberus · Chara · Custos Messium · Felis · Frederici Honores/Gloria Frederici · Gallus · Globus Aerostaticus · Jordanus · Lochium Funis · Machina Electrica · Malus · Mons Maenalus · Musca Borealis · Noctua · Officina Typographica · Polophylax · Psalterium Georgii/Harpa Georgii · Quadrans Muralis · Ramus Pomifer · Robur Carolinum · Sceptrum Brandenburgicum · Sceptrum et Manus Iustitiae · Solarium · Tarandus vel Rangifer · Taurus Poniatovii · Telescopium Herschelii · Testudo · Tigris · Triangulum Minor · Turdus Solitarius · Vultur |
|
|
obsolete constellation names |
|
Apis · Phoenicopterus · Serpentarius · Vespa · Xiphias | | |
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; from the article "Antlia". Image Credit.