Centaurus
Centaurus is the ninth largest constellation, visible in the far southern sky in the months around March. Centaurus was included among the 48 constellations listed by the 2nd-century astronomer Ptolemy
Visually, it is dominated by the bright stars α-Cen and β-Cen, which form a pair of pointers to the Southern Cross, Crux, and may be used to distinguish it from the False Cross asterism in Carina and Vela.
The brighter of these, α-Cen is not only the third brightest star in the sky but also the closest of all the stars visible to the unaided eye, lying at a distance of around 4.37 lightyears.
Although it appears as a single object to the unaided eye, it is actually a triple-star system. Through a telescope, it is easy to resolve into a pair of stars, of which HR 5459 is the brighter and HR 5460 the fainter. A third component of this system, Proxima Centauri, is the nearest known star to the Earth, but at 11th magnitude, it is very faint.
The Milky Way passes through the southern half of Centaurus, and so it is home to many bright open clusters. Its best known deep sky object is ω–Centauri (NGC 5139) which is the largest and brightest globular cluster in the sky, visible to the naked eye at mag 3.7.
In classical mythology, the centaurs were a race of beings who were half human and half horse. Centaurus is identified as one particularly wise centaur, Chiron, the son of Cronus, king of the Titans. He is commonly depicted holding an animal, the neighboring constellation Lupus, which he is about to sacrifice on the altar depicted in Ara.
According to the Romans, Chiron, was a tutor to many of the earlier Greek heroes including Heracles (Hercules), Theseus, and Jason, the leader of the Argonauts
Centaurus is known by the name ಕಿನ್ನರ (Kinnara) in the Indian system.
Centaurus contains:
-
Stars
- Rigil Kentaurus (mag -0.0)
- Hadar (mag 0.6)
- α-Cen (mag 1.4)
- Menkent (mag 2.0)
- ε-Cen (mag 2.3)
- η-Cen (mag 2.3)
- δ-Cen (mag 2.5)
- ζ-Cen (mag 2.5)
- ι-Cen (mag 2.7)
- γ-Cen (mag 2.8)
- HD (mag 2.9)
- λ-Cen (mag 3.1)
- κ-Cen (mag 3.1)
- ν-Cen (mag 3.4)
- μ-Cen (mag 3.4)
- φ-Cen (mag 3.8)
- υ¹-Cen (mag 3.8)
- τ-Cen (mag 3.8)
- σ-Cen (mag 3.9)
- π-Cen (mag 3.9)
- d-Cen (mag 3.9)
- ρ-Cen (mag 3.9)
- b-Cen (mag 4.0)
- ψ-Cen (mag 4.0)
- c¹-Cen (mag 4.1)
-
Open Clusters
-
Globular Clusters
-
Galaxy
-
- NGC 5128 (mag 7.0)
- NGC 4945 (mag 9.5)
- NGC 5102 (mag 9.7)
- NGC 4976 (mag 10.2)
- NGC 5253 (mag 10.5)
- NGC 4696 (mag 10.7)
- NGC 5161 (mag 11.0)
- NGC 3706 (mag 11.1)
- NGC 4219 (mag 11.3)
- NGC 4709 (mag 11.3)
- NGC 5419 (mag 11.3)
- NGC 5011 (mag 11.3)
- NGC 5483 (mag 11.4)
- NGC 5121 (mag 11.4)
- NGC 5090 (mag 11.5)
- NGC 4767 (mag 11.5)
- IC 4329 (mag 11.5)
- IC 3896 (mag 11.6)
- NGC 5064 (mag 11.6)
- NGC 5206 (mag 11.6)
- IC 3253 (mag 11.6)
- IC 4214 (mag 11.7)
- NGC 4835 (mag 11.7)
- IC 4327 (mag 11.8)
- NGC 5188 (mag 11.8)
-
View Centaurus in 3D
Source: Wikipedia, in-the-sky.org
Image Courtesy: Sky&Telescope & IAU, Illustration Images linked from Urania's Mirror on Wikmedia Commons by Sidney Hall
Image Courtesy: Sky&Telescope & IAU, Illustration Images linked from Urania's Mirror on Wikmedia Commons by Sidney Hall