Lepus



Lepus lies immediately south of Orion, where it culminates at midnight in the December sky.

The name ‘Lepus’ is Latin for hare, and the creature represented here is often said to be chased by Orion’s two dogs, Canis Major and Canis Minor. For sure, the two dogs rise and set about an hour behind Lepus. However, the hare is not usually depicted in flight, but rather couched at the hunter’s feet.

Lepus is a relatively faint constellation: its brightest star is of third magnitude and is called Arneb, Arabic for ‘hare’. Its only Messier object is the eighth-magnitude globular cluster M79.

 

In the Indian system, the constellation is known as ಶಶ (Shasha).

Lepus contains:
  • Stars
    • Arneb (mag 2.6)
    • Nihal (mag 2.8)
    • ε-Lep (mag 3.2)
    • μ-Lep (mag 3.3)
    • ζ-Lep (mag 3.5)
    • γ-Lep (mag 3.6)
    • η-Lep (mag 3.7)
    • δ-Lep (mag 3.8)
    • λ-Lep (mag 4.3)
    • κ-Lep (mag 4.4)
    • ι-Lep (mag 4.4)
    • θ-Lep (mag 4.7)
    • HD 34968 (mag 4.7)
    • HD 32309 (mag 4.9)
    • SS Lep (mag 5.0)
    • HD 32436 (mag 5.0)
    • HD 41312 (mag 5.0)
    • HD 34310 (mag 5.0)
    • 8-Lep (mag 5.2)
    • ν-Lep (mag 5.3)
    • 19-Lep (mag 5.3)
    • HD 35162 (mag 5.4)
    • HD 41841 (mag 5.5)
    • HD 42301 (mag 5.5)
    • HD 34538 (mag 5.5)
  • Open Clusters
    • None
  • Globular Clusters
  • Galaxy

View Lepus 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


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