Camelopardalis



Camelopardalis is a large but faint area of sky close to the north celestial pole representing a giraffe.

It does not contain any bright stars, and furthermore it also lies well away from the plane of the Milky Way and does not contain any bright deep sky objects either. However, because there is little obscuration from nearby material it is a good place to observe the distant universe, and it contains many faint galaxies.

Rather improbably, the name ‘Camelopardalis’ means ‘giraffe’ and was given to this sky area by Plancius in 1612. I had previously been left unnamed by Greek astronomers since it did not contain any bright stars.

The giraffe in question is supposedly the animal Rebecca rode to marry Isaac in the Book of Genesis, though the Biblical story itself refers to a camel. Legendhas it that Johannes Hevelius saw the spots of a giraffe in the constellation’s stars, prompting the association.

The Indian name for this constellation is ದೀರ್ಘ ಕಂಠ (Deergha Kantha)

Camelopardalis contains:
  • Stars
    • β-Cam (mag 4.0)
    • HD 21291 (mag 4.3)
    • α-Cam (mag 4.3)
    • BE Cam (mag 4.4)
    • 7-Cam (mag 4.4)
    • HD 49878 (mag 4.6)
    • HD 21389 (mag 4.6)
    • γ-Cam (mag 4.6)
    • BK Cam (mag 4.7)
    • HD 42818 (mag 4.8)
    • HD 23089 (mag 4.8)
    • VZ Cam (mag 4.9)
    • HD 24479 (mag 5.0)
    • HD 25291 (mag 5.0)
    • HD 24480 (mag 5.1)
    • 3-Cam (mag 5.1)
    • 43-Cam (mag 5.1)
    • HD 33564 (mag 5.1)
    • HD 21447 (mag 5.1)
    • BD Cam (mag 5.1)
    • 42-Cam (mag 5.1)
    • HD 106112 (mag 5.1)
    • HD 20797 (mag 5.2)
    • HD 26764 (mag 5.2)
    • TU Cam (mag 5.2)
  • Open Clusters
  • Globular Clusters
    None
  • Galaxy

View Camelopardalis 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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