Reticulum



Reticulum is a small and faint southern constellation. It lies close to the south celestial pole and is circumpolar across much of the southern hemisphere, but appears highest in the evening sky in the months around November.

This constellation was named by Nicolas Louis de Lacaille in 1756 to commemorate the reticle in the eyepiece of the telescope he used to measure star positions from the Cape of Good Hope in 1751–52.

Previously this sky area was known as ‘Rhombus’ – so called because its brightest stars lie in a diamond shape.

Reticulum contains only one third-magnitude star and no bright deep sky objects.

In the Indian astronomy system, Reticulum is called ಜಾಲ (Jaala).

Reticulum contains:

 

  • Stars
    • α-Ret (mag 3.3)
    • β-Ret (mag 3.8)
    • ε-Ret (mag 4.4)
    • γ-Ret (mag 4.5)
    • δ-Ret (mag 4.6)
    • κ-Ret (mag 4.7)
    • ι-Ret (mag 5.0)
    • ζ²-Ret (mag 5.2)
    • η-Ret (mag 5.2)
    • HD 27304 (mag 5.5)
    • ζ¹-Ret (mag 5.5)
    • HD 28732 (mag 5.7)
    • HD 29399 (mag 5.8)
    • HD 22252 (mag 5.8)
    • HD 28413 (mag 5.9)
    • HD 20888 (mag 6.0)
    • θ-Ret (mag 6.0)
    • HD 25346 (mag 6.1)
    • HD 25170 (mag 6.1)
    • HD 23697 (mag 6.4)
    • TT Ret (mag 6.4)
    • HD 26491 (mag 6.4)
    • HD 22382 (mag 6.4)
    • HD 22634 (mag 6.7)
    • None
  • Open Clusters
  • Globular Clusters
    • None
  • Galaxy
    • NGC 1313 (mag 10.0)
    • NGC 1559 (mag 10.4)
    • NGC 1574 (mag 10.5)
    • NGC 1543 (mag 10.6)
    • IC 2056 (mag 12.5)
    • NGC 1536 (mag 13.2)
    • NGC 1490 (mag 13.4)
    • NGC 1534 (mag 13.8)
    • NGC 1463 (mag 14.2)
    • IC 2060 (mag 14.3)
    • NGC 1529 (mag 14.4)
    • NGC 1503 (mag 14.4)
    • IC 2010 (mag 14.5)
    • IC 1997 (mag 14.5)
    • NGC 1526 (mag 14.6)
    • IC 2049 (mag 14.7)
    • IC 2037 (mag 14.8)
    • IC 2017 (mag 14.9)
    • IC 1980 (mag 14.9)
    • IC 1960 (mag 15.2)
    • IC 2014 (mag 15.5)
    • IC 2024 (mag 15.5)
    • IC 1965 (mag 15.6)
    • IC 1982 (mag 15.7)
    • IC 2034 (mag 15.9)

View Reticulum 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


Share: