Canes Venatici Explained
Canes Venatici |
Abbreviation: | CVn |
Genitive: | canes venatical |
Pronounce: | ,[1] genitive |
Symbolism: | the Hunting Dogs |
Ra: | to |
Dec: | +27.84° to +52.36° |
Areatotal: | 465 |
Arearank: | 38th |
Numbermainstars: | 2 |
Numberbfstars: | 22 |
Numberstarsplanets: | 4 |
Numberbrightstars: | 1 |
Numbernearbystars: | 2 |
Brighteststarname: | Cor Caroli (Asterion) (α CVn) |
Starmagnitude: | 2.90 |
Neareststarname: | DG Canum Venaticorum |
Stardistancely: | 25.89 |
Stardistancepc: | 7.94 |
Numbermessierobjects: | 5 |
Meteorshowers: | Canes Venaticids |
Latmax: | 90 |
Latmin: | 40 |
Month: | May |
Canes Venatici is one of the 88 constellations designated by the International Astronomical Union (IAU). It is a small northern constellation that was created by Johannes Hevelius in the 17th century. Its name is Latin for 'hunting dogs', and the constellation is often depicted in illustrations as representing the dogs of Boötes the Herdsman, a neighboring constellation.
Cor Caroli is the constellation's brightest star, with an apparent magnitude of 2.9. La Superba (Y CVn) is one of the reddest naked-eye stars and one of the brightest carbon stars. The Whirlpool Galaxy is a spiral galaxy tilted face-on to observers on Earth, and was the first galaxy whose spiral nature was discerned. In addition, quasar TON 618 is one of the most massive black holes with the mass of 66 billion solar masses.
History
The stars of Canes Venatici are not bright. In classical times, they were listed by Ptolemy as unfigured stars below the constellation Ursa Major in his star catalogue.
In medieval times, the identification of these stars with the dogs of Boötes arose through a mistranslation: some of Boötes's stars were traditionally described as representing the club (el|κολλοροβος, Greek, Modern (1453-);: kollorobos) of Boötes. When the Greek astronomer Ptolemy's Almagest was translated from Greek to Arabic, the translator Hunayn ibn Ishaq did not know the Greek word and rendered it as a similar-sounding compound Arabic word for a kind of weapon, writing Arabic: العصا ذات الكُلاب|rtl=yes Arabic: al-'aşā dhāt al-kullāb, which means 'the staff having a hook'.
When the Arabic text was later translated into Latin, the translator, Gerard of Cremona, mistook Arabic: كُلاب|rtl=yes Arabic: kullāb ('hook') for Arabic: كِلاب|rtl=yes Arabic: kilāb ('dogs'). Both written words look the same in Arabic text without diacritics, leading Gerard to write it as Latin: Hastile habens canes ('spearshaft-having dogs').[2] In 1533, the German astronomer Peter Apian depicted Boötes as having two dogs with him.
These spurious dogs floated about the astronomical literature until Hevelius decided to make them a separate constellation in 1687.[3] Hevelius chose the name Asterion for the northern dog and Chara for the southern dog, as Latin: Canes Venatici, 'the hunting dogs', in his star atlas.
In his star catalogue, the Czech astronomer Antonín Bečvář assigned the names Asterion to β CVn and Chara to α CVn.
Although the International Astronomical Union dropped several constellations in 1930 that were medieval and Renaissance innovations, Canes Venatici survived to become one of the 88 IAU designated constellations.[4]
Neighbors and borders
Canes Venatici is bordered by Ursa Major to the north and west, Coma Berenices to the south, and Boötes to the east. The three-letter abbreviation for the constellation, as adopted by the International Astronomical Union in 1922, is "CVn".[5] The official constellation boundaries, as set by Belgian astronomer Eugène Delporte in 1930,[4] are defined by a polygon of 14 sides.
In the equatorial coordinate system, the right ascension coordinates of these borders lie between and, while the declination coordinates are between +27.84° and +52.36°.[6] Covering 465 square degrees, it ranks 38th of the 88 constellations in size.
Prominent stars and deep-sky objects
Stars
See also: List of stars in Canes Venatici.
Canes Venatici contains no very bright stars. The Bayer designation stars, Alpha and Beta Canum Venaticorum are only of third and fourth magnitude respectively. Flamsteed catalogued 25 stars in the constellation, labelling them 1 to 25 Canum Venaticorum (CVn); however, 1CVn turned out to be in Ursa Major, 13CVn was in Coma Berenices, and 22CVn did not exist.[7]
- Alpha Canum Venaticorum, also known as Latin: Cor Caroli ('heart of Charles'), is the constellation's brightest star, named by Sir Charles Scarborough in memory of King Charles I, the executed king of Britain. The English astronomer William Henry Smyth wrote in 1844 that α CVn was brighter than usual during the Restoration, as Charles II returned to England to take the throne, but gave no source for this statement, which seems to be apocryphal.[8] Cor Caroli is a wide double star, with a primary of magnitude 2.9 and a secondary of magnitude 5.6; the primary is 110 light-years from Earth. The primary also has an unusually strong variable magnetic field.
- Beta Canum Venaticorum, or Chara, is a yellow-hued main sequence star of magnitude 4.25, 27 light-years from Earth. Its common name comes from the word for joy. It has been listed as an astrobiologically interesting star because of its proximity and similarity to the Sun.[9] [10] However, no exoplanets have been discovered around it so far.[11]
- Y Canum Venaticorum (La Superba) is a semiregular variable star that varies between magnitudes 5.0 and 6.5 over a period of around 158 days. It is a carbon star and is deep red in color, with a spectral type of C54J(N3).[12]
- AM Canum Venaticorum, a very blue star of magnitude 14, is the prototype of a special class of cataclysmic variable stars, in which the companion star is a white dwarf, rather than a main sequence star. It is 143 parsecs distant from the Sun.[13]
- RS Canum Venaticorum is the prototype of a special class of binary stars[14] of chromospherically active and optically variable components.
- R Canum Venaticorum is a Mira variable that ranges between magnitudes 6.5 and 12.9 over a period of approximately 329 days.[15]
Supervoid
The Giant Void, an extremely large void (part of the universe containing very few galaxies), is within the vicinity of this constellation. It is regarded to be the second largest void ever discovered, slightly larger than the Eridanus Supervoid and smaller than the proposed KBC Void and 1,200 times the volume of expected typical voids. It was discovered in 1988 in a deep-sky survey. Its centre is approximately 1.5 billion light-years away.[16]
Deep-sky objects
Canes Venatici contains five Messier objects, including four galaxies. One of the more significant galaxies in Canes Venatici is the Whirlpool Galaxy (M51, NGC 5194) and NGC 5195, a small barred spiral galaxy that is seen face-on. This was the first galaxy recognised as having a spiral structure, this structure being first observed by Lord Rosse in 1845. It is a face-on spiral galaxy 37 million light-years from Earth. Widely considered to be one of the most beautiful galaxies visible, M51 has many star-forming regions and nebulae in its arms, coloring them pink and blue in contrast to the older yellow core. M 51 has a smaller companion, NGC 5195, that has very few star-forming regions and thus appears yellow. It is passing behind M 51 and may be the cause of the larger galaxy's prodigious star formation.
Other notable spiral galaxies in Canes Venatici are the Sunflower Galaxy (M63, NGC 5055), M94 (NGC 4736), and M106 (NGC 4258).
- M63, the Sunflower Galaxy, was named for its appearance in large amateur telescopes. It is a spiral galaxy with an integrated magnitude of 9.0.
- M94 (NGC 4736) is a small face-on spiral galaxy with approximate magnitude 8.0, about 15 million light-years from Earth.
- NGC 4631 is a barred spiral galaxy, which is one of the largest and brightest edge-on galaxies in the sky.[17]
- M3 (NGC 5272) is a globular cluster 32,000 light-years from Earth. It is 18′ in diameter, and at magnitude 6.3 is bright enough to be seen with binoculars. It can even be seen with the naked eye under particularly dark skies.
- M94, also cataloged as NGC 4736, is a face-on spiral galaxy 15 million light-years from Earth. It has very tight spiral arms and a bright core. The outskirts of the galaxy are incredibly luminous in the ultraviolet because of a ring of new stars surrounding the core 7,000 light-years in diameter. Though astronomers are not sure what has caused this ring of new stars, some hypothesize that it is from shock waves caused by a bar that is thus far invisible.[18]
Ton 618 is a hyperluminous quasar and blazar in this constellation, near its border with the neighboring Coma Berenices. It possesses a black hole with a mass 66 billion times that of the Sun, making it one of the most massive black holes ever measured.[19] There is also a Lyman-alpha blob.[20]
References
Bibliography
- Book: Allen, Richard Hinckley. Richard Hinckley Allen. 1963. 1899. Star Names: Their lore and meaning. Dover Publications. New York, NY. 0-486-21079-0.
- Book: Apianus, Petrus. 1533. Petrus Apianus. Horoscopion generale. la.
- Book: Bečvář, Antonín. 1951. Antonín Bečvář. Atlas Coeli. II – Catalogue 1950.0. Czechoslovak Astronomical Society.
- Book: Hevelius, Johannes. 1690. Johannes Hevelius. Firmamentum Sobiescianum. la.
- Book: Kunitzsch, P.. 1959. Arabische Sternnamen in Europa. Otto Harassowitz. de.
- Book: Ptolemäus, Claudius. Claudius Ptolemy. Kunitzsch. P.. 1974. Der Almagest: Die Syntaxis Mathematica des Claudius Ptolemäus in arabisch-lateinischer Ūberlieferung. Otto Harassowitz . .
- Book: Kunitzsch, P.. 1990. Der Sternkatalog des Almagest die arabisch-mittelalterliche Tradition. II Die lateinische Ūbersetzung Gerhards von Cremona. Otto Harassowitz. de.
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Constellation Pronunciation Guide. Space.com. 13 December 2006. 2020-10-03. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20201004043354/https://www.space.com/3237-constellation-pronunciation-guide.html. 2020-10-04.
- ; ;
- Web site: Ridpath. Ian. Canes Venatici. Star Tales.
- Book: Delporte, Eugène. 1930. Délimitation scientifique des constellations. International Astronomical Union.
- Web site: Ridpath. Ian. The IAU list of the 88 constellations and their abbreviations.
- Canes Venatici, constellation boundary. The Constellations. International Astronomical Union. 15 February 2014. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20140216012503/https://www.iau.org/public/themes/constellations/. 2014-02-16.
- Book: Wagman, Morton. October 2003. Lost Stars: Lost, missing and troublesome stars from the catalogues of Johannes Bayer, Nicholas Louis de Lacaille, John Flamsteed, and sundry others. 366. McDonald and Woodward. Blacksburg, VA. 978-0-939923-78-6.
- Web site: Ridpath. Ian. Canes Venatici. Star Tales.
- de Mello . G. P.. del Peloso . E. F. . Ghezzi . L. . Astrobiologically Interesting Stars Within 10 Parsecs of the Sun . Astrobiology . 2006 . 6 . 2 . 308–331 . 10.1089/ast.2006.6.308. astro-ph/0511180 . 16689649 . 2006AsBio...6..308P. 119459291.
- News: Stars searched for extraterrestrials . . 2006-02-19 . 2008-05-04 .
- van Belle . Gerard T. . von Braun . Kaspar . Directly Determined Linear Radii and Effective Temperatures of Exoplanet Host Stars . The Astrophysical Journal . 694 . 2 . 1085–1098 . April 2009 . 10.1088/0004-637X/694/2/1085 . 2009ApJ...694.1085V . 0901.1206 . 18370219 .
- 2011ARep...55...31S. Search for and study of hot circumstellar dust envelopes. Astronomy Reports. 55. 31–81. Shenavrin. V. I.. Taranova. O. G.. Nadzhip. A. E.. 122700080. 2011. 1. 10.1134/S1063772911010070.
- 2008NewA...13..133A. Spatial distribution and galactic model parameters of cataclysmic variables. New Astronomy. 13. 3. 133–143. Ak. T.. Bilir. S.. Ak. S.. Eker. Z.. 2008. 10.1016/j.newast.2007.08.003. 0708.1053. 17804687.
- V* RS CVn. 9 June 2012.
- Web site: R Canum Venaticorum. VSX. 4 January 2010. AAVSO Website. American Association of Variable Star Observers. 26 June 2014.
- Kopylov. A. I.. Kopylova. F. G.. February 2002. Search for streaming motion of galaxy clusters around the Giant Void. live. Astronomy & Astrophysics. 382. 2. 389–396. 2002A&A...382..389K. 10.1051/0004-6361:20011500. https://web.archive.org/web/20180718223712/https://www.aanda.org/articles/aa/pdf/2002/05/aa1614.pdf. 2018-07-18. free.
- Book: O'Meara, Stephen James. The Caldwell Objects. Sky Publishing Corporation. 0-933346-97-2. 126. January 2002.
- Book: Wilkins. Jamie. Dunn. Robert. August 2006. 300 Astronomical Objects: A visual reference to the universe. Firefly Books. 9781554071753.
- Shemmer. O.. Netzer. H.. Maiolino. R.. Oliva. E.. Croom. S.. Corbett. E.. di Fabrizio. L.. Near-infrared spectroscopy of high-redshift active galactic nuclei: I. A metallicity-accretion rate relationship. The Astrophysical Journal. 2004. 614. 2. 547–557. astro-ph/0406559. 2004ApJ...614..547S. 10.1086/423607. 119010341.
- Li . Jianrui. Emonts . B.H.C.. Cai . Z.. Prochaska . J.X.. Yoon . I.. Lehnert . M.D.. Zhang . S. . Wu . Y. . Li . Jianan . Li . Mingyu . Lacy . M. . Villar-Martín . M. . 25 November 2021. Massive Molecular Outflow and 100 kpc Extended Cold Halo Gas in the Enormous Lyα Nebula of QSO 1228+3128 . The Astrophysical Journal Letters. 922. 2 . L29. 10.3847/2041-8213/ac390d. 2111.06409. 2021ApJ...922L..29L. 244102865. free.