Welcome to the Munich Astro Archiv Constellation Pages.
Being asked most people would name the twelve constellations of the zodiac and some more they have heard of or even seen (most common is surely the Big Dipper, though it is not a constellation but an asterism). In total there are 88 constellations, which can be divided into eight constellation families (see Menzel, "A Field Guide to the Stars and Planetes").
Many names we use nowadays came from the ancient Greeks. They used to assign their gods and heroes to certain figures in the sky. Due to their northern location they only gave names to those regions visible from their countries. The regions around the celestial south pole got some of their names when the astronomer Johan Bayer made his notes about the south regions of the sky. He followed the tradition of the names of the ancient, mainly connected to the sea and its creatures. Later on the french astronomer La Caille added the last 13 to fill the star-poor regions between the existing groups. He finally broke with the traditional namegiving and used scientific equipment or instruments (there is only one exception, which is Mensa, the Table Mountain).
It should be noted that although now common, this is only the western view of
the star patterns.
Noone knows when mankind start giving names to stars and grouping of stars. It
is most likely that constellation names were invented by early sailors for
navigation purposes. But also in the deserts they might have been a good help
for the people to find their ways. Therefore its quite naturally that each
culture grouped the stars differently and gave them names from their natural
and social enviroment.
The constellations of the zodiac we know nowadays reach back to the days of the
Babylonians and Chaldeans, 2000 to 3000 years ago. Back then the sun passes
through twelve constellations we still assign to the zodiac. But since these
old days there have been several changes to the assignment of the stars.
The sun is now
passing through thirdteen constellations along the ecliptic.
After the sun left Scorpius
in the last week of November it moves through Ophiuchus, the Serpent
Holder, in December before reaching Sagittarius, the Archer, end of
December.
About the constellation pages:
From the listing of all 88
constellations one finds links to more extended informations about each of
them. This informations covers data and descriptions about stars, deepsky
objects and meteor showers.
There are also tables with the
brightest stars of each constellation available.
Sometimes people find starcharts pretty useless because they show only a small part of the sky. Photographic pictures of the entire sky a prepared as image maps (all images below 4 kB; clicking on an area leads to the constellation - individual stars will hopefully included soon) or as non-clickable pictures, but with the constellation lines drawn into it.
The constellation pages are available in english,
german and partly in italian. On each
description page you find the flags of Germany and Italy which leads to the
same page translated to these languages.
At the bottom of each page you find two logos: a miniature version of the MAA
Logo, which gives a backlink to the MAA home page, and a miniature version of
the Logo of this constellation page (in preparation; letter "C" and "S"), which
simply gives you the possibilty to jump directly back to here.
Other recommended sites about constellations:
References:
See here the list of the literature I used to
create these pages.
© 1996-2000 C. Kronberg --- smil
Curator: Hartmut Frommert
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