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Columba (constellation)

Coordinates: Sky map 06h 00m 00s, −35° 00′ 00″
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Columba
Constellation
Columba
AbbreviationCol
GenitiveColumbae
Pronunciation/kəˈlʌmbə/,
genitive /kəˈlʌmb/
Symbolismthe dove
Right ascension05h 03m 53.8665s06h 39m 36.9263s[1]
Declination−27.0772038°–−43.1116486°[1]
Area270 sq. deg. (54th)
Main stars5
Bayer/Flamsteed
stars
18
Stars with planets1
Stars brighter than 3.00m1
Stars within 10.00 pc (32.62 ly)0
Brightest starα Col (Phact) (2.65m)
Messier objects0
Meteor showers0
Bordering
constellations
Lepus
Caelum
Pictor
Puppis
Canis Major
Visible at latitudes between +45° and −90°.
Best visible at 21:00 (9 p.m.) during the month of February.

Columba is a faint constellation designated in the late sixteenth century, remaining in official use, with its rigid limits set in the 20th century. Its name is Latin for dove. It takes up 1.31% of the southern celestial hemisphere and is just south of Canis Major and Lepus.

History

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The constellation Columba as it can be seen by the naked eye.
  • Early 3rd century BC: Aratus's astronomical poem Phainomena (lines 367–370 and 384–385) mentions faint stars where Columba is now but does not fit any name or figure to them.
  • 2nd century AD: Ptolemy listed 48 constellations in the Almagest but did not mention Columba.
  • c. 150–215 AD: Clement of Alexandria wrote in his Logos Paidogogos[2]"Αἱ δὲ σφραγῖδες ἡμῖν ἔστων πελειὰς ἢ ἰχθὺς ἢ ναῦς οὐριοδρομοῦσα ἢ λύρα μουσική, ᾗ κέχρηται Πολυκράτης, ἢ ἄγκυρα ναυτική," (= "[when recommending symbols for Christians to use], let our seals be a dove or a fish or a ship running in a good wind or a musical lyre ... or a ship's anchor ..."), with no mention of stars or astronomy.
  • 1592 AD: [3] Petrus Plancius first depicted Columba on the small celestial planispheres of his large wall map to differentiate the 'unformed stars' of the large constellation Canis Major.[4] Columba is also shown on his smaller world map of 1594 and on early Dutch celestial globes. Plancius named the constellation Columba Noachi ("Noah's Dove"), referring to the dove that gave Noah the information that the Great Flood was receding. This name is found on early 17th-century celestial globes and star atlases.
The constellation seen as "Columba Noachi" in Urania's Mirror (1825).
  • 1592: Frederick de Houtman listed Columba as "De Duyve med den Olijftack" (= "the dove with the olive branch")
  • 1603: Bayer's Uranometria was published. It includes Columba as Columba Noachi.[5]
  • 1624: Bartschius listed Columba in his Usus Astronomicus as "Columba Nohae".
  • 1662: Caesius published Coelum Astronomico-Poeticum, including an inaccurate Latin translation of the above text of Clement of Alexandria: it mistranslated "ναῦς οὐριοδρομοῦσα" as Latin "Navis coelestis cursu in coelum tendens" ("Ship of the sky following a course in the sky"), perhaps misunderstanding "οὐριο-" as "up in the air or sky" by analogy with οὐρανός = "sky".
  • 1679: Halley mentioned Columba in his work Catalogus Stellarum Australium from his observations on St. Helena.
  • 1679: Augustin Royer published a star atlas that showed Columba as a constellation.
  • c.1690: Hevelius's Prodromus Astronomiae showed Columba but did not list it as a constellation.
  • 1712 (pirated) and 1725 (authorized): Flamsteed's work Historia Coelestis Britannica showed Columba but did not list it as a constellation.
  • 1757 or 1763: Lacaille listed Columba as a constellation and catalogued its stars.
  • 1889: Richard H. Allen,[6] misled by Caesius's mistranslation, wrote that the Columba asterism may have been invented in Roman/Greek times, but with a footnote saying that it may have been another star group.
  • 2001: Ridpath and Tirion wrote that Columba may also represent the dove released by Jason and the Argonauts at the Black Sea's mouth; it helped them navigate the dangerous Symplegades.[3]
  • 2007: The author P.K. Chen wrote (his opinion) that, given the mythological linkage of a dove with Jason and the Argonauts, and the celestial location of Columba over Puppis (part of the old constellation Argo Navis, the ship of the Argonauts), Columba may have an ancient history although Ptolemy omits it.[7][8]
  • 2019–20: OSIRIS-REx students discovered a black hole in the constellation Columba, based on observing X-ray bursts.[9]

In the Society Islands, Alpha Columbae (Phact) was called Ana-iva.[10]

Features

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Stars

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Columba is rather inconspicuous, the brightest star, Alpha Columbae, being only of magnitude 2.7. This, a blue-white star, has a pre-Bayer, traditional, Arabic name Phact (meaning ring dove) and is 268 light-years from Earth. The only other named star is Beta Columbae, which has the alike-status name Wazn. It is an orange-hued giant star of magnitude 3.1, 87 light-years away.[11]

The constellation contains the runaway star μ Columbae, which was probably expelled from the ι Orionis system.

Exoplanet NGTS-1b and its star NGTS-1 are in Columba.

General radial velocity

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Columba contains the solar antapex – the opposite to the net direction of the solar system[12] (noting the local spiral arm of the Milky Way itself is responsible for most of our change of position over time).[citation needed]

Deep-sky objects

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NGC 1851 a globular cluster in Columba appears at 7th magnitude in a far part of our galaxy as is 39,000 light-years away - it is resolvable south of at greatest latitude +40°N in medium-sized amateur telescopes (under good conditions).[11]

See also

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Citations

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  1. ^ a b "Columba, constellation boundary". The Constellations. International Astronomical Union. Retrieved 27 February 2014.
  2. ^ Brenda Deen Schildgen (2016). Heritage or Heresy: Preservation and Destruction of Religious Art and Architecture in Europe. Springer. p. 63. ISBN 978-0-230-61315-7.
  3. ^ a b Ridpath & Tirion 2001, pp. 120–121.
  4. ^ Ley, Willy (December 1963). "The Names of the Constellations". For Your Information. Galaxy Science Fiction. pp. 90–99.
  5. ^ Canis Maior and Columba in Bayers Uranometria 1603 (Linda Hall Library) Archived 2007-04-27 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Richard H. Allen (1899) Star Names: Their Lore and Meaning, pp. 166–168
  7. ^ P.K. Chen (2007) A Constellation Album: Stars and Mythology of the Night Sky, p. 126 (ISBN 978-1-931559-38-6).
  8. ^ Chen, p. 126.
  9. ^ "NASA's OSIRIS-REx Students Catch Unexpected Glimpse of Newly Discovered Black Hole". NASA. 28 February 2020.
  10. ^ Makemson 1941, p. 281.
  11. ^ a b Ridpath & Tirion 2017, p. 122.
  12. ^ Madore, Barry F. (14 August 2002). "Astronomical Glossary". NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database. Retrieved 31 January 2023.

References

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