Asterism (astronomy)

This picture of Brocchi's Cluster (the Coathanger), an asterism in the constellation Vulpecula, was taken through binoculars.

In astronomy, an asterism is a pattern of stars recognized in the Earth's night sky. It may be part of an official constellation or it may be composed of stars from more than one constellation.

Colloquial usage does not draw a sharp distinction between "constellation" in the sense of an asterism (pattern of stars) and "constellation" in the sense of an area of the sky surrounding an asterism. The modern system of constellations used in astronomy employs the latter concept. For example, the asterism known as the Big Dipper comprises the seven brightest stars in the IAU constellation that is called Ursa Major.

Like constellations, asterisms are in most cases composed of stars which, although visible in the same general area, are often located at very different distances from Earth.

Simple shapes composed of a few stars make asterisms easy to identify. Thus they are particularly useful to people who are familiarizing themselves with the night sky.

Background

Even before the dawn of civilization, it became common to clump various stars together in connect-the-dots stick-figure patterns. The grouping of stars into constellations is essentially arbitrary, and different cultures have had different constellations, although a few of the more obvious ones tend to recur frequently, e.g., Orion and Scorpius. Historically, without an "official" list, there was really no difference between a constellation and an asterism. Anyone could arrange and name a grouping which might or might not be generally accepted. Still, some of our own constellations go back at least as far as the Babylonians.

Our current list is based on that of the Greco-Roman astronomer, Claudius Ptolemy of Alexandria (c 90–c 168). His list of 48 constellations was accepted as the standard for 1,800 years. As constellations were considered to be composed only of the stars that constituted the figure, it was always possible to use the leftover, non-figure ("amorphic") stars to create and squeeze in a new grouping among the established constellations. Two astronomers particularly known for attempting to expand Ptolemy's catalog were Johann Bayer (1572–1625) and Nicolas Louis de Lacaille (1713–1762). Bayer listed a dozen figures that had been suggested since Ptolemy's day; Lacaille created new groups, mostly for the area near the South Celestial Pole, unobserved by the ancients. Many of their proposed constellations have been accepted, the rest remaining asterisms, mostly obsolete. Clarification was necessary to determine which groupings are constellations and which stars belonged to them. The situation was finally regularized in 1930 when the International Astronomical Union (IAU) divided the sky into 88 official constellations with precise boundaries. Any other grouping is an asterism.

Large seasonal asterisms

Component stars of seasonal asterisms are bright and mark out simple geometric shapes.[1]

Other examples

The Big Dipper asterism

One of the best-known asterisms is the Big Dipper or Plough. It is composed of the seven brightest stars in Ursa Major,[7] where they delineate the Bear's hindquarters and exaggerated tail, or alternatively, the "handle" forming the upper outline of the bear's head and neck. With its longer tail, Ursa Minor hardly appears bearlike at all, and is widely known by its pseudonym, the Little Dipper.[8]

Constellation aliases

Ursa Minor is not the only constellation that does not look very much like what it represents; very few do. This has led to nicknames for some of the constellations. These nicknames are another variety of asterism. A glance at the stick-figures shown in the charts under the constellation names will easily explain the origin of these asterisms.

Sectional asterisms

An asterism may also be a section of a constellation that refers to the traditional figuring of the whole. Thus, for example, there are:

There are many others.[7]

Non-sectional asterisms

Other asterisms are also composed of stars from one constellation, but do not refer to the traditional figures.

Cross-border groups

Like the seasonal asterisms, there are others that are formed from stars in more than one constellation.

Telescopic patterns

Asterisms range from the large and obvious to the small, and even telescopic.

Former asterisms

Argo is a special case. Argo Navis, ("the ship Argo"), was, by far, the largest of Ptolemy's constellations. Starting with Lacaille in his Coelum Australe Stelliferum (1763), it became common to refer to its various parts as the Keel, the Poop Deck, and the Sails. In the 1930 IAU arrangement, Argo was deemed too large, and these old sectional asterisms were recognized as official constellations (Carina, Puppis, and Vela), thereby turning Argo, as a whole, into an asterism.

The Southern Cross is not an asterism, but merely a variation on the meaning of Crux. Crux was an asterism when Bayer created it in Uranometria (1603) from stars in the hind legs of Centaurus. It was given constellation status in 1930, thereby mutilating the Centaur.

Centaurus had been reduced in size once before. Lupus was originally considered to be merely a sectional asterism (as an unspecified Wild Beast in the Centaur's grasp). Hipparchus split it off in the 3rd century BC, and Ptolemy's list confirmed its independent status.

In its original figuration, Leo included a spray of faint stars pictured as the tuft in the Lion's Tail which stretched straight out from its body. Antedating even Ptolemy by centuries, Conon of Alexandria created the asterism "Berenice's Hair" commemorating his queen in 243 BC. Following Tycho's acceptance of Coma, Bayer recorded it and refigured the Lion. The IAU confirmed Coma's status as a constellation.

Even so venerable a constellation as Libra was once merely an asterism. Until the middle of the first millennium BC, the Zodiac consisted of only eleven constellations. The biblical reference to "the eleven stars" (Genesis 37:9) is more accurately "the eleven asterisms/constellations (of the Zodiac)." At the time, Scorpius' claws were pictured as extending to Zubenelgenubi, "the southern claw" and Zubeneschamali, "the northern claw" (Alpha and Beta Librae). Later, when Virgo was reimagined as Astraea, the goddess of justice, the Claws became a set of scales held in her hand. By Ptolemy's day, Libra had become an independent constellation, unconnected with either of its neighbors. Still, the names of its stars reflect the time when it was the asterism of "The Claws" and its figuration is that of the old sectional asterism within Virgo.

The groups named here were sectional asterisms that have been promoted to constellation status. For a list of proposed constellations that were not accepted as anything beyond asterisms, and are now considered obsolete, see Former constellations.

Non-asterisms

In the formal sense used here, asterisms are groups of stars that have not been categorized as something else.[lower-alpha 1] Objects which do not fall within the bounds of this definition include the Milky Way, nebulae, and open clusters.

Dividing the night sky into two roughly equal hemispheres, the Milky Way appears as a hazy band of white light arching across the entire celestial sphere. Many cultures have myths about "the broad white road in heaven."[19] That the glow originates from innumerable faint stars and other materials which lie within the galactic plane was one of Galileo's early telescopic discoveries. Similarly, the Magellanic Clouds are not asterisms, but galaxies in their own right.

Nebulae, clouds of gas and dust that dot the galaxy, whether emission, such as the Pelican, or dark, such as the Horsehead, are clearly not asterisms as they are not composed of stars.

Open clusters are groups of stars that are physically related gravitationally bound together and moving through the galaxy in the same direction and speed. As these groupings are not human constructs, but real phenomena, they do not count as asterisms. Among the best-known and closest are the Pleiades (M45) and the Hyades in Taurus and the Beehive (M44) in Cancer. (It may be noted that, with the addition of Aldebaran, which is in the same line of sight, the Hyades open cluster forms a V-shaped sectional asterism in Taurus).

The fine point of what constitutes an asterism may be seen in two examples. Theta Orionis (θ Ori) is embedded in, and illuminates, the Orion Nebula (M42). Looked at telescopically, it resolved into four stars arranged in a trapezoid, and they were nicknamed the Trapezium. The asterism retained this name even when it was discovered that there were yet more stars in the group. However, it has since been determined that the Orion Nebula is a stellar nursery and that the Trapezium is actually an Open Cluster. Thus it is no longer an asterism. On the other hand, M73 in Aquarius, which was thought to be an Open Cluster, turns out to be composed of unrelated stars, and may now be considered to be an asterism.

See also

Notes

  1. While in common parlance, any fixed celestial feature may be called an asterism, it is not strictly proper to refer to a constellation, cluster, or galaxy as such, and thus reduce it to a mere asterism. The "aliases" are asterisms because they are simplified figures, leaving out the dimmer stars in the official constellations.

References

Bibliography

External links

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