Tuesday, January 21, 2020
Aquarius :: essays research papers
 Aquarius           Aquarius can be found in the SE sky in autumn, especially October. A  dark night is especially helpful because many faint stars make up Aquarius.  This will help to make the fainter stars stand out because its hard enough to  see a shape in Aquarius. Up and to the west of aquarius, pegasus can be found.  Down and to the east of aquarius, capricorn can be found.       Aquarius portrays a man or boy spilling water from an urn. Aquarius is  identified with Ganymede, a beautiful young shepherd who was abducted by Zeus  and taken to Mount Olympus to be the cup bearer for the gods.       Stars:       Sadalmelik: Arabic for "lucky one of the king". It lies just off the  celestial equator.       Sudalsud: It means "luckiest of the lucky" in Arabic. It is the  brightest star in the constellation       Sadachbia: Arabic for "lucky star of hidden things" or " lucky star of  the tents." This makes up part of the asterism sometimes called the tent, but  is usually called the urn referring to Aquarius.       Skat or Scheat: It comes from the Arabic word for shin and it dates  back to the translation of Ptolemy's Almagest.       Albali: The name comes from the Arabic, which means "swallower"; no one  really knows why the star got this name       Situla: This name comes from Latin and means "well bucket". Situla was  the original Arabic name for the entire constellation Aquarius.         There are three star clusters contained in Aquarius. M2, which was  discovered in 1764, is one that can be seen with a small telescope. A larger  telescope is needed to make out the individual stars. M72 is another cluster  that is located southeast of Albali and isn't far from the Saturn Nebula. NGC  7492 is the third cluster and is located east of Skat.        Aquarius also has two nebulae in it. It is called the Saturn Nebula  because it resembles the rings on Saturn. A very large telescope is needed to  see its rings. It was discovered in 1782 by William Herschel. In a small  telescopes it will appear as faint disks of fuzzy light.  					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.