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Lupus, In The Sky
In astronomy, an ancient constellation of the southern sky,
located between the constellations Centaurus and Scorpius. Lupus has no extremely bright
stars but is densely populated with stars of second and third
magnitude. It is a constellation rich in double stars and multiple
stars. A few open clusters and other deep-sky objects can be
seen with binoculars within its boundaries; many more are visible
with a more powerful telescope. The name Lupus is Latin for "wolf,"
but the wolf appellation apparently did not become common until
the Renaissance. The ancient Greeks and Romans figured the grouping
as a wild animal of no specific type. Representations among the
Mediterranean civilizations that recognized this grouping included
a lioness, a leopard, a male horse, and a howling dog. Lupus
is often linked to the Centaur rearing above it, though the symbolism
may be forced. As examples, the Centaur is sometimes described
as reaching out to grasp Lupus and carry it to the Altar (Ara),
a nearby constellation, or as impaling Lupus on a pole. For a
long time, however, the stars were not clearly separated from
those in Centaurus. Eratosthenes, a Greek astronomer of the 3rd
century BC, described these stars as a wine skin from which the
Centaur was about to drink. It fell to Hipparchus of Bithnya,
a Greek astronomer of the 2nd century BC, to separate the stars
from Centaurus and give the constellation a name, Therion (Wild
Animal). The great astronomer Ptolemy of Alexandria cataloged
the constellation as Therion in the 2nd century AD, but alternative
names continued to appear on sky maps for centuries.
Lupus forms part of the disklike zone of young, bright stars
called Gould's Belt that slices through the Milky Way galaxy
at an angle of about 18 degrees. Sprinkled around the edge of
Gould's Belt are star nurseries, all of about the same age. The
Dutch astronomer Adriaan Blaauw has proposed that all of these
star nurseries originated at the same time, about 30 million
years ago, when compression of dust and gas squeezed a large
molecular cloud and caused a burst of star formation. The very
active Orion star nursery was one result; the association of
young, hot stars called the Upper Centaurus-Lupus Stellar Association
was another. Although stars in constellations generally move
in unrelated (to each other) fashion, most of the stars in this
association are moving together at the same speed, 16 miles (25
kilometers) per second, in the direction of Beta Columbae.
The Upper Centaurus--Lupus Association lies in the part of
Gould's Belt that extends above the plane of the Milky Way, so
that a portion of the Milky Way runs through Lupus. This location
brings within the boundaries of the constellation some attractive
star fields and their associated nebulae (both bright and dark),
galaxies, and clusters. The seventh-magnitude globular cluster
NGC 5986 can be seen with binoculars toward the northern end
of the constellation. This cluster is not extremely tight, and
some individual stars can be resolved with an amateur-sized telescope.
A few degrees north of NGC 5986 is a dark band in the sky known
as the dark nebula B 228. A dark nebula, or absorption nebula,
is a cloud of gas and dust that blocks light coming from behind.
As a result of absorption of their emitted light, the few stars
visible in the vicinity of B 228 appear unusually red. A few
open clusters, including the sixth-magnitude NGC 5822, lie near
the southern border of the constellation. On the western border,
about 5 degrees northwest of Alpha Lupi, is the Wolf-Rayet ring-type
planetary nebula IC 4406, visible with a small telescope. The
central stars of the Wolf-Rayet nebulae are thought to be the
hottest stars in the universe.
The figured part of the constellation, the stars that make
up the wolf shape, contains several bright single, double, and
multiple stars--none of which have a name. Alpha, Beta, Gamma,
Delta, Epsilon, and Zeta Lupi form a rough oblong representing
the body and front legs of the animal. Alpha Lupi, which might
be thought of as the eye, is a magnitude 2.3 blue giant about
620 light-years distant from Earth. About 6 degrees northeast,
marking the end of the ruff, is Beta Lupi, a magnitude 2.7 blue-white
giant about 680 light-years distant. Gamma Lupi, where the tail
and hind legs emerge from the animal's rump, is a magnitude 2.8
blue-white binary star whose close companion cannot be separated
with a small telescope. Northeast, along the more northerly of
the hind legs, is a wide multiple system, the Phi series, consisting
of a magnitude 3.5 yellow-orange giant star with two faint companions.
The other hind leg is marked by the double star Eta Lupi, whose
components are a magnitude 3.4 blue-white primary and a fainter,
whitish yellow companion. Back in the oblong representing the
animal's body are the multiple star systems Pi and Mu Lupi, and
the double star Kappa Lupi, whose magnitude 3.9 and 5.7 blue-white
components can be separated with a small telescope. In the Southern
Hemisphere Lupus is best viewed between March and September.
It reaches its highest point in the sky at 10:00 PM on June 1,
when, for an observer in the mid-southern latitudes, it appears
about two thirds of the way up the sky. Lupus lies northeast
of the very bright star Alpha Centauri and follows Centaurus
across the sky. About half of Lupus is visible from the mid-northern
latitudes in late spring and early summer. For a northern observer,
Lupus lies southwest of the red supergiant Antares and precedes
Scorpius across the sky.
Lupus (the Wolf) Some Facts:
Genitive: Lupi
Abbreviation: Lup
Declination: -29.8 degrees to -55.3 degrees
Right ascension: 14 h 13 m, to 16 h 05 m
Area covered: 334 square degrees
Number of stars brighter than sixth magnitude: 70
Compton's Encyclopedia Online v2.0 ©
1997 The Learning Company, Inc. |