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Phoenix (constellation)

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Phoenix

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Abbreviation Phe
Genitive Phoenicis
Symbology the Phoenix
Right ascension 0 h
Declination −50°
Area List of constellations by area>Ranked 37th
Number of stars
(magnitude < 3)
1
Brightest star α Phoenicis (Ankaa)
(Apparent magnitude>App. magnitude 2.39)
Meteor showers
Bordering
constellations
Visible at latitudes between +32° and −90°
Best visible at 21:00 (9 p.m.) during the month of November
Phoenix is a minor southern constellation, introduced by Dutch navigators Pieter Dirkszoon Keyser and Frederick de Houtman, and popularized by Johann Bayer's Uranometria in 1603.

There are only thirteen stars in the whole constellation which are brighter than magnitude 5.0.

The constellation stretches from roughly −41° to −57° declination, and from 23.5h to 2h of right ascension. This means it is generally invisible to anyone living north of the 40th parallel in the Northern Hemisphere, and remains low in the sky for anyone living north of the equator. It is easily visible from locations such as Australia and South Africa during Southern Hemisphere summer.

Phoenix is associated with the minor Phoenicids meteor shower of December 5th.

History

The introduction of a Phoenix into modern astronomy was, in a measure, by adoption rather than by invention. But, whether Bayer knew it or not, his title is an appropriate one, for with various early nations - at all events, in China, Egypt, India, and Persia, - this bird has been "an astronomical symbol of cyclic period" some versions of the well-known fable making its life coincident with the Great Year of the ancients beginning at noon of the day when the sun entered among the stars of Aries; and, in Egypt, with the Sothic Period when the sun and Sirius rose together on the 20th of July. Thompson further writes of this: "A new Phoenix-period is said to have commenced AD 139, in the reign of Antoninus Pius; and a recrudescence of astronomical symbolism associated therewith is manifested on the coins of that Emperor". Coincidentally, Ptolemy adopted as the epoch of his catalogue the year AD 138, the first of Antoninus. [SLM p.335].

With the Egyptians, who knew this bird as Bennu and showed it on their coins, it was an emblem of immortality; indeed it generally has been such in pagan as well as in Christian times. In China the constellation was Ho Neaou, the Firebird. [SLM p.335].

Stars

Stars with proper names:
* (α Phe) 2.40 Ankaa or Nair al Zaurak or Cymbae [Lucida Cymbae]
*: < العنقاء al-canqā’ The phoenix [a fabulous bird in Arabian myth]
*: < النائر الزورق an-na’ir az-zawraq The bright one of the boat
*: < lūcida cumbæ The brightness of the skiff
Stars with Bayer designations:
: β Phe 3.32; γ Phe 3.41; δ Phe 3.93; ε Phe 3.88; ζ Phe 3.94; θ Phe 6.07; η Phe 4.36; ι Phe 4.69; κ Phe 3.93; λ1 Phe 4.76; λ2 Phe 5.51; μ Phe 4.59; ν Phe 4.97; ξ Phe 5.72; π Phe 5.13; ρ Phe 5.24; σ Phe 5.18; τ Phe 5.71; υ Phe 5.21; χ Phe 5.15; φ Phe 5.12; ψ Phe 4.39; ω Phe 6.12
Stars with Flamsteed designations:
: 120 Phe 5.49
Other notable stars:
* HE0107-5240 – ancient star

See also


The 12 Constellations created by Pieter Dirkszoon Keyser and Frederick de Houtman between 1595 and 1597 and introduced by Johann Bayer in the 1603 text Uranometria
Apus | Chamaeleon | Dorado | Grus | Hydrus | Indus | Musca | Pavo | Phoenix | Triangulum Australe | Tucana | Volans

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