Circinus

From All Skies Encyclopaedia
star chart
IAU Constellation Circinus (CC BY IAU and Sky & Telescope magazine, Roger Sinnott & Rick Fienberg)
first star chart of Circinus
Constellation Le Compas (Circinus) in Lacaille's original definition (1756). It is formed of faint stars neighbouring alpha Centauri (also highlighted here).

One of the 88 IAU constellations. The constellation was taken over in the 1920s.[1]

It was invented in Cape Town in the early modern era, when the Cape Colony, the settlement around the Fort de Goede Hoop (Castle of Good Hope) slowly grew. At that time, the place was a way-station for European ships to the archipelago now called Indonesia where tobacco, copper and iron was traded with the Khoekhoe clans of the region in exchange for fresh meat and other important travelling implements.

Etymology and History

In the 16th century, the Dutch cartographer Plancius commissioned two ship navigators to bring back star charts from the East Indies exploration - they formed the constellation ‘Southern Triangle’ (Triangulum Australe) under the Centaur, which consists of four stars similar to the classical Greek constellation of the triangle: one on each point and another in the centre of the baseline of the isosceles triangle. Between this and the centaur's hoof, there was a gap into which the French astronomer and surveyor Nicolas de Lacaille squeezed the figure of a circle around 160 years later. The constellation consists of three stars intended to represent the slender folded drawing tool. He may well have symbolised one of his most important daily tools here.

Lacaille named the constellation in French Le Compas and grouped[2] them together with Norma (his invention) and the Southern Triangle (Triangulum Australe) invented earlier by the Dutch.

Incidentally, the stars of Circinus were already visible and above the horizon in ancient times. However, due to precession and their proper motion, they would have been shifted so that the more northerly of the two legs of the compass would have passed through α Centauri. For ancient astronomers, the figure would therefore have been unclear and implausible even if we could show them our current view: The brightest star is only 3.2 mag, the other two are at 4 and almost 5 mag, so that they appear very inconspicuous against the background of the Milky Way and next to the bright Centaurus stars.

Image Gallery

Indigenous Constellations in this Area

Stellarium map of "Xami Di Mura"
The Khoekhoe constellation "Xami Di Mura" as depicted in Stellarium; sky culture provided by Suki Lock for the South African Astronomical Observatory (SAAO), Centre for Astronomical Heritage (CfAH). The star alpha Circini is marked here.

In this area adjacent to the third brightest star of the night sky, Indigenous cultures have not named individual stars (other than α and β Centauri). The main star of the constellation Circinus, α Cir, has hence been nameless.

The South African people of the Khoekhoe who lived in the area at the time when the constellation was invented, have named the two bright stars "the eyes of the beast" (Xami Di Mura), where the beast (xami) is a lion and the two eyes are "mura". If the two bright stars are imagined the eyes, the face of this creature is seen in the adjacent areas, covering also the star α Circini.

The language groups of Khoe and San cover a wide range each. Most of these languages are now moribund. The Khoekhoe dialect \Xam is one such language which was fortunately recorded, however there are no speakers surviving.

IAU WGSN Catalog of Star Names

In 2024, it was suggested to use the Khoe term "Xami" (from the \Xam dialect) to designate the star Circini with a term from one of the peoples who are native to the place where the constellation was invented.

Weblinks

References

  1. Ian Ridpath's Star Tales (online edition on Circinus).
  2. Ian Ridpath's Star Tales (on grouping online edition)