Lilii Austrina: Difference between revisions

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==IAU Working Group Star Names==
==IAU Working Group Star Names==
As "[[Lilii Borea]]" has been applied to 39 Ari in 2017, the IAU discusses the parallel name in 2023/4.
As "[[Lilii Borea]]" has been applied to 39 Ari in 2017, the IAU discusses the parallel name in 2023/4 (found by Ian Ridpath). However, as the identification of Lilii Austrina with 41 Arietis is without any doubt due to the given coordinates, and this star already has a name given by the IAU, WGSN refrains from applying "Lilii Austrina".


== Weblinks ==
== Weblinks ==

Revision as of 18:18, 11 July 2024

screenshot with highlighting
Lilii Austrina in Lacaille's star list 1757. in: "Astronomiae fundamenta novissimis solis et stellarum observationibus stabilita, Lutetiae in Collegio mazarineo et in Africa ad caput Bonae Spei peractis a Nicolao Ludovico de La Caille"

In his short list of right ascensions of selected stars, Lacaille 1757 named this star "The one south of the Lily" in Latin: Lilii Austrina.


Etymology and History

screenshot of map with highlighting of the Lily
Lilium in "Globi coelestis in tabulas planas redacti descriptio auctore R.P." by Ignatio Gastone Pardies Societatis Jesu mathematico opus postumum" by Ignace-Gaston Pardies (1636-1673), digital.

Lilium Constellation

Ignace-Gaston Pardies introduced a new (now obsolete) constellation Lilium, the fleur-de-lis of France, on plate 2 of his Globi coelestis in tabulas planas redacti descriptio atlas published posthumously in 1674, although he did not attach a name to the image. He had reused four stars in the north of Aries from which Petrus Plancius in 1613 had previously formed Apes, the Bee to model the constellation.

In 1679, Augustin Royer published his Cartes du ciel réduites en quatre tables and an accompanying star catalogue, both of which contain the constellation Lilium, this time carrying the name and the translation "La Fleur de lys".

In 1730, the constellation Lilium also appeared in Mercurii philosophici firmamentum firmianum descriptionem et usum globi artificialis coelestis by Thomas Corbinian, a German-Austrian monk who lived in Augsburg and Salzburg.

In 1795, Jean Nicolas Fortin published his commentary to Flamsteed's Atlas Coelestis and mentions the Fleur de Lis:

La tête de Méduse A l’Orient du triangle, on remarque un groupe de cinq étoiles, formant la tête de Méduse; la plus orientale est de la seconde grandeur, & se nomme Algol; cette étoile est singuliere en ce qu’elle diminue de grandeur & de lumiere dans l’espace de 2 jours 20 heures 49 minutes 1 seconde. Si l’on prend le triangle & la tête de Méduse pour les deux extrémités de la base d’un triangle équilatéral dont le sommet seroit au Midi, on remarquera trois étoiles dont une est de la troisieme grandeur, c’est la petite Constellation de la Mouche, ou le Lys.

English translation:

The head of Medusa To the east of the triangle we see a group of five stars, forming the head of Medusa; the easternmost is of the second magnitude, and is called Algol; this star is singular in that it diminishes in magnitude and luminosity in the period of 2 days 20 hours 49 minutes 1 second. If we take the triangle and the head of Medusa for the two extremities of the base of an equilateral triangle whose summit would be at Midday, we will notice three stars of which one is of the third magnitude, it is the small Constellation of the Fly, or the Lily.

Star Names

screenshot from book, marked star names
page of the star catalogue of Lacaille1757 (Astronomiae fundamenta novissimis solis et stellarum observationibus stabilita, Lutetiae in Collegio mazarineo et in Africa ad caput Bonae Spei) with LiliiBorea and Lilii Austrina marked

Lacaille named its two brightest stars Lilii Borea and Lilii Austrina (i.e. in the north and south of the lily)

In his Astronomiæ fundamenta novissimis solis et stellarum observationibus stabilita published in 1757[1], Lacaille presented several tables, e.g. a star catalogue (Tabula exhibens Stellarum afcenfiones rectas veras declinationes veras) and a list of right ascensions of selected stars (De veris aliquot Stellarum afcenfionibus rectis fæpiùs) where he calls the two star names Lilii Borea and Lilii Austrina.

RA1750 DEC1750 identification
Lilii Borea 38° 15' 39."7 28° 11' 33."1 39 Arietis (a star of Lilium)
39 Ari (Stellarium) 38.°28

38° 17' 1".6

28° 11' 34."6
Lilii Austrina 38° 49' 45."2 26° 12' 47."7 41 Arietis (a star of Lilium)
41 Ari (Stellarium) 38.°84

38° 50' 37"

26° 12' 52."1

Lacaille also published the Ephemerides des mouvemens celestes, pour dix annees, depuis 1765[2] and names these two stars La Boreale a la fleur de Lys (The Northern one of the Lily) and L'Australe a la fleur de Lys (The Southern one of the Lily).

The modern designations of these two stars are 39 and 41 Arietis. In 2017 the IAU WGSN adopted Lacaille’s name Lilii Borea for 39 Arietis. They gave 41 Arietis the name Bharani after the second nakshatra (lunar mansion) in Hindu astronomy, consisting of 35, 39, and 41 Arietis.

Mythology

IAU Working Group Star Names

As "Lilii Borea" has been applied to 39 Ari in 2017, the IAU discusses the parallel name in 2023/4 (found by Ian Ridpath). However, as the identification of Lilii Austrina with 41 Arietis is without any doubt due to the given coordinates, and this star already has a name given by the IAU, WGSN refrains from applying "Lilii Austrina".

Weblinks

Reference

  1. Lacaille, N. L. (1757). Astronomiae fundamenta novissimis solis et stellarum observationibus stabilita, Lutetiae in Collegio mazarineo et in Africa ad caput Bonae Spei peractis a Nicolao Ludovico de La Caille. Digitalized by GoogleBooks, here p. 225 and 233.
  2. Lacaille (1765) Ephemerides des mouvemens celestes, pour dix annees, depuis