Hydor: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Hydor Farnese-Stellarium smh2022 anim.gif|thumb|animated GIF of the Cetus region on the Farnese Globe mapped to the Stellarium star chart. The curly lines forming a stream of heavenly water (drawing and implementation by SMH 2024).]] |
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The Ancient Greek term Hydor (ὕδωρ) means "Water". It is a constellation that is only mentioned in Aratus' didactical poem "Phainomena". |
The Ancient Greek term Hydor (ὕδωρ) means "Water". It is a constellation that is only mentioned in Aratus' didactical poem "Phainomena". |
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=== Image Gallery === |
=== Image Gallery === |
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<gallery> |
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File:CetusCentered Kugel smh framed.jpg|an apparent vessel for Cetus on the Kugel-Globe (drawing SMH 2024), 2nd or 1st century BCE |
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File:Hydor Kugel smh2023.jpeg|map of the Kugel Globe, Cetus in the center of two lines with rings, drawing by SMH 2024, 2nd or 1st century BCE |
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File:Farnese dasWasser smh sw framed.jpeg|Some lines forming a stream of water in which Cetus is centered on the Farnese Globe (drawing by SMH 2021), 2nd or 1st century CE with Hellenistic predecessor |
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File:Hydor Farnese-Stellarium smh2022.jpeg|Figures of the Farnese Globe mapped to the Stellarium star chart (drawing and implementing by SMH 2021). Cetus-region. |
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File:Hydor Mainz smh2023.jpeg|map of the Mainz Globe with Cetus in the center, surrounded by many dots (star symbols), perhaps representing The Water (drawing by SMH 2023), 2nd century CE |
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=== Star Name (Early Modern) === |
=== Star Name (Early Modern) === |
Revision as of 13:47, 14 September 2024
The Ancient Greek term Hydor (ὕδωρ) means "Water". It is a constellation that is only mentioned in Aratus' didactical poem "Phainomena".
Etymology and History
Ancient Constellation
Aratus (4th century BCE) in his didactic poem "Phainomena" mentions a constellation "The Water" that is mentioned by no other preserved text:
Other stars lying scattered below the Water-pourer hang in the sk between the celestial Monster and the Fish, but they are faint and nameless. Close to them, like a light spray of water being sprinkled this way and that from the right hand of the illustrious Water-pourer, some pale and feeble star go round. Among them go two rather brighter stars, not so very far apart nor yet very close, onebeautiful and bright star beneath the two feet of the Water-pourer, the other below the dark Monster's tail. Men call them collectively the Water. (389-399)
These stars are in the area of the sky between the bright stars Diphda and Fomalhaut, south of the Aquarius and Cetus.
The three preserved ancient globes depict this constellation of The Water as a vessel for the monster named "Ketos" in Greek, making it a monster living in the water (sea), a seamonster.
Image Gallery
Star Name (Early Modern)
"Hydor" - water - is the first name listed in Allen (1899) although not transliterated from the Greek to Latin alphabet: "λ, 3.8, red, is the most prominent of the first stars in the Stream. Proclus followed Aratos in calling it Ὕδωρ, [note: Hydor] the Water; and others, Ἔκχυσις, [note: "Ekkhysis"] the Outpouring; Aratos describing it, "Like a slight flow of water here and there, Scattered around, bright stars revolve but small"; although these titles, appropriated by Bayer for λ, originally were for the whole group set apart as the Stream. Allen's description basically repeats Bayer (1603) Uranometria, attributing names to Aratus and Proclus.
However, the entry is one of many sloppinesses in Allen (1899). The term "Hydor" describes the whole huge region of faint stars around Cetus - it is the element that makes the monster depicted in Cetus a seamonster (because it is in Hydor!). This way, the constellation Hydor is depicted on all three surviving globes from antiquity!
Mythology
IAU Working Group Star Names
As the term Ὕδωρ originally describes a constellation and, thus, a group of many faint stars or an area in the sky, we can apply the name to any star in that area around the figure of Cetus (in Eridanus, Fornax, Cetus, Sculptor, Aquarius - although "For" doesn't make sense). The name "Hydor (ὕδωρ) is suggested
- for 2 Cet (HIP 301, HR 9098 SIMBAD), a blue star (B9) of 4.536 mag in visible light. In modern star charts, the star is located between the tail of the Cetus-figure and the drops of the outlet of Aquarius.
- or for lambda Aqr as preserved in Bayer's Uranometria (1603) which is a red star (M2) of Vmag 3.79 (SIMBAD)
the WGSN chose ... (not to apply/ to apply the name to a neighbouring star/ to ...) in the IAU-CSN.