Suhail: Difference between revisions
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| * ''Suhayl al-Wazn''<ref>al-Ṣūfī</ref> | * ''Suhayl al-Wazn''<ref>al-Ṣūfī</ref> | ||
| * ''Al Suhail al-Wazn''<ref>Allen, Richard Hinckley (1899). Star Names - Their Lore and Meaning. Dover Publications, Inc., New York</ref><ref>Schjellerup</ref> | * ''Al Suhail al-Wazn''<ref name=":1">Allen, Richard Hinckley (1899). Star Names - Their Lore and Meaning. Dover Publications, Inc., New York</ref><ref name=":2">Schjellerup</ref> | ||
| * ''Al Suhail al Wazn'' for λ Arg=λ Vel<ref>BdL (19SEE 10)</ref><ref>Hoffleit</ref> | * ''Al Suhail al Wazn'' for λ Arg=λ Vel<ref>BdL (19SEE 10)</ref><ref name=":3">Hoffleit</ref> | ||
| * ''Alsuhail''<ref>BdL (1908)</ref> | * ''Alsuhail''<ref>BdL (1908)</ref> | ||
| * ''Suhail''<ref>Rhoads, Jack W. (1971). A Reduced Star Catalog Containing 537 Named Stars. NASA JPL CIT, Technical Memorandum 33-507, Pasadena, 15 November 1971</ref><ref>Simbad ([https://simbad.u-strasbg.fr/simbad/sim-basic?Ident=Suhail&submit=SIMBAD+search lam Vel]), Wenger et al. (2000) "The SIMBAD astronomical database", A&AS, 143, 9</ref> | * ''Suhail''<ref>Rhoads, Jack W. (1971). A Reduced Star Catalog Containing 537 Named Stars. NASA JPL CIT, Technical Memorandum 33-507, Pasadena, 15 November 1971</ref><ref>Simbad ([https://simbad.u-strasbg.fr/simbad/sim-basic?Ident=Suhail&submit=SIMBAD+search lam Vel]), Wenger et al. (2000) "The SIMBAD astronomical database", A&AS, 143, 9</ref> | ||
| * '' | * ''Suhail [al Muhlif]''<ref>''Abriged Nautical Almanach'', 1953. Auj.</ref> | ||
| * ''Soheil AlWezn''<ref name=":4">Hyde</ref> | |||
| * ''Sihil ponderosus'' (lat.) for "heavy Suhayl"<ref>''Tabl. alphons.''</ref> ... a misreading of the word ''al-wazn'', which here does not mean “weight” but “counterpart” | * ''Sihil ponderosus'' (lat.) for "heavy Suhayl"<ref>''Tabl. alphons.''</ref> ... a misreading of the word ''al-wazn'', which here does not mean “weight” but “counterpart” | ||
| * ''Al Suhail'' (wikipedia) | * ''Al Suhail'' (wikipedia) | ||
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| Spelling Variants:  | Spelling Variants:  | ||
| * '''''Muhlifain محلفين''''' | * '''''Muhlifain'''''<ref name=":5">Rumrill</ref> '''''محلفين''''' | ||
| * المحلفين ''al-Muḥlifayn'' (accus.) | * المحلفين ''al-Muḥlifayn'' (accus.) | ||
| * ''Soheil AlMúhliph''<ref name=":4" /> | |||
| * ''Suhail Al Muhlif'' (سهيل المخلف) | * ''Suhail Al Muhlif'' (سهيل المخلف) | ||
| * ''Suhaïl al-Muhlif''<ref name=":2" /> [''sic!'']<ref name=":3" /><ref>Bakich</ref> | |||
| * ''Al Suhail al-Muḥlif''<ref name=":1" /> | |||
| * ''Alsuhail al Mulhif [sic !]''<ref>BdL (1910)</ref> | |||
| * ''Al Suhail al Muhlif''<ref name=":5" /> | |||
| === Kunitzsch and Smart === | === Kunitzsch and Smart === | ||
Revision as of 13:13, 14 October 2025
Suhail is a modern star name adopted by the International Astronomical Union in the IAU-Catalog of Star Names (IAU-CSN). Its origin is Arabic. It is the name of HIP 44816 (λ Vel, HR 3634) in constellation Vel.
Etymology and History
Suhail is an Arabic star name which has been used in different positions:
- Suhail Al Muhlif (سهيل المخلف) for γ Vel
- Suhail al-Wazn (سهيل الوزن) for λ Vel
The simple form adopted by the IAU may create further confusion with the name of the star α Car (Canopus), which is the only one among the Arabs to deserve the name Suhail/ Suhayl.
Spelling Variants:[1]
- Suhayl al-Wazn[2]
- Al Suhail al-Wazn[3][4]
- Al Suhail al Wazn for λ Arg=λ Vel[5][6]
- Alsuhail[7]
- Suhail[8][9]
- Suhail [al Muhlif][10]
- Soheil AlWezn[11]
- Sihil ponderosus (lat.) for "heavy Suhayl"[12] ... a misreading of the word al-wazn, which here does not mean “weight” but “counterpart”
- Al Suhail (wikipedia)
Suhail al-Wazn
Introduced at the beginning of the 20th century in various forms, this name comes from Suhayl al-Wazn, “Suhayl of Wazn” found in al-Ṣūfī.[1]
Suhail Muhlifain
a misplacement of the term to another star (γ Vel).[1]
Spelling Variants:
- Muhlifain[13] محلفين
- المحلفين al-Muḥlifayn (accus.)
- Soheil AlMúhliph[11]
- Suhail Al Muhlif (سهيل المخلف)
- Suhaïl al-Muhlif[4] [sic!][6][14]
- Al Suhail al-Muḥlif[3]
- Alsuhail al Mulhif [sic !][15]
- Al Suhail al Muhlif[13]
Kunitzsch and Smart
Applied in recent times and representing an abbreviation of any of several composite ind-A names (for example suhail al-wazn, suhail al-muhlif) that sci-A authors variously attributed to brighter stars in the region of Suhail. Lambda Vel was among these brighter stars. Some of the composite names may have been authentic ind-A names for far-southern stars, with their true identities unknown to the more northern sci-Arabs, while others of them were surely the creations of ind-A poets.
Mythology
IAU Working Group on Star Names
The name was adopted by the IAU WGSN on 2016/08/21. The WGSN chose to apply the name for the star λ Vel in the IAU-CSN although it has historically been used for several stars.
Weblinks
- Website of the IAU WGSN: https://exopla.net/
Reference
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Roland Laffitte (2025), Nommer les étoile: 500 noms hérités des Arabes - Apport de l'uranographie arabe, Orient des Mots
- ↑ al-Ṣūfī
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Allen, Richard Hinckley (1899). Star Names - Their Lore and Meaning. Dover Publications, Inc., New York
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Schjellerup
- ↑ BdL (19SEE 10)
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Hoffleit
- ↑ BdL (1908)
- ↑ Rhoads, Jack W. (1971). A Reduced Star Catalog Containing 537 Named Stars. NASA JPL CIT, Technical Memorandum 33-507, Pasadena, 15 November 1971
- ↑ Simbad (lam Vel), Wenger et al. (2000) "The SIMBAD astronomical database", A&AS, 143, 9
- ↑ Abriged Nautical Almanach, 1953. Auj.
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 Hyde
- ↑ Tabl. alphons.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 Rumrill
- ↑ Bakich
- ↑ BdL (1910)







