Noctua

From All Skies Encyclopaedia
plate 32 in Urania's Mirror by S. Hall, a set of celestial cards accompanied by A familiar treatise on astronomy ... by Jehoshaphat Aspin. London. Astronomical chart, 1 print on layered paper board : etching, hand-colored.
The little owl at Haifa district in Israel

Noctua, the owl, was an extinct constellation introduced by Alexander Jamieson (1822) "Celestial Atlas Comprising A Systematic Display Of The Heavens In A Series Of Thirty Maps".

Etymology and History

The joint history of the extinct constellations Turdus Solitarius (Solitaire) and Noctua in the tail of Hydra are discussed at length in Chapter 29 of John Barentine's (2015) "The Lost Constellations: A History of Obsolete, Extinct, or Forgotten Star Lore," with the origins of Noctua discussed on p. 454.

Early 19th century English atlases did not adopted Bode's "Solitaire", but retained figures of birds in the same region. Thomas Young (1807; "A Course of Lectures on Natural Philosophy and the Mechanical Arts") replaced the Solitaire with a Mockingbird.

Alexander Jamieson (1822) "Celestial Atlas Comprising A Systematic Display Of The Heavens In A Series Of Thirty Maps" (p.49) reimagined the bird constellation. Not mentioning either Bode's or Young's version, but only mentioning Monnier's earlier version:

"L'ERMITE (Oiseau), which appears on Map XIX, was formed some years ago by M. Monnier, under the Southern scale of the Celestial Balance. I have transformed L'Ermite Oiseau into the sage looking Noctua, a bird, which, considering the frequency it is met with on all Egyptian monuments, it appears strange our astronomers have not long ere this transferred among the celestials."

Variants of the image

IAU Working Group Star Names

The name "Noctua" was discussed as a proper name for ET Vir (HR 5301, HIP 69269) in October 2024, but withdrawn due to the existence of an asteroid name "Noctua":

Weblinks

Reference