Quadrans Muralis

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star chart
The radiant of the Quadrantids meteor shower displayed in Stellarium (2025) with stars only shown brighter than 6.5 mag. The star closest to the current radiant is marked.

This is one of the obsolete constellations from Early Modern Europe. The term is Latin and means "wall-mounted quadrant", a large astronomical instrument fixed to a wall. The constellation is still in common memory of meteor observers as a rich meteor shower that peaks in the first days of January are known as the Quadrantids. Their apparent point of origin, the radiant, is in the area where historically this constellation used to be defined.

Etymology and History

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Quadrans Muralis in Fortin's 1795 star catalogue (first page).
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Quadrans Muralis in Fortin's 1795 star catalogue (second page).

Origin of Constellation

The constellation was originally invented by the French astronomer Joseph Jérôme Lalande in 1795.[1]

In the same year, the French astronomer Jean Fortin published the 3rd edition of his Atlas céleste and a star catalogue in which he listed ten stars in the constellation "Le Mural" (in French).

Fortin's atlas started in 1776 as a French edition of Flamsteed's 1729 Atlas Coelestis written in English (maps labelled in Latin).[2] This book (1st edition 1776; 2nd edition 1778) of the Atlas céleste[3][4] does not show Quadrans, neither in the Bootes map nor in the Draco map. His 3rd edition, published in 1795 (with participation of others, e.g. Lalande) shows the new constellation Quadrans in the Draco map, but not in the map of Bootes.

The German astronomer Johann E. Bode had included a German edition of Flamsteed's atlas in his popular book Anleitung zur Kennntniß des gestirnten Himmels (1782). In the 2nd edition of this book in 1805, he depicted the new constellation Quadrans in the map of Bootes, but not in the map Draco (so he did not copy from Fortin directly). It is clearly visible that he had used the same copper plates for the print as in 1782 because he did not erase the boundary lines between the constellations that he had invented. (There are no boundaries drawn in Flamsteed or Fortin.) The image of the constellation Quadrans is at the place where the boundaries of the three constellations Bootes, Hercules and Draco meet.

In his 1801 trilingual magnus opus Uranographia[5] (with text in German and French, and constellation maps labelled in Latin), Bode took up the idea of this constellation and incorporated it in the map of Bootes.[6] This map is not anymore based on Flamsteed's drawings, but a completely new celestial map with deviating shapes of constellations and many more objects (stars, star clusters and other nebulae) registered.

Alexander Jamieson and Sidney Hall in the subsequent decades also depicted Quadrans together with Bootes.

Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation

Mythology

no mythology

IAU WGSN Name Discussion

In 2023 and 2025, it was suggested to use a name related to this obsolete historical constellation. The terms "Quadrans" or "Muralis" could be used to name a star in the area of this historical constellation; the first term makes more sense with regard to its reminiscence in the name of the meteor shower.

WGSN chose to ...

Weblinks

References

  1. Ian Ridpath, Star Tales, Lalande's Quadrans Muralis (Online Edition)
  2. Die Große Flamsteed Edition (Faksimiles of Flamsteed, Fortin, Bode). Begleitbuch Latußeck, A. and Hoffmann, S: Ein nützliches Unternehmen, Albireo-Verlag, Köln, 2017 (online)
  3. Flamsteed (1729). Atlas Coelestis, Online: Gallica
  4. Fortin (1778), Atlas céleste, 2nd edition (Online Lib. Univ. Oklahoma)
  5. Bode (1801) Uranographia. Online: maps not available, but star catalogue by MDZ (Munich Library)
  6. Ian Ridpath, Star Tales, Quadrans Muralis (Online Edition)