Crux Constellation (The Southern Cross) - Stars, Myth, Facts... - Constellation G
Crux Constellation (The Southern Cross) - Stars, Myth, Facts... - Constellation G
Crux Constellation (The Southern Cross) - Stars, Myth, Facts... - Constellation G
Astronomy
Orion
Big Dipper
Big Dipper
Crux
Orion’s Belt
Lyra
Draco
Aquarius
Leo
Cassiopeia
Southern Cross
Crux has one star with known planets and contains no Messier
objects. The brightest star in the constellation is Acrux, Alpha Crucis,
with an apparent magnitude of 0.77. Acrux is also the 12th brightest
star in the sky. There is one meteor shower associated with the
constellation; the Crucids.
Crux contains six named stars. The proper names of stars that have
been officially approved by the International Astronomical Union (IAU)
are Acrux, Gacrux, Ginan, Imai, Mimosa, and Tupã.
Crux constellation map by IAU and Sky&Telescope magazine
Mythology
Crux is a famous constellation in many cultures. Ancient Greeks
considered it to be part of the Centaurus constellation. Greeks were
able to see Crux before its stars dropped below the horizon for
Europe and most of the northern hemisphere. Some saw significance
in this, linking the disappearance of the celestial cross from the sky to
the crucifixion of Christ. The 2nd century Greek astronomer Ptolemy
listed the stars of Crux as part of the constellation Centaurus in his
Almagest. By the year 400 AD, the constellation was not visible from
most of Europe anymore, and Europeans did not rediscover Crux until
the great naval expeditions of the late 15th and early 16th century.
Crux stars
Acrux – α Crucis (Alpha Crucis)
Acrux, Alpha Crucis, is the brightest star in the constellation and the
12th brightest star in the sky. The star has an apparent magnitude of
0.77 and is approximately 320 light years distant. Its name is short for
Alpha Crux. At -63° declination, Alpha Crucis is the southernmost
first magnitude star. It cannot be seen north of latitude 27°N.
Acrux is a multiple star system composed of Alpha-1 Crucis, a B class
subgiant, and Alpha-2 Crucis, a B class dwarf. The two are separated
by four arc seconds. Both stars are very hot, almost class O, and their
respective luminosities are 25,000 and 16,000 times that of the Sun.
Gamma Crucis is the third brightest star in Crux and the 26th
brightest star in the sky. It is a binary star, with a primary component
belonging to the spectral class M4 III and a white, A3 class star with a
visual magnitude of 6.4 for an optical companion. The companion is
about 400 light years distant from Earth.
BZ Crucis
BZ Crucis is a Be star classified as a B1IVe class star, a B class
subgiant showing emission lines in its spectrum. It is a Gamma
Cassiopeiae type variable star, which is to say a shell star that has a
circumstellar gas disk around the equator. BZ Crucis is an X-ray
source. It has an apparent magnitude of 5.316 and is approximately
1,000 light years distant. It is located behind the Coalsack Nebula.
NGC 4349-127
NGC 4349-127 is a red giant star almost 20 times as massive as
The Coalsack is one of the most prominent dark nebulae visible to the unaided
eye. A beautiful sight in the southern sky, the Coalsack casts a dark silhouette
against the Milky Way’s bright stripe of stars. The Coalsack is located
approximately 600 light-years away from Earth in the southern part of the
constellation of Crux (the Southern Cross). This seemingly starless dark patch is
actually an opaque interstellar dust cloud that obscures the light of the
background Milky Way stars. Dust grains in the cloud redden the starlight that
reaches us by absorbing blue light preferentially, so that the red stars shimmering
in the northern and darkest part of the Coalsack appear more crimson than they
would in the absence of this dust. The first European to see this remarkable object
was probably the Spanish navigator and explorer Vincente Yanez Pinzon when he
sailed to the South American coast in 1499. The Coalsack earned the nickname
“Black Magellanic Cloud” in the 16th century, apparently rivalling the prominence
of the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, the two dwarf irregular galaxies that
shine brightly in the skies of the Southern Hemisphere. The Incas tell that the god
Ataguchu, in a fit of temper, kicked the Milky Way and a fragment flew off, forming
Ataguchu, in a fit of temper, kicked the Milky Way and a fragment flew off, forming
the Small Magellanic Cloud where it landed on the sky, and leaving the black mark
of the Coalsack behind. Beware of Inca gods in a bad mood! Another famous sight
seen from southern latitudes — though it can creep into view in tropical northern
latitudes — is the Southern Cross, or Crux. This cross-shaped constellation has
assumed great significance in the cultures of the Southern Hemisphere, even as
far back as prehistoric times. So distinctive and evocative is the Southern Cross
that the national flags of Australia, Brazil, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, and
Samoa all include a representation of it. The European Southern Observatory
(ESO) has also acknowledged the significance of Crux as the foremost
constellation of the southern skies, and has proudly incorporated the cross-
shaped symbol into the ESO logo. Image: ESO/S. Brunier
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solar system.
The cluster can only be observed from the southern hemisphere. It
was discovered by the French astronomer Nicolas Louis de Lacaille
on his trip to South Africa in 1751-52.
This composite image serves as a still “zoom-in”, showing the rich star field in
which NGC 4755 nestles and then moving in to the detailed Hubble image of the
Kappa Crucis Cluster, or Jewel Box, itself. The range of images begins with a very
wide-field view of the sky surrounding NGC 4755. The images then progressively
“zoom in” to reveal a “close-up” of the Jewel Box, featuring several very bright,
pale blue super-giant stars, a solitary ruby-red super-giant and a variety of other
brilliantly coloured stars. Image: ESO, NASA/ESA, Digitized Sky Survey 2 and
Jesús Maíz Apellániz (Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía, Spain)
To the unaided eye, the cluster appears like a star near Beta Crucis,
The dominant star in the cluster is Kappa Crucis (HD 111973), a red,
M-type supergiant with a visual magnitude of 5.98. The star stands in
stark contrast with other stars in the cluster, which are mostly blue.
The FORS1 instrument on the ESO Very Large Telescope (VLT) at ESO’s Paranal
Observatory was used to take this exquisitely sharp close up view of the colourful
Jewel Box cluster, NGC 4755. The telescope’s huge mirror allowed very short
exposure times: just 2.6 seconds through a blue filter (B), 1.3 seconds through a
yellow/green filter (V) and 1.3 seconds through a red filter (R). Image: ESO/Y.
Beletsky
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