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Spacewatch Friday: Avian Astronomy: Do Some Heavenly Nighttime 'Birding'

By Joe Rao
Special to SPACE.com
posted: 07:00 am ET
06 June 2003

JUNE 6

There are quite a few varieties of birds portrayed among the constellations. There is a swan, an eagle, a dove, a crane, a toucan, a peacock, a bird of paradise and even a mythical phoenix. Over toward the south as night falls these spring evenings is yet another: Corvus, the Crow.

Next to the famous Sickle of Leo, Corvus is probably the most striking star pattern in the spring southern sky for those living at mid-northern latitudes. It appears as a small, moderately bright quadrilateral-shaped pattern of stars, like a triangle whose top has been removed by a slanting cut.

Add a fainter adjoining star and the pattern resembles the battened mainsail of a Chinese junk.

Corvus can also be used to positively identify the bluish first-magnitude star Spica, in Virgo. Just follow the direction of Corvus slanting top to the east (to the left) and you will soon arrive at Spica. able -->


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   Images

SKY MAP: Corvus and the rest of the southwestern sky as of June 6, 2003, at 10 p.m. from mid-northern latitudes. Stars are higher and to the left earlier in the evening. On subsequent nights at the same time, the stars will be slightly lower and to the right.

* Graphic made with Starry Night Software
 

How the ancients saw Corvus, the Crow, plus zoom in and see the stars of the constellation.

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Corvus is supposed to represent the unfaithful raven of the god Apollo. The bird was sent out with a cup for some water, but instead loitered at a fig tree until the fruit became ripe. He then returned to Apollo without the cup, but with a water snake in his claws, alleging the snake to be the cause of his delay.

As punishment, the angry Apollo changed Corvus from silvery-white to the black color that all crows and ravens bear to this day. In addition, Corvus was forever fixed in the sky along with the Cup (Crater) and the Snake (Hydra), doomed to everlasting thirst by the guardianship of the Hydra over the Cup and its contents.

Crater, the Cup is a small and rather faint figure, which corresponds quite closely to its name. Its stars outline a goblet, but unfortunately theyre hard to distinguish when the sky is hazy or when theres a bright Moon in the sky.

Last week we highlighted Crux, the famous Southern Cross. Interestingly, when the four-sided Corvus has reached its highest point in its course across the sky, it stands directly above the Southern Cross, which is also attaining its highest point above the South Pole of the sky.

But as we noted last week, even at its highest, the Cross remains out of sight below the horizon everywhere in the United States except for the Florida Keys. Thus Corvus reveals the position of a constellation whose name is known to almost everyone though invisible to many of us.

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Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York's Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for The New York Times and other publications, and he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, New York.

DEFINITIONS

Degrees measure apparent sizes of objects or distances in the sky, as seen from our vantage point. The Moon is one-half degree in width. The width of your fist held at arm's length is about 10 degrees.

1 AU, or astronomical unit, is the distance from the Sun to Earth, or about 93 million miles.

Magnitude is the standard by which astronomers measure the apparent brightness of objects that appear in the sky. The lower the number, the brighter the object. The brightest stars in the sky are categorized as zero or first magnitude. Negative magnitudes are reserved for the most brilliant objects: the brightest star is Sirius (-1.4); the full Moon is -12.7; the Sun is -26.7. The faintest stars visible under dark skies are around +6.

 

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