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Cassiopeia

Cassiopeia is a constellation in the northern sky named after the vain queen Cassiopeia in Greek mythology. It has an easily recognizable 'W' shape formed by five bright stars. Cassiopeia contains two extremely luminous stars and Cassiopeia A, the remnant of an ancient supernova. Two Messier objects are located within its borders. In Chinese astronomy, its stars are located among three areas, and in Arabic culture its stars depict a camel. The constellation is featured in various works of popular culture.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
299 views5 pages

Cassiopeia

Cassiopeia is a constellation in the northern sky named after the vain queen Cassiopeia in Greek mythology. It has an easily recognizable 'W' shape formed by five bright stars. Cassiopeia contains two extremely luminous stars and Cassiopeia A, the remnant of an ancient supernova. Two Messier objects are located within its borders. In Chinese astronomy, its stars are located among three areas, and in Arabic culture its stars depict a camel. The constellation is featured in various works of popular culture.

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msaravind
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Cassiopeia (constellation)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Cassiopeia

Constellation

List of stars in Cassiopeia Abbreviation Genitive Pronunciation Symbolism Right ascension Declination Quadrant Area Main stars Bayer/Flamsteed stars Stars with planets Cas Cassiopeiae /ksi.pi./ Cssiopia, colloquially /ksiopi./ Cssipeia; genitive /ksi.pi.i/ the Seated Queen 1h +60 NQ1 598 sq. deg. (25th) 5 53 3

Stars brighter than 4 3.00m Stars within 10.00 pc (32.62 ly) Brightest star 7 Cas (Schedar) (2.15m)

Nearest star Messier objects Meteor showers Bordering constellations

Cas (Achird) (19.42 ly, 5.95 pc) 2 Perseids Camelopardalis Cepheus Lacerta Andromeda Perseus

Cassiopeia is a constellation in the northern sky, named after the vain queen Cassiopeia in Greek mythology, who boasted about her unrivalled beauty. Cassiopea was one of the 48 constellations listed by the 2nd century Greek astronomer Ptolemy, and it remains one of the 88 modern constellations today. It is easily recognizable due to its distinctive 'W' shape, formed by five bright stars. It is bordered by Andromeda to the south, Perseus to the southeast, and Cepheus to the north. She is opposite the Big Dipper, and from northern latitudes can be seen at her clearest in early November.

[edit] Notable features


[edit] Stars
Cassiopeia contains two stars visible to the naked eye that rank among the most luminous in the galaxy: Cas and V509 Cas, both of the extremely rare class of yellow hypergiants. The star Cas is a nearby (19.4 ly) binary star comprising a yellow Sun-like dwarf and an orange dwarf star. Within the 'W' asterism formed by Cassiopeias five major stars lies Cassiopeia A (Cas A). It is the remnant of a supernova that took place approximately 300 years ago (as observed now from Earth 11,000 light-years away), and has the distinction of being the strongest radio source observable outside our solar system. It was perhaps observed as a faint star in 1680 by John Flamsteed. It was also the subject of the first image returned by the Chandra X-Ray Observatory in the late 1990s. The five main stars that make up the distinctive "W" shape are shown in this table

Cassiopeia in her chair, as depicted in Urania's Mirror, a set of constellation cards published in London c.1825. Proper Apparent ~Distance Hipparcos Greek Letter Solar Radii Name Magnitude (L Yrs) HIP 746 beta Caph 2.2 2.25 54.46 HIP 3179 alpha Shedir 42 2.2 228.56 HIP 4427 gamma Tsih 11 2.15 613.08 HIP 6686 delta Ruchbah 1.7 2.65 99.41 HIP 8886 epsilon Segin 7 3.35 441.95

[edit] Deep-sky objects


Two Messier objects, Messier 52 (NGC 7654) and Messier 103 (NGC 581), are located in Cassiopeia. Both are open clusters and being 7th apparent magnitude objects they are easy targets with binoculars.

The Sun would appear close to Cassiopeia from Alpha Centauri

[edit] Pattern from Alpha Centauri


If one were able to observe Earth's Sun from Alpha Centauri, the closest star to our solar system, it would appear in Cassiopeia as a yellow-white 0.5 magnitude star. The famous W of Cassiopeia would become a zig-zag pattern with the Sun at the leftmost end, closest to Cas.

[edit] Mythology
Main article: Cassiopeia (mythology) The constellation is named after Cassiopeia, a queen (in astrology). Cassiopeia was the daughter of King Cepheus, whom married Lepus the Hare. She was caring and helped the poor. She also lived on a mountain and was hard to find. Cepheus and Cassiopeia were placed next to each other among the stars, the King by his Queen and only daughter the golden hare.

[edit] Equivalents

In Chinese astronomy, the stars forming the constellation Cassiopeia are found among three areas: the Purple Forbidden enclosure (, Z Wi Yun), the Black Tortoise of the North (, Bi Fng Xun W), and the White Tiger of the West (, X Fng Bi H). In Arabic culture, the stars that form Cassiopeia are depicted as a camel. Other cultures see a hand or moose antlers in the pattern.[1]

[edit] In popular culture


The Cuban artist Silvio Rodrguez wrote a song to Cassiopeia just after almost dying in a car crash. Rock group Third Eye Blind mentions Cassiopeia in their song "Bonfire" and companion song "Lightning Comes, Goes". Shabutie (now Coheed and Cambria) wrote a song called Cassiopeia on their "Penelope EP" Also, the Korean group TVXQ's fanbase was named after this constellation because of the positioning of the letters TVfXQ (a variant of their group name) resembled that of the constellation. The official TVXQ Korean fanclub (Cassiopeia) was in the 2008 Guinness world records for largest official fanclub in the world[citation needed]. The constellation features in the storyline of the 2001 film Serendipity. The binary star that is the main star of the constellation, features as setting for at least a part of Charles Sheffield's 1985 Science Fiction novel, Between the Strokes of Night. On Joanna Newsom's independent label debut album The Milk-Eyed Mender, released on March 23, 2004 on by Drag City, the eighth song is titled Cassiopeia. It runs 3:20min. Consumer electronics company Casio used Cassiopeia as the name for a line of Pocket PCs running Microsoft's Windows CE in the late 90s. The constellation is mentioned in the movie Spartan by Val Kilmer while pointing out North on a map. It is mentioned in the movie Omen III: The Final Conflict (1981) as a sign of the second coming of Christ. Cassiopeia is mentioned in the Broadway musical In the Heights during the song "Paciencia y Fe (Patience and Faith)". Cassiopeia is the name of a song by the band Dragonland, on their album "Astronomy".

Cassiopeia is also the name of a champion in the DotA game League of Legends. Cassiopeia is the title of the first track on the album "Under the Silver of Machines (2007)" by the Alt Rock band Last Winter. In the 1974 USSR movie Otroki vo Vselennoy (Teens in the Universe), 7 teenage kids from Soviet Russia ( all Russians) crossed the interstellar space to land on the planet (orbiting Schedar, Alpha Cassiopeiae) to save its human population from enslaving robots. In the french animated TV series Once Upon a Time... Space, the main antagonist is the military republic of Cassiope (Cassiopeia in french), whose symbol is the VV formed by the brightest stars of that constellation. In the original Super Sentai series, Himitsu Sentai Gorenger, Cassiopeia's cosmic rays are the weakness of the main antagonist, the Black Cross Fhrer, and the names of the Gorengers themselves (with the exception of a temporary replacement for one of them) begin with one of the kana for Cassiopeia.

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