- List of selected stars for navigation
-
Fifty-eight selected navigational stars are given a special status in the field of celestial navigation. Of the approximately 6,000 stars visible to the naked eye under optimal conditions, the selected stars are among the brightest and span thirty-eight constellations of the celestial sphere from the declination of 70° south to 89° north. Many of the selected stars were named in antiquity by the ancient Arabs, Greeks, Romans, and Babylonians.
The star Polaris, often called the "North Star", is treated specially due to its proximity to the north celestial pole. When navigating in the northern hemisphere, special techniques can be used with Polaris to determine latitude or gyrocompass error. The other 57 selected stars have daily positions given in nautical almanacs, aiding the navigator in efficiently performing observations on them. A second group of 115 "tabulated stars" can also be used for celestial navigation, but are often less familiar to the navigator and require extra calculations.
For purposes of identification, the positions of navigational stars — expressed as declination and sidereal hour angle — are often rounded to the nearest degree. In addition to tables, star charts provide an aid to the navigator in identifying the navigational stars, showing constellations, relative positions, and brightness.
Contents
Background
Under optimal conditions, approximately 6,000 stars are visible to the naked eye of an observer on Earth.[1] Of these, 58 are known in the field of navigational astronomy as "selected stars", including 19 stars of the first magnitude, 38 stars of the second magnitude, and Polaris.[1] The selection of the stars is made by Her Majesty's Nautical Almanac Office and the US Naval Observatory, in the production of the yearly Nautical Almanac which the two organizations have published jointly since 1958.[2] Criteria in the choice of stars includes their distribution across the celestial sphere, brightness, and ease of identification.[3] Information for another 115 stars, known as "tabulated stars", is also available to the navigator.[1] This list provides information on the name, approximate position in the celestial sphere, and apparent magnitude of the 58 selected stars in tabular form and by star charts.
These stars are typically used in two ways by the navigator. The first is to obtain a line of position by use of a sextant observation and the techniques of celestial navigation.[4] Multiple lines of position can be intersected to obtain a position known as a celestial fix. The second typical use of the navigational stars is to determine gyrocompass error by computing the azimuth of a star and comparing it to an azimuth measured using the ship's gyrocompass.[5] Numerous other applications also exist.
Navigators typically refer to stars using one of two naming systems for stars: common names and Bayer's designations.[1] All of the selected stars have had a common name since 1953, and many were named in antiquity by the Arabs, Greeks, Romans, and Babylonians.[1] Bayer's naming convention has been in use since 1603, and consists of a Greek letter combined with the possessive form of the star's constellation.[1] Both names are shown for each star in the tables and charts below.
Each star's approximate position on the celestial sphere is given using the equatorial coordinate system. The celestial sphere is an imaginary globe of infinite size with the Earth at its center.[6] Positions on the celestial sphere are often expressed using two coordinates: declination and sidereal hour angle, which are similar to latitude and longitude on the surface of the Earth. To define declination, the Earth's equator is projected out to the celestial sphere to construct the celestial equator, and declination is measured in degrees north or south of this celestial equator.[6] Sidereal hour angle is a measurement between 0 and 360 degrees, indicating how far west a body is from an arbitrarily chosen line on the celestial sphere called the vernal equinox.
The final characteristic provided in the tables and star charts is the star's brightness, expressed in terms of apparent magnitude. Magnitude is a logarithmic scale of brightness, designed so that a body of one magnitude is approximately 2.512 times brighter than a body of the next magnitude.[Note 1][7] Thus, a body of magnitude 1 is 2.5125, or 100 times brighter than a body of magnitude 6.[7] The dimmest stars that can be seen through a 200-inch terrestrial telescope are of the 20th magnitude, and very bright objects like the Sun and a full Moon have magnitudes of −26.7 and −12.6 respectively.[7]
Table
Key to the table Column title Description No. The number used to identify stars in navigation publications and star charts.[Note 2] Common name The name of the star commonly used navigation publications and star charts. Bayer designation Another name of the star which combines a Greek letter with the possessive form of its constellation's Latin name. Etymology of
common nameEtymology of the common name.[8] SHA Sidereal hour angle (SHA), the angular distance west of the vernal equinox. Dec. Declination, the angular distance north or south of the celestial equator. App.
magnitudeApparent magnitude, an indicator of the star's brightness. The table of navigational stars provides several types of information. In the first column is the identifying index number, followed by the common name, the Bayer designation, and the etymology of the common name. Then the star's approximate position, suitable for identification purposes, is given in terms of declination and sidereal hour angle, followed by the star's magnitude. The final column presents citations to the sources of the data, The American Practical Navigator and the star's entry at the SIMBAD database, a project of the Strasbourg Astronomical Data Center or CDS.
No.[Note 2] Common
nameBayer
designationEtymology of common name SHA Dec. App.
magnitudeReferences 1 Alpheratz Andromedae αthe horse's navel 358 N 29° 2.06 [8][9] 2 Ankaa Phoenicis αcoined name 354 S 42° 2.37 [8][10] 3 Schedar Cassiopeiae αthe breast (of Cassiopeia) 350 N 56° 2.25 [8][11] 4 Diphda Ceti βthe second frog (Fomalhaut was once the first) 349 S 18° 2.04 [8][12] 5 Achernar Eridani αend of the river (Eridanus) 336 S 57° 0.50 [8][13] 6 Hamal Arietis αfull-grown lamb 328 N 23° 2.00 [8][14] 7 Acamar Eridani θanother form of Achernar 316 S 40° 3.2 [8][15] 8 Menkar Ceti αnose (of the whale) 315 N 04° 2.5 [8][16] 9 Mirfak Persei αelbow of the Pleiades 309 N 50° 1.82 [8][17] 10 Aldebaran Tauri αfollower (of the Pleiades) 291 N 16° 0.85 var[Note 3] [8][18] 11 Rigel Orionis βfoot (left foot of Orion) 282 S 08° 0.12 [8][19] 12 Capella Aurigae αlittle she-goat 281 N 46° 0.71 [8][20] 13 Bellatrix Orionis γfemale warrior 279 N 06° 1.64 [8][21] 14 Elnath Tauri βone butting with the horns 279 N 29° 1.68 [8][22] 15 Alnilam Orionis εstring of pearls 276 S 01° 1.70 [8][23] 16 Betelgeuse Orionis αthe arm pit (of Orion) 271 N 07° 0.58 var[Note 3] [8][24] 17 Canopus Carinae αcity of ancient Egypt 264 S 53° −0.72 [8][25] 18 Sirius Canis Majoris αthe scorching one (popularly, the dog star) 259 S 17° −1.47 [8][26] 19 Adhara Canis Majoris εthe virgin(s) 256 S 29° 1.51 [8][27] 20 Procyon Canis Minoris αbefore the dog (rising before the dog star, Sirius) 245 N 05° 0.34 [8][28] 21 Pollux Geminorum βZeus' other twin son (Castor, α Gem, is the first twin) 244 N 28° 1.15 [8][29] 22 Avior Carinae ε1coined name 234 S 59° 2.4 [8][30] 23 Suhail Velorum λshortened form of Al Suhail, one Arabic name for Canopus 223 S 43° 2.23 [8][31] 24 Miaplacidus Carinae βquiet or still waters 222 S 70° 1.70 [8][32] 25 Alphard Hydrae αsolitary star of the serpent 218 S 09° 2.00 [8][33] 26 Regulus Leonis αthe prince 208 N 12° 1.35 [8][34] 27 Dubhe Ursae Majoris α1the bear's back 194 N 62° 1.87 [8][35] 28 Denebola Leonis βtail of the lion 183 N 15° 2.14 [8][36] 29 Gienah Corvi γright wing of the raven 176 S 17° 2.80 [8][37] 30 Acrux Crucis α1coined from Bayer name 174 S 63° 1.40 [8][38] 31 Gacrux Crucis γcoined from Bayer name 172 S 57° 1.63 [8][39] 32 Alioth Ursae Majoris εanother form of Capella 167 N 56° 1.76 [8][40] 33 Spica Virginis αthe ear of corn 159 S 11° 1.04 [8][41] 34 Alkaid Ursae Majoris ηleader of the daughters of the bier 153 N 49° 1.85 [8][42] 35 Hadar Centauri βleg of the centaur 149 S 60° 0.60 [8][43] 36 Menkent Centauri θshoulder of the centaur 149 S 36° 2.06 [8][44] 38 Rigil Kentaurus Centauri α1foot of the centaur 140 S 61° −0.01 [8][45] 37 Arcturus Bootis αthe bear's guard 146 N 19° −0.04 var[Note 3] [8][46] 39 Zubenelgenubi Librae αsouthern claw (of the scorpion) 138 S 16° 3.28 [8][47] 40 Kochab Ursae Minoris βshortened form of "north star" (named when it was that,[Note 4] ca. 1500 BC – AD 300). 137 N 74° 2.08 [8][48] 41 Alphecca Corona Borealis αfeeble one (in the crown) 127 N 27° 2.24 [8][49] 42 Antares Scorpii αrival of Mars (in color) 113 S 26° 1.09 [8][50] 43 Atria Trianguli Australis αcoined from Bayer name 108 S 69° 1.92 [8][51] 44 Sabik Ophiuchi ηsecond winner or conqueror 103 S 16° 2.43 [8][52] 45 Shaula Scorpii λcocked-up part of the scorpion's tail 097 S 37° 1.62 [8][53] 46 Rasalhague Ophiuchi αhead of the serpent charmer 096 N 13° 2.10 [8][54] 47 Eltanin Draconis γhead of the dragon 091 N 51° 2.23 [8][55] 48 Kaus Australis Sagittarii εsouthern part of the bow (of Sagittarius) 084 S 34° 1.80 [8][56] 49 Vega Lyrae αthe falling eagle or vulture 081 N 39° 0.03 [8][57] 50 Nunki Sagittarii σconstellation of the holy city (Eridu) 076 S 26° 2.06 [8][58] 51 Altair Aquilae αflying eagle or vulture 063 N 09° 0.77 [8][59] 52 Peacock Pavonis αCoined from the English name of the constellation 054 S 57° 1.91 [8][60] 53 Deneb Cygnus αtail of the hen 050 N 45° 1.25 [8][61] 54 Enif Pegasi εnose of the horse 034 N 10° 2.40 [8][62] 55 Al Na'ir Gruis αbright one (of the fish's tail) 028 S 47° 1.74 [8][63] 56 Fomalhaut Piscis Austrinus αmouth of the southern fish 016 S 30° 1.16 [8][64] 57 Markab Pegasi αsaddle (of Pegasus) 014 N 15° 2.49 [8][65] [Note 2] *Polaris[8] Ursae Minoris αthe pole (star) 319 N 89° 2.01 var[Note 3] [8][66] Star charts
Key to the Star charts Item Description UPPERCASE TEXT Constellation names are indicated in uppercase text. Selected star of magnitude 1.5 and brighter. Labeled with common name, star number, and Greek letter to indicate Bayer designation. Selected star of magnitude 1.6 and fainter. Labeled with common name, star number, and Greek letter to indicate Bayer designation. Tabulated star of magnitude 2.5 and brighter. Labeled with Greek letter to indicate Bayer designation. Tabulated star of magnitude 2.6 and fainter. Labeled with Greek letter to indicate Bayer designation. Untabulated star. Not labeled. Dotted line Constellation outline. Navigators often use star charts to identify a star by its position relative to other stars. References like the Nautical Almanac and The American Practical Navigator provide four star charts, covering different portions of the celestial sphere. Two of these charts are azimuthal equidistant projections of the north and south poles. The other two cover the equatorial region of the celestial sphere, from the declination of 30° south to 30° north. The two equatorial charts are mercator projections, one for the eastern hemisphere of the celestial sphere and one for the western hemisphere. Note that unlike familiar maps, east is shown to the left and west is shown to the right. With this orientation, the navigator can hold the star chart overhead, and the arrangement of the stars on the chart will resemble the stars in the sky.[1]
In the star charts, constellations are labelled with capital letters and indicated by dotted lines collecting their stars. The 58 selected stars for navigation are shown in blue and labelled with their common name, star number, and a Greek letter to indicate their Bayer designation. The additional 115 tabulated stars that can also be used for navigation are shown in red and labelled with a Greek letter to indicate their Bayer designation. Some additional stars not suitable for navigation are also included on the charts to indicate constellations, they are presented as unlabelled small red dots.
Equatorial stars
- Equatorial stars of the eastern hemisphere
The equatorial region of the celestial sphere's eastern hemisphere includes 16 navigational stars from Alpheratz in the constellation Andromeda to Denebola in Leo. It also includes stars from the constellations Cetus, Aries, Taurus, Orion, Canis Major and Minor, Gemini, and Hydra. Of particular note among these stars are "the dog star" Sirius, the brightest star in the sky, and four stars of the easily identified constellation Orion.
- Equatorial stars of the western hemisphere
The equatorial region of the celestial sphere's western hemisphere includes 13 navigational stars from Gienah in the constellation Corvus to Markab in Pegasus. It also includes stars from the constellations Virgo, Bootes, Libra, Corona Borealis, Scorpio, Ophiuchus, Sagittarius, and Aquila. The variable star Arcturus is the brightest star in this group.
Northern stars
The 11 northern stars are those with a declination between 30° north and 90° north. They are listed in order of decreasing sidereal hour angle, or from the vernal equinox westward across the sky. Starting with Schedar in the Cassiopeia constellation, the list includes stars from the constellations Auriga, the Great and Little Bears, Draco, Lyra and Cygnus. The two brightest northern stars are Vega and Capella.
In the star chart to the right, declination is shown by the radial coordinate, starting at 90° north in the center and decreasing to 30° north at the outer edge. Sidereal hour angle is shown as the angular coordinate, starting at 0° at the left of the chart, and increasing counter-clockwise.
Southern stars
The 18 southern stars are those with a declination between 30° south and 90° south. They are listed in order of decreasing sidereal hour angle, or from the vernal equinox westward across the sky. Starting with Ankaa in the Phoenix constellation, the list includes stars from the constellations Eridanus, Carina, Crux, Centaurus, Libra, Triangulum Australe, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Pavo, and Grus. Canopus, Rigil Kentaurus, Achernar, and Hadar are the brightest stars in the southern sky.
In the star chart to the right, declination is shown by the radial coordinate, starting at 90° north in the center and decreasing to 30° north at the outer edge. Sidereal hour angle is shown as the angular coordinate, starting at 0° at the right of the chart, and increasing clockwise.
Footnotes
-
- Notes
- ^ The value is actually the fifth root of 100, an irrational number known as Pogson's Ratio. See Australian Science Teachers' Association (2006). Teaching science, Volumes 52–53. Australian Science Teachers' Association. pp. 44. http://books.google.com/books?id=ae0kAQAAIAAJ&q=%22Pogson's+Ratio%22+irrational+number&dq=%22Pogson's+Ratio%22+irrational+number&hl=en&ei=fwCFTI-8A8TYnAedib1i&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CCkQ6AEwAA. Retrieved 2010-09-06.
- ^ a b c This list uses the assigned numbers from the nautical almanac, which includes only 57 stars. Polaris, which is included in the list given in The American Practical Navigator, is listed here without a number.
- ^ a b c d The suffix var after the numeric value denotes a variable star whose magnitude changes over time.
- ^ For more information, see the article changing pole stars.
-
- Citations
- ^ a b c d e f g Bowditch, 2002, p. 249.
- ^ "History of the Nautical Almanac". US Naval Observatory. http://www.usno.navy.mil/USNO/astronomical-applications/publications/hist-naut-almanac. Retrieved 2011-01-23.
- ^ Wright and Whitney, 1992, p. 273.
- ^ Bowditch, 2002, pp. 301–303.
- ^ Bowditch, 2002, pp. 271–274.
- ^ a b Bowditch, 2002, p. 234.
- ^ a b c Bowditch, 2002, p. 219.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh Bowditch, 2002, p. 248.
- ^ Strasbourg Astronomical Data Center (CDS), 2010, Alpheratz.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Phe Alpha Phe.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Schedar.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Ceti Beta Ceti.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Achernar.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Hamal.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Acamar.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Menkar .
- ^ CDS, 2010, Mirfak.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Aldebaran.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Rigel.
- ^ CDS, 2010, A Capella A.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Bellatrix.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Tau bet Tau.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Alnilam.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Betelgeuse.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Canopus.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Sirius.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Adara.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Procyon.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Pollux.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Car Eps Car.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Vel lam Vel.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Car Beta Car.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Alphard.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Regulus.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Dubhe.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Denebola.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Corvi Gienah Corvi.
- ^ CDS, 2010, A Acrux A.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Gacrux.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Alioth.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Spica.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Alkaid.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Agena.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Menkent.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Centauri Alpha Centauri.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Arcturus.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Librae Alpha Librae.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Kochab.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Alphecca.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Antares.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Atria.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Sabik.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Shaula.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Rasalhague.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Etamin.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Australis Kaus Australis.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Vega.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Nunki.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Altair.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Peacock.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Deneb.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Enif.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Gruis Alpha Gruis.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Fomalhaut.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Markab.
- ^ CDS, 2010, Polaris.
References
- Bowditch, LL.D., Nathaniel (2002) [1802]. "15: Navigational Astronomy". The American Practical Navigator: An Epitome of Navigation. Bethesda, MD: National Imagery and Mapping Agency. ISBN 0939837544. http://www.nga.mil/NGAPortal/MSI.portal?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=msi_portal_page_62&pubCode=0002. Retrieved 2010-06-19.
- Strasbourg Astronomical Data Center (CDS) (2010). "SIMBAD". Set of Identifications, Measurements, and Bibliography for Astronomical Data. Strasbourg: University of Strasbourg. http://simbad.u-strasbg.fr/simbad/. Retrieved 2010-09-05.
- United States Army Research Office (2009). 2010 Nautical Almanac. Arcata, CA: Paradise Cay Publications. pp. 28, leaf. ISBN 0-939837-85-4.
- Wright, Frances; Whitney, Charles Allen (1992). Learn to navigate by the tutorial system developed at Harvard. Cambridge, Md: Cornell Maritime Press. ISBN 0-87033-426-3.
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