For those who are from Cygnus Constellation or are intrested in this Constellation also known as "The Swan"
A star has been named by me called LoveLi…
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Latest Activity: Nov. 22, 2008
Find more photos like this on The Ashtar Command Dear Friends, For those who can remember being in the constellation Cygnus and for those who are intrested in this beautiful constellation. Welcome to join. Later more info about this subject.
Lots of love, light and harmony,
Amey
Cygnus (pronounced /ˈsɪgnəs/, Latin: swan, Greek: Κύκνος) is a northern constellation. It was one of Ptolemy's 48 constellations, and is also one of the 88 modern constellations. Because of the pattern of its main stars, it is sometimes known as the Northern Cross (in contrast to the Southern Cross).
One of the most recognizable constellations of the northern summer and autumn, it resembles a swan flying south along the Milky Way. Albireo, a double star with blue and yellow components is at the "head". Deneb, its brightest star, is at the tail and is one star of the summer triangle.
The constellation bears a resemblance to a wide winged, long necked bird, in graceful flight [1]. In Greek mythology, the constellation represents several different legendary swans. Zeus disguised himself as a swan to seduce Leda, who gave birth to the Gemini, Helen of Troy, and Clytemnestra.
Orpheus was transformed into a swan after his murder, and was said to have been placed in the sky next to his lyre (Lyra).
Finally, it is said that a king named Cycnus was a relative or lover of the ill-fated Phaëthon. The son of Apollo, Phaethon tricked his father into allowing him to ride the chariot of the Sun, but lost control and was struck down by Zeus. Grief-stricken after Phaëthon's death, and determined to give his remains a proper burial, Cycnus dove to the bottom of the river Eridanus to find him. He dove so many times into the river that he was transformed into the swan Cygnus, and is visible in the sky today.
Cygnus, together with other constellations in the Zodiac sign of Sagittarius (specifically Lyra and Aquila, together with Sagittarius itself), may be a significant part of the origin of the myth of the Stymphalian Birds, one of The Twelve Labours of Heracles.
In Chinese mythology, the constellation Cygnus is the site of the once-a-year magpie bridge (鹊桥, Que Qiao) which connects the lovers Niu Lang and Zhi Nu (see Qi Xi).
In Ovid's Metamorphoses, there are three people named Cygnus, all of whom are transformed into swans. The first is the relative of Phaethon mentioned above, who is the son of Sthenelus and king of Liguria. The second is a boy from Tempe, to whom Phyllius gives several tamed animals as gifts. When Phyllius refuses to give Cygnus a tamed bull that the boy demands, Cygnus throws himself off a cliff in a fit of spite. Instead of falling to his death, Cygnus is transformed into a swan and flies away. The third person named Cygnus is a son of Neptune. He is a warrior in the Trojan War who is invulnerable to all stabbing weapons, much to the frustration of his enemy, Achilles. Achilles finally kills him by smashing his face in with his shield, but Neptune saves Cygnus by transforming him into a swan.
Source: Wikipedia
And as he went, his voice grew thinner, shriller, White feathers hid his hair, and his neck lengthened, A web began to join his ruddy fingers, Wings came along his sides, his lips extended Into a blunted beak: what once was Cygnus Was a new bird, the Swan. - Ovid: Metamorphoses (Book II) Cygnus the Constellation
Name: Cygnus (Latin: 'swan') Genitive: Cygni Short form: Cyg Area: 804 sq deg Co-ordinates1: Right Ascension 21h, Declination +40° Origin: Ancient
Cygnus is an easily-recognisable northern hemisphere constellation, one of Greek astronomer Ptolemy's original 48, and is very prominent throughout the summer months. Constellations are formed by joining up the dots (stars) with imaginary lines, and, much like the child's game, you end up with a recognisable shape. The cross-like pattern of its main stars suggests the outline of a flying swan. A less common alternative name for the constellation is indeed the 'Northern Cross'. Cygnus has more than its fair share of double and variable stars, and it boasts the first-discovered 'black hole'.
The brightest star, Deneb, is one of the three stars of the Summer Triangle, along with Altair (in Aquila) and Vega2 (in Lyra). Deneb is at the north-eastern apex3. The triangle lies almost directly overhead to European observers at Midsummer, and can hardly be mistaken, since it is also spanned by one of the densest sections of the Milky Way.
The Milky Way in Cygnus is riven by a dark band of dust sometimes known as the Cygnus Rift (or, in some sources, as the 'Northern Coalsack', echoing the more familiar Coalsack within Crux, the Southern Cross). When looking in this direction, an observer is looking out along the spiral arm of the galaxy in which our own Sun lies.
Le Gentil 3 is a dark nebula in Cygnus named after its discoverer, the French astronomer Guillaume Joseph Hyacinthe Jean-Baptiste Le Gentil de la Galaisière. One of history's long-forgotten astronomers, poor le Gentil had some real bad luck attempting to record the Venus transits of 1761 and 1769.
Cygnus A is one of the earliest radio galaxies discovered. At 700 million light years4 distance, it is the most powerful in our part of the universe. Shaped like an American football, it emits powerful X-Rays - and there's a black hole in the nucleus.
Mythology
A sudden blow: the great wings beating still Above the staggering girl, her thighs caressed By the dark webs, her nape caught in his bill, He holds her helpless upon his breast. - William Butler Yeats Cygnus is associated with several myths. According to one of these, it represents Zeus in the form of a swan, one of his legendary disguises. This is the one he used to visit King Tyndareus' wife Leda, Queen of Sparta. This encounter provided the inspiration for many paintings and sculptures. The story goes that after Zeus had impregnated Queen Leda, and she had conceived two children Helen and Pollux, she also slept with her husband Tyndareus, who fathered a daughter, Clytemnestra and a son, Castor. These offspring caused a lot of trouble: Helen, reputedly the most beautiful woman in the world, was kidnapped by Paris, so the Greeks besieged the city of Troy to get her back, in what became known as the Trojan War5. Clytemnestra was married to Agamemnon, King of Argos, but after he returned from the war with a new wife on his arm, she killed him. Castor and Pollux have their own story.
In an alternative story, Cygnus is one of three birds hunted by Hercules, whose constellation is close by. (Another is Aquila 'the Eagle', and the third is a vulture, composed of the stars we now know as Lyra. The group were identified with the Stymphalian Birds of Greek legend).
The most usual folklore concerns Phaeton. He was the mortal son of the sun-god Helios, who unwisely allowed him to drive the sun-chariot. The chariot went out of control; Zeus thought that the world was threatened, and struck Phaeton down. His body fell into the River Eridanus, from where his devoted friend Cygnus strove to recover it. Zeus took pity, turned Cygnus into a swan, and placed him in the sky.
Stars
above the star that I have named: LoveLight
The scientific star names are simple to understand (if you know your Greek alphabet). 'Alpha Cygni' means that it is the brightest star in the constellation Cygnus. The next brightest is designated 'beta', etc. Combined with the genitive name, this is known as the 'Bayer designation'. Some stars have proper names as well; for example, alpha Cygni is Deneb. Others are known by their catalogue number.
Deneb (alpha Cygni) forms the tail of the Swan, and is a blue supergiant of stellar magnitude 1.3, making it the 20th brightest star in the sky. At approximately 3,200 light-years distant, however, it is one of the most luminous stars known, with an absolute magnitude of -8.7.
The star which marks the beak of the Swan, Albireo (beta Cygni), is a particularly beautiful binary, comprising a third magnitude orange giant and a blue companion of fifth magnitude. Powerful telescopes can resolve the brighter component, which turns out to be a double star itself.
Sadir (gamma Cygni) is at the centre of the cross and the Swan's breast; a second magnitude yellow-white supergiant which is also believed to comprise a binary system. It is the designated 'gamma' but it is actually brighter than the beta star Albireo. Sadir is surrounded by a diffuse nebula.
Rukh (delta Cygni) is a triple star system which is sometimes the (north) pole star, thanks to the 26,000-year cycle of precession of the Earth.
Gienah (epsilon Cygni) marks the wing tip. It's a fabulous second magnitude orange giant, just over 70 light-years distant.
61 Cygni has two dwarf components of the sixth magnitude at 11 light years distance and is of significance as its distance was the first to be measured of any star.
P Cygni is a nova-like variable which periodically dims from third to sixth magnitude. It has given its name to a class of stars with similar and characteristic spectra, and its behaviour was first noted by Kepler.
Chi Cygni varies regularly from third to 14th magnitude, with a period of about 400 days.
Star Chart
Star Designation Name or catalogue number Magnitude Distance (light years) Spectral classification and/or comments α Cyg Alpha Cygni Deneb (bird's tail) +1.30 3,200 Blue supergiant β Cyg Beta Cygni Albireo (beak) +3.08/+5.11 400 Binary double, K3/B8 γ Cyg Gamma Cygni Sadir (breast) +2.30 1,300 F8 supergiant δ Cyg Delta Cygni Rukh +2.86 175 Triple star system sometime Pole star ε Cyg Epsilon Cygni Gienah (wing) +2.64 73 K0 (orange) giant ζ Cyg Zeta Cygni unnamed +3.2 150 Multiple star system η Cyg Eta Cygni unnamed +3.8 140 Multiple star system θ Cyg Theta Cygni unnamed +4.5 60 Triple star system 16 Cyg B SAO 31899 unnamed +6.2 90 Planetary system HD 188753 ADS 13125 unnamed +4.17 149 Triple planetary system Nova 1600 Cygni P Cygni unnamed +4.8 var 6,000 Discovered by Willem Janszoom Blaeu Nova 1975 Cygni V1500 Cygni unnamed +2 Second-brightest nova of the 20th Century
Quantum Singularity
Close to the star Eta Cygni lies an X-Ray object designated Cygnus X-1, which in 1973 was the first star to be tentatively identified as a quantum singularity. More commonly known as black holes, they are collapsed red giant stars, and nothing that strays too close escapes them, not even light. We can't see the event horizon6, but we can detect their presence by the reaction of surrounding objects. Luckily for us, this intergalactic heavyweight with an insatiable appetite is over 8,000 light years distant.
Messier Objects
Two open clusters from the Messier catalogue lie within the bounds of Cygnus. M29, in the vicinity of Sadir, is faint and unremarkable. M39 is a large naked-eye open cluster that lies close to the eastern boundary of the constellation and slightly to the north of Deneb.
New General Catalogue Objects
Cygnus contains some rather more interesting nebulae, including a number in a tight area about three degrees south of Epsilon Cygni (also known as Gienah) in the eastern wing of the Swan. To the east of the group lies the Cirrus Nebula (NGC6992) and to the west the fainter and more diffuse Veil Nebula (NGC 6992). The complete system is the remains of a 5,000-year-old supernova. Though difficult to observe without resort to long-exposure photography, it has yielded strikingly beautiful images.
Between M39 and Deneb lies the North America Nebula (NGC 7000), which gets its name from its shape, easily revealed by a small telescope. Also close by are the two nebulae IC5067 and IC5070, which are collectively known as the Pelican.
Catalogue Number Name Type Magnitude Distance (light years) Notes NGC 6826 The Blinking Eye Planetary nebula +9 2,200 Has prominent red FLIERs7 NGC 6913 M29 Open star cluster +7 7,200 Discovered by Charles Messier in 1764 NGC 7092 M39 Open star cluster +5 810 Discovered by Le Gentil in 1750 NGC 7000 North America Nebula Diffuse Emission +9 2,600 Discovered by William Herschel in 1786 NGC 6992/6960 Cirrus aka The Veil aka Cygnus Loop Bright reflection nebula +5 2,000 5,000-year-old supernova NGC 6888 Crescent Nebula Emission +9 5,000 Formed by Wolf-Rayet star WR 136 NGC 6946 Fireworks Galaxy Spiral galaxy +9.6 10 million Spans 20kly; borders Cepheus NGC 6946 NGC 7027 Planetary Nebula 14,000 One of the smallest-known PN IC 5067/5070 Pelican Diffuse nebula +8 2,300 Emission Sh2-101 Tulip Bright nebula +9 8,700 Emission Cygnus A Galaxy +9 700 million X-Ray radio galaxy discovered by Grote Reber in 1939.
Wolf-Rayet Stars
Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars are rare blue giants named after their discoverers Charles Wolf and Georges Rayet. The stars are massive, over 20 times the size of our Sun. The stellar wind they produce has been measured at speeds of several million kilometres per hour. They have a high rate of mass loss, equivalent to an Earth mass per year. This shortens the star's life and will eventually cause them to go supernova.
Meteor Showers
A couple of meteor showers originate from the direction of Cygnus, though they are modest ones. The October Cygnids is a sparse, irregular shower visible between 26 September and 10 October, by which time Cygnus is falling lower in the northern sky. The Kappa Cygnids (with a different virtual point) was once a concentrated shower peaking in early August, but has now broadened and lessened in intensity. It is active between mid-July and the end of August. During the Kappa Cygnids of 1977, Elvis Presley died. Ever since then, the meteor shower has been dedicated to him by his faithful fans.
Cygnus and Swans in Modern Culture
Cygnus is the family name (genus) of large waterbirds which we know as swans. These stately, graceful creatures enjoy royal protection in the UK. Swan Upping takes place on the River Thames annually in July.
'Cygnet Committee' is a song by David Bowie from his 1975 album Space Oddity.
The USS Cygnus was the name of the spacecraft in the 1979 Disney film The Black Hole.
The Cygnoids are minor players in a few episodes of Futurama.
'Cygnus X-1' is an interminable prog-rock classic by Canadian rockers Rush.
The Ugly Duckling is a children's story by Hans Christian Andersen - it's about a hatchling being raised by ducks, but he's different from his siblings. He wakes one morning to find he's turned into a beautiful swan. 'The Ugly Duckling' has also been immortalised in song by the likes of Mike Reid and Danny Kaye (from the 1952 film Hans Christian Andersen).
The Swan and the Bard
Go thither; and, with unattainted eye, Compare her face with some that I shall show, And I will make thee think thy swan a crow. - Romeo and Juliet The swan was the favourite bird of William Shakespeare and he included references to it in many of his plays such as Antony and Cleopatra, As You Like It, The Merchant of Venice, Othello and Romeo and Juliet. Out of all his theatres, the one named The Swan Theatre in Paris Gardens, Surrey, was built by Francis Langley around 1594. One visitor in 1596, Johannes de Witt, made a drawing of the interior of the Swan playhouse, and it survives today, having outlived the theatre.
The most outstanding of all the theatres, however, and the largest, is that whose sign is the Swan as it seats 3,000 people. It is built out of flint stones stacked on top of each other (of which there is great store in Britain), supported by wooden pillars which, by their painted marble colour, can deceive even the most acute observers. As its form seems to bear the appearance of a Roman work, I have made a drawing of it. - Johannes de Witt, Utrecht, Randstad, Netherlands. Amazingly, Shakespeare's plays didn't go down well with everyone. One neighbour of the theatre, William Wayte, went so far as to issue a writ for Sureties of the Peace against 'William Shakspeare, Francis Langley, Dorothy Soer wife of John Soer, and Anne Lee, for fear of death and so forth'.
The play watched at The Swan by de Witt was Twelfth Night; we know this because his drawing was identified as Scene 4/Act III in Twelfth Night by the Oxfordian scholar, Mrs Eva Turner Clark, in 1937.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 Current IAU guidelines use a plus sign (+) for northern constellations and a minus sign (−) for southern ones. 2 Vega was the star system from which the 'contact' came in Carl Sagan's novel and film Contact. 3 That's the top left corner if north is at the top. 4 A light year is the distance light travels in one year, roughly 5.88 trillion miles or 9.46 trillion km. 5 Helen of Troy is also known as 'the face that launched a thousand ships'. 6 The sphere inside which not even light can escape. 7 Fast Low-Ionisation Emission Regions.
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3 Comments
Comment by Lightspark on November 22, 2008 at 5:11pm
Of course we do see the "Swan" all the time: Stella Polaris is between Otava nad Swan, and between Cassiopeia and Lyra :-)
Comment by Lightspark on November 22, 2008 at 3:40pm
...or perhaps I should go to our local observatory of our university, which is open for public on Tuesdays. I am not an university student or researcer anymore, so I am just public co-operator.
Comment by Lightspark on November 22, 2008 at 3:38pm
Dear Amey,
I have hobbied ashtronomy during my life, but I have to do some home work if this costellation is visible on Nordic sky, and when and in which cordinates. I will take my telescope out during Christmas holiday if sky is clear :-)
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