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Carina (constellation)

Carina (/kəˈrnə, kəˈrnə/ kə-RY-nə, -⁠REE-) is a constellation in the southern sky. Its name is Latin for the keel of a ship, and it was the southern foundation of the larger constellation of Argo Navis (the ship Argo) until it was divided into three pieces, the other two being Puppis (the poop deck), and Vela (the sails of the ship).

Carina
Constellation
AbbreviationCar
GenitiveCarinae
Pronunciation/kəˈrnə, kəˈrnə/ kə-RY-nə, -⁠REE-, genitive /kəˈrn/ kə-RY-nee[1]
Symbolismthe keel
Right ascension06h 02m 59.7365s11h 20m 37.4211s[2]
Declination−50.7545471° to −75.6840134°[2]
Area494 sq. deg. (34th)
Main stars9
Bayer/Flamsteed
stars
52
Stars with planets11
Stars brighter than 3.00m6
Stars within 10.00 pc (32.62 ly)1
Brightest starCanopus (α Car) (−0.72m)
Messier objects0
Meteor showers
Bordering
constellations
Visible at latitudes between +20° and −90°.
Best visible at 21:00 (9 p.m.) during the month of March.

History and mythology edit

Carina was once a part of Argo Navis, the great ship of the mythical Jason and the Argonauts who searched for the Golden Fleece. The constellation of Argo was introduced in ancient Greece. However, due to the massive size of Argo Navis and the sheer number of stars that required separate designation, Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille divided Argo into three sections in 1763, including Carina (the hull or keel).[3] In the 19th century, these three became established as separate constellations, and were formally included in the list of 88 modern IAU constellations in 1930.[4] Lacaille kept a single set of Greek letters for the whole of Argo, and separate sets of Latin letter designations for each of the three sections. Therefore, Carina has the α, β and ε, Vela has γ and δ, Puppis has ζ, and so on.[5]

Notable features edit

 
The constellation Carina as it can be seen by the naked eye

Stars edit

Carina contains Canopus, a white-hued supergiant that is the second-brightest star in the night sky at magnitude −0.72. Alpha Carinae, as Canopus is formally designated, is 313 light-years from Earth. Its traditional name comes from the mythological Canopus, who was a navigator for Menelaus, king of Sparta.[3]

There are several other stars above magnitude 3 in Carina. Beta Carinae, traditionally called Miaplacidus, is a blue-white-hued star of magnitude 1.7, 111 light-years from Earth. Epsilon Carinae is an orange-hued giant star similarly bright to Miaplacidus at magnitude 1.9; it is 630 light-years from Earth. Another fairly bright star is the blue-white-hued Theta Carinae; it is a magnitude 2.7 star 440 light-years from Earth. Theta Carinae is also the most prominent member of the cluster IC 2602. Iota Carinae is a white-hued supergiant star of magnitude 2.2, 690 light-years from Earth.[3]

Eta Carinae is the most prominent variable star in Carina, with a mass of approximately 100 solar masses and 4 million times as bright as the Sun.[3] It was first discovered to be unusual in 1677, when its magnitude suddenly rose to 4, attracting the attention of Edmond Halley.[6] Eta Carinae is inside NGC 3372, commonly called the Carina Nebula.[3] It had a long outburst in 1827, when it brightened to magnitude 1, only fading to magnitude 1.5 in 1828. Its most prominent outburst made Eta Carinae the equal of Sirius; it brightened to magnitude −1.5 in 1843. In the decades following 1843 it appeared relatively placid, having a magnitude between 6.5 and 7.9.[6] However, in 1998, it brightened again, though only to magnitude 5.0, a far less drastic outburst. Eta Carinae is a binary star, with a companion that has a period of 5.5 years; the two stars are surrounded by the Homunculus Nebula, which is composed of gas that was ejected in 1843.[3]

There are several less prominent variable stars in Carina. l Carinae is a Cepheid variable noted for its brightness; it is the brightest Cepheid that is variable to the unaided eye. It is a yellow-hued supergiant star with a minimum magnitude of 4.2 and a maximum magnitude of 3.3; it has a period of 35.5 days.[3]

Two bright Mira variable stars are in Carina: R Carinae and S Carinae; both stars are red giants. R Carinae has a minimum magnitude of 10.0 and a maximum magnitude of 4.0. Its period is 309 days and it is 416 light-years from Earth. S Carinae is similar, with a minimum magnitude of 10.0 and a maximum magnitude of 5.0. However, S Carinae has a shorter period—150 days, though it is much more distant at 1,300 light-years from Earth.[3]

Carina is home to several double stars and binary stars. Upsilon Carinae is a binary star with two blue-white-hued giant components, 1,600 light-years from Earth. The primary is of magnitude 3.0 and the secondary is of magnitude 6.0; the two components are distinguishable in a small amateur telescope.[3]

 
The Diamond Cross as highlighted in the constellation of Carina.

Two asterisms are prominent in Carina. The 'Diamond Cross' is composed of the stars Beta, Theta, Upsilon and Omega Carinae.[7] The Diamond Cross is visible south of 20ºN latitude, and is larger but fainter than the Southern Cross in Crux. Flanking the Diamond Cross is the False cross, composed of four stars[3] - two stars in Carina, Iota Carinae and Epsilon Carinae, and two stars in Vela, Kappa Velorum and Delta Velorum[3] - and is often mistaken for the Southern Cross, causing errors in astronavigation.

Deep-sky objects edit

Carina is known for its namesake nebula, NGC 3372,[8] discovered by French astronomer Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille in 1751, which contains several nebulae. The Carina Nebula overall is an extended emission nebula approximately 8,000 light-years away and 300 light-years wide that includes vast star-forming regions.[9] It has an overall magnitude of 8.0[6] and an apparent diameter of over 2 degrees.[3] Its central region is called the Keyhole, or the Keyhole Nebula. This was described in 1847 by John Herschel, and likened to a keyhole by Emma Converse in 1873.[10] The Keyhole is about seven light-years wide and is composed mostly of ionized hydrogen, with two major star-forming regions. The Homunculus Nebula is a planetary nebula visible to the naked eye that is being ejected by the erratic luminous blue variable star Eta Carinae, the most massive visible star known. Eta Carinae is so massive that it has reached the theoretical upper limit for the mass of a star and is therefore unstable. It is known for its outbursts; in 1840 it briefly became one of the brightest stars in the sky due to a particularly massive outburst, which largely created the Homunculus Nebula. Because of this instability and history of outbursts, Eta Carinae is considered a prime supernova candidate for the next several hundred thousand years because it has reached the end of its estimated million-year life span.[9]

NGC 2516 is an open cluster that is both quite large[11] (approximately half a degree square) and bright, visible to the unaided eye.[11] It is located 1,100 light-years from Earth and has approximately 80 stars, the brightest of which is a red giant star of magnitude 5.2. NGC 3114 is another open cluster approximately of the same size, though it is more distant at 3,000 light-years from Earth. It is more loose and dim than NGC 2516, as its brightest stars are only 6th magnitude. The most prominent open cluster in Carina is IC 2602, also called the "Southern Pleiades". It contains Theta Carinae, along with several other stars visible to the unaided eye. In total, the cluster possesses approximately 60 stars. The Southern Pleiades is particularly large for an open cluster, with a diameter of approximately one degree. Like IC 2602, NGC 3532 is visible to the unaided eye[11] and is of comparable size. It possesses approximately 150 stars that are arranged in an unusual shape, approximating an ellipse with a dark central area. Several prominent orange giants are among the cluster's bright stars, of the 7th magnitude. Superimposed on the cluster is Chi Carinae, a yellow-white-hued star of magnitude 3.9, far more distant than NGC 3532.[3]

Carina also contains the naked-eye globular cluster NGC 2808.[11] Epsilon Carinae and Upsilon Carinae are double stars visible in small telescopes.

One noted galaxy cluster is 1E 0657-56, the Bullet Cluster. At a distance of 4 billion light-years (redshift 0.296), this galaxy cluster is named for the shock wave seen in the intracluster medium, which resembles the shock wave of a supersonic bullet. The bow shock visible is thought to be due to the smaller galaxy cluster moving through the intracluster medium at a relative speed of 3,000–4,000 kilometers per second to the larger cluster. Because this gravitational interaction has been ongoing for hundreds of millions of years, the smaller cluster is being destroyed and will eventually merge with the larger cluster.[9]

Meteors edit

Carina contains the radiant of the Eta Carinids meteor shower, which peaks around January 21 each year.

Equivalents edit

From China (especially northern China), the stars of Carina can barely be seen. The star Canopus (the south polar star in Chinese astronomy) was located by Chinese astronomers in the Vermilion Bird of the South (南方朱雀, Nán Fāng Zhū Què). The rest of the stars were first classified by Xu Guanggi during the Ming dynasty, based on the knowledge acquired from western star charts, and placed among The Southern Asterisms (近南極星區, Jìnnánjíxīngōu).[clarification needed]

Polynesian peoples had no name for the constellation in particular, though they had many names for Canopus. The Māori name Ariki ("High-born"),[12] and the Hawaiian Ke Alii-o-kona-i-ka-lewa, "The Chief of the southern expanse"[13] both attest to the star's prominence in the southern sky, while the Māori Atutahi, "First-light" or "Single-light", and the Tuamotu Te Tau-rari and Marere-te-tavahi, "He who stands alone".[14] refer to the star's solitary nature. It was also called Kapae-poto ("Short horizon"), because it rarely sets from the vantage point of New Zealand,[15] and Kauanga ("Solitary"), when it was the last star visible before sunrise.[16]

Future edit

 
The Southern Celestial Pole migrates through the constellation Carina.

Carina is in the southern sky quite near the south celestial pole, making it never set (circumpolar) for most of the southern hemisphere. Due to precession of Earth's axis, by the year 4700 the south celestial pole will be in Carina. Three bright stars in Carina will come within 1 degree of the southern celestial pole and take turns as the southern pole star: Omega Carinae (mag 3.29) in 5600, Upsilon Carinae (mag 2.97) in 6700, and Iota Carinae (mag 2.21) in 7900. About 13,860 CE, the bright Canopus (−0.7) will have a greater declination than −82°.[17]

Namesakes edit

USS Carina (AK-74) was a United States Navy Crater-class cargo ship named after the constellation.[18]

the Toyota Carina was named after it.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Home : Oxford English Dictionary". www.oed.com. Retrieved Jul 25, 2022.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ a b "Carina, constellation boundary". The Constellations. International Astronomical Union. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Ridpath & Tirion 2001, pp. 104–106.
  4. ^ Delporte, E. (1930). Delimitation scientifique des constellations (tables et cartes). Cambridge University Press. Bibcode:1930dsct.book.....D.
  5. ^ Wagman, M. (2003). Lost Stars: Lost, Missing, and Troublesome Stars from the Catalogues of Johannes Bayer, Nicholas-Louis de Lacaille, John Flamsteed, and Sundry Others. McDonald & Woodward Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-939923-78-6.
  6. ^ a b c Levy 2005, p. 101.
  7. ^ "Diamond Cross". Constellation Guide. Retrieved 11 April 2023.
  8. ^ Levy 2005, p. 100.
  9. ^ a b c Wilkins & Dunn 2006, p. [page needed].
  10. ^ Appletons' Journal. D. Appleton and Company. 1873. pp. 818–.
  11. ^ a b c d Chartrand, Mark R (1991). National Audubon Society Field Guide to the Night Sky. New York, USA: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. p. 470. ISBN 0-679-40852-5.
  12. ^ Makemson 1941, p. 201.
  13. ^ Makemson 1941, p. 198.
  14. ^ Makemson 1941, p. 229.
  15. ^ Makemson 1941, p. 217.
  16. ^ Makemson 1941, p. 218.
  17. ^ Stellarium 0.16.0, setting time to that year.
  18. ^ "Carina". Naval History and Heritage Command. US Navy. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
Secondary sources

External links edit

  Media related to Carina (constellation) at Wikimedia Commons

  • The Deep Photographic Guide to the Constellations: Carina
  • Starry Night Photography: Carina
  • Star Tales – Carina
  • The clickable Carina
  • Huge gamma-ray blast seen 12.2 billion light-years from Earth


carina, constellation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, carina, constellation, news, newspapers, book. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Carina constellation news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Carina k e ˈ r aɪ n e k e ˈ r iː n e ke RY ne REE is a constellation in the southern sky Its name is Latin for the keel of a ship and it was the southern foundation of the larger constellation of Argo Navis the ship Argo until it was divided into three pieces the other two being Puppis the poop deck and Vela the sails of the ship CarinaConstellationList of stars in CarinaAbbreviationCarGenitiveCarinaePronunciation k e ˈ r aɪ n e k e ˈ r iː n e ke RY ne REE genitive k e ˈ r aɪ n iː ke RY nee 1 Symbolismthe keelRight ascension06h 02m 59 7365s 11h 20m 37 4211s 2 Declination 50 7545471 to 75 6840134 2 Area494 sq deg 34th Main stars9Bayer Flamsteedstars52Stars with planets11Stars brighter than 3 00m6Stars within 10 00 pc 32 62 ly 1Brightest starCanopus a Car 0 72m Messier objects0Meteor showersAlpha Carinids Eta CarinidsBorderingconstellationsVela Puppis Pictor Volans Chamaeleon Musca CentaurusVisible at latitudes between 20 and 90 Best visible at 21 00 9 p m during the month of March Contents 1 History and mythology 2 Notable features 2 1 Stars 2 2 Deep sky objects 2 3 Meteors 3 Equivalents 4 Future 5 Namesakes 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory and mythology editCarina was once a part of Argo Navis the great ship of the mythical Jason and the Argonauts who searched for the Golden Fleece The constellation of Argo was introduced in ancient Greece However due to the massive size of Argo Navis and the sheer number of stars that required separate designation Nicolas Louis de Lacaille divided Argo into three sections in 1763 including Carina the hull or keel 3 In the 19th century these three became established as separate constellations and were formally included in the list of 88 modern IAU constellations in 1930 4 Lacaille kept a single set of Greek letters for the whole of Argo and separate sets of Latin letter designations for each of the three sections Therefore Carina has the a b and e Vela has g and d Puppis has z and so on 5 Notable features edit nbsp The constellation Carina as it can be seen by the naked eye Stars edit See also List of stars in Carina Carina contains Canopus a white hued supergiant that is the second brightest star in the night sky at magnitude 0 72 Alpha Carinae as Canopus is formally designated is 313 light years from Earth Its traditional name comes from the mythological Canopus who was a navigator for Menelaus king of Sparta 3 There are several other stars above magnitude 3 in Carina Beta Carinae traditionally called Miaplacidus is a blue white hued star of magnitude 1 7 111 light years from Earth Epsilon Carinae is an orange hued giant star similarly bright to Miaplacidus at magnitude 1 9 it is 630 light years from Earth Another fairly bright star is the blue white hued Theta Carinae it is a magnitude 2 7 star 440 light years from Earth Theta Carinae is also the most prominent member of the cluster IC 2602 Iota Carinae is a white hued supergiant star of magnitude 2 2 690 light years from Earth 3 Eta Carinae is the most prominent variable star in Carina with a mass of approximately 100 solar masses and 4 million times as bright as the Sun 3 It was first discovered to be unusual in 1677 when its magnitude suddenly rose to 4 attracting the attention of Edmond Halley 6 Eta Carinae is inside NGC 3372 commonly called the Carina Nebula 3 It had a long outburst in 1827 when it brightened to magnitude 1 only fading to magnitude 1 5 in 1828 Its most prominent outburst made Eta Carinae the equal of Sirius it brightened to magnitude 1 5 in 1843 In the decades following 1843 it appeared relatively placid having a magnitude between 6 5 and 7 9 6 However in 1998 it brightened again though only to magnitude 5 0 a far less drastic outburst Eta Carinae is a binary star with a companion that has a period of 5 5 years the two stars are surrounded by the Homunculus Nebula which is composed of gas that was ejected in 1843 3 There are several less prominent variable stars in Carina l Carinae is a Cepheid variable noted for its brightness it is the brightest Cepheid that is variable to the unaided eye It is a yellow hued supergiant star with a minimum magnitude of 4 2 and a maximum magnitude of 3 3 it has a period of 35 5 days 3 Two bright Mira variable stars are in Carina R Carinae and S Carinae both stars are red giants R Carinae has a minimum magnitude of 10 0 and a maximum magnitude of 4 0 Its period is 309 days and it is 416 light years from Earth S Carinae is similar with a minimum magnitude of 10 0 and a maximum magnitude of 5 0 However S Carinae has a shorter period 150 days though it is much more distant at 1 300 light years from Earth 3 Carina is home to several double stars and binary stars Upsilon Carinae is a binary star with two blue white hued giant components 1 600 light years from Earth The primary is of magnitude 3 0 and the secondary is of magnitude 6 0 the two components are distinguishable in a small amateur telescope 3 nbsp The Diamond Cross as highlighted in the constellation of Carina Two asterisms are prominent in Carina The Diamond Cross is composed of the stars Beta Theta Upsilon and Omega Carinae 7 The Diamond Cross is visible south of 20ºN latitude and is larger but fainter than the Southern Cross in Crux Flanking the Diamond Cross is the False cross composed of four stars 3 two stars in Carina Iota Carinae and Epsilon Carinae and two stars in Vela Kappa Velorum and Delta Velorum 3 and is often mistaken for the Southern Cross causing errors in astronavigation Deep sky objects edit Carina is known for its namesake nebula NGC 3372 8 discovered by French astronomer Nicolas Louis de Lacaille in 1751 which contains several nebulae The Carina Nebula overall is an extended emission nebula approximately 8 000 light years away and 300 light years wide that includes vast star forming regions 9 It has an overall magnitude of 8 0 6 and an apparent diameter of over 2 degrees 3 Its central region is called the Keyhole or the Keyhole Nebula This was described in 1847 by John Herschel and likened to a keyhole by Emma Converse in 1873 10 The Keyhole is about seven light years wide and is composed mostly of ionized hydrogen with two major star forming regions The Homunculus Nebula is a planetary nebula visible to the naked eye that is being ejected by the erratic luminous blue variable star Eta Carinae the most massive visible star known Eta Carinae is so massive that it has reached the theoretical upper limit for the mass of a star and is therefore unstable It is known for its outbursts in 1840 it briefly became one of the brightest stars in the sky due to a particularly massive outburst which largely created the Homunculus Nebula Because of this instability and history of outbursts Eta Carinae is considered a prime supernova candidate for the next several hundred thousand years because it has reached the end of its estimated million year life span 9 NGC 2516 is an open cluster that is both quite large 11 approximately half a degree square and bright visible to the unaided eye 11 It is located 1 100 light years from Earth and has approximately 80 stars the brightest of which is a red giant star of magnitude 5 2 NGC 3114 is another open cluster approximately of the same size though it is more distant at 3 000 light years from Earth It is more loose and dim than NGC 2516 as its brightest stars are only 6th magnitude The most prominent open cluster in Carina is IC 2602 also called the Southern Pleiades It contains Theta Carinae along with several other stars visible to the unaided eye In total the cluster possesses approximately 60 stars The Southern Pleiades is particularly large for an open cluster with a diameter of approximately one degree Like IC 2602 NGC 3532 is visible to the unaided eye 11 and is of comparable size It possesses approximately 150 stars that are arranged in an unusual shape approximating an ellipse with a dark central area Several prominent orange giants are among the cluster s bright stars of the 7th magnitude Superimposed on the cluster is Chi Carinae a yellow white hued star of magnitude 3 9 far more distant than NGC 3532 3 Carina also contains the naked eye globular cluster NGC 2808 11 Epsilon Carinae and Upsilon Carinae are double stars visible in small telescopes One noted galaxy cluster is 1E 0657 56 the Bullet Cluster At a distance of 4 billion light years redshift 0 296 this galaxy cluster is named for the shock wave seen in the intracluster medium which resembles the shock wave of a supersonic bullet The bow shock visible is thought to be due to the smaller galaxy cluster moving through the intracluster medium at a relative speed of 3 000 4 000 kilometers per second to the larger cluster Because this gravitational interaction has been ongoing for hundreds of millions of years the smaller cluster is being destroyed and will eventually merge with the larger cluster 9 Meteors edit Carina contains the radiant of the Eta Carinids meteor shower which peaks around January 21 each year Equivalents editFrom China especially northern China the stars of Carina can barely be seen The star Canopus the south polar star in Chinese astronomy was located by Chinese astronomers in the Vermilion Bird of the South 南方朱雀 Nan Fang Zhu Que The rest of the stars were first classified by Xu Guanggi during the Ming dynasty based on the knowledge acquired from western star charts and placed among The Southern Asterisms 近南極星區 Jinnanjixingōu clarification needed Polynesian peoples had no name for the constellation in particular though they had many names for Canopus The Maori name Ariki High born 12 and the Hawaiian Ke Alii o kona i ka lewa The Chief of the southern expanse 13 both attest to the star s prominence in the southern sky while the Maori Atutahi First light or Single light and the Tuamotu Te Tau rari and Marere te tavahi He who stands alone 14 refer to the star s solitary nature It was also called Kapae poto Short horizon because it rarely sets from the vantage point of New Zealand 15 and Kauanga Solitary when it was the last star visible before sunrise 16 Future edit nbsp The Southern Celestial Pole migrates through the constellation Carina Carina is in the southern sky quite near the south celestial pole making it never set circumpolar for most of the southern hemisphere Due to precession of Earth s axis by the year 4700 the south celestial pole will be in Carina Three bright stars in Carina will come within 1 degree of the southern celestial pole and take turns as the southern pole star Omega Carinae mag 3 29 in 5600 Upsilon Carinae mag 2 97 in 6700 and Iota Carinae mag 2 21 in 7900 About 13 860 CE the bright Canopus 0 7 will have a greater declination than 82 17 Namesakes editUSS Carina AK 74 was a United States Navy Crater class cargo ship named after the constellation 18 the Toyota Carina was named after it citation needed See also editCarina in Chinese astronomy List of brightest starsReferences edit Home Oxford English Dictionary www oed com Retrieved Jul 25 2022 permanent dead link a b Carina constellation boundary The Constellations International Astronomical Union Retrieved 15 February 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Ridpath amp Tirion 2001 pp 104 106 Delporte E 1930 Delimitation scientifique des constellations tables et cartes Cambridge University Press Bibcode 1930dsct book D Wagman M 2003 Lost Stars Lost Missing and Troublesome Stars from the Catalogues of Johannes Bayer Nicholas Louis de Lacaille John Flamsteed and Sundry Others McDonald amp Woodward Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 939923 78 6 a b c Levy 2005 p 101 Diamond Cross Constellation Guide Retrieved 11 April 2023 Levy 2005 p 100 a b c Wilkins amp Dunn 2006 p page needed Appletons Journal D Appleton and Company 1873 pp 818 a b c d Chartrand Mark R 1991 National Audubon Society Field Guide to the Night Sky New York USA Alfred A Knopf Inc p 470 ISBN 0 679 40852 5 Makemson 1941 p 201 Makemson 1941 p 198 Makemson 1941 p 229 Makemson 1941 p 217 Makemson 1941 p 218 Stellarium 0 16 0 setting time to that year Carina Naval History and Heritage Command US Navy Retrieved 8 August 2021 Secondary sources Levy David H 2005 Deep Sky Objects Prometheus Books ISBN 978 1 59102 361 6 Makemson Maud Worcester 1941 The Morning Star Rises an account of Polynesian astronomy Yale University Press Bibcode 1941msra book M Ridpath Ian Tirion Will 2007 2001 Stars and Planets Guide Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 08913 3 Wilkins Jamie Dunn Robert 2006 300 Astronomical Objects A Visual Reference to the Universe 1st ed Buffalo New York Firefly Books ISBN 978 1 55407 175 3 External links edit nbsp Media related to Carina constellation at Wikimedia Commons The Deep Photographic Guide to the Constellations Carina Starry Night Photography Carina Eta Carina Nebula by Thomas Willig Star Tales Carina The clickable Carina Huge gamma ray blast seen 12 2 billion light years from Earth Portals nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carina constellation amp oldid 1214206748, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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