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Hercules (constellation)

Hercules is a constellation named after Hercules, the Roman mythological hero adapted from the Greek hero Heracles. Hercules was one of the 48 constellations listed by the second-century astronomer Ptolemy, and it remains one of the 88 modern constellations today. It is the fifth-largest of the modern constellations and is the largest of the 50 which have no stars brighter than apparent magnitude +2.5.

Hercules
Constellation
AbbreviationHer
GenitiveHerculis[1]
Pronunciation/ˈhɜːrkjʊlz/,
genitive /ˈhɜːrkjʊlɪs/
SymbolismHeracles
Right ascension17h
Declination+30°
QuadrantNQ3
Area1225 sq. deg. (5th)
Main stars14, 22
Bayer/Flamsteed
stars
106
Stars with planets15
Stars brighter than 3.00m2
Stars within 10.00 pc (32.62 ly)9
Brightest starβ Her (Kornephoros) (2.78m)
Messier objects2
Meteor showersTau Herculids
Bordering
constellations
Draco
Boötes
Corona Borealis
Serpens Caput
Ophiuchus
Aquila
Sagitta
Vulpecula
Lyra[1]
Visible at latitudes between +90° and −50°.
Best visible at 21:00 (9 p.m.) during the month of July.

Characteristics edit

 
The constellation Hercules as it may appear to the naked eye.

Hercules is bordered by Draco to the north; Boötes, Corona Borealis, and Serpens Caput to the east; Ophiuchus to the south; Aquila to the southwest; and Sagitta, Vulpecula, and Lyra to the west. Covering 1225.1 square degrees and 2.970% of the night sky, it ranks fifth among the 88 constellations in size.[2] The three-letter abbreviation for the constellation, as adopted by the International Astronomical Union in 1922, is 'Her'.[3] The official constellation boundaries, as set by Eugène Delporte in 1930, are defined by a polygon of 32 segments (illustrated in infobox). In the equatorial coordinate system, epoch 2000, the right ascension coordinates of these borders lie between 16h 00m 26.64s and 18h 57m 49.50s, while the declination coordinates are between +3.67° and +51.32°.[4] In mid-northern latitudes, Hercules is best observed from mid-spring until early autumn, culminating at midnight on June 13.[1]

The solar apex is the direction of the Sun's motion with respect to the Local Standard of Rest. This is located within the constellation of Hercules, around coordinates right ascension 18h 00m and declination 30° 00′.[5] The north pole of the supergalactic coordinate system is located within this constellation at right ascension 18h 55m 01s and declination +15° 42′ 32″.[6]

Stars edit

Hercules has no first or second magnitude stars. However, it does have several stars above magnitude 4. Alpha Herculis, traditionally called Rasalgethi, is a triple star system, partly resolvable in small amateur telescopes, 359 light-years from Earth. Its common name means "the kneeler's head".[7] The primary is an irregular variable star; it is a bright giant with a minimum magnitude of 4 and a maximum magnitude of 3. It has a diameter of roughly 400 solar diameters.[8] The secondary, a spectroscopic binary that orbits the primary every 3600 years, is a blue-green hued star of magnitude 5.6. Beta Herculis, also called Kornephoros, is the brightest star in Hercules. It is a yellow giant of magnitude 2.8, 148 light-years from Earth; kornephoros means club-bearer.[9] Delta Herculis A is a double star divisible in small amateur telescopes. The primary is a blue-white star of magnitude 3.1, and is 78 light-years from Earth. The optical companion is of magnitude 8.2. Gamma Herculis is also a double star divisible in small amateur telescopes. The primary is a white giant of magnitude 3.8, 195 light-years from Earth. The optical companion, widely separated, is 10th magnitude. Zeta Herculis is a binary star that is becoming divisible in medium-aperture amateur telescopes, as the components widen to their peak in 2025. The system, 35 light-years from Earth, has a period of 34.5 years. The primary is a yellow-tinged star of magnitude 2.9 and the secondary is an orange star of magnitude 5.7.[10]

Hercules hosts further quite bright double stars and binary stars. Kappa Herculis is a double star divisible in small amateur telescopes. The primary is a yellow giant of magnitude 5.0, 388 light-years from Earth; the secondary is an orange giant of magnitude 6.3, 470 light-years from Earth. Rho Herculis is a binary star 402 light-years from Earth, divisible in small amateur telescopes. Both components are blue-green giant stars; the primary is magnitude 4.5 and the secondary is magnitude 5.5. 95 Herculis is a binary star divisible in small telescopes, 470 light-years from Earth. The primary is a silvery giant of magnitude 4.9, and the secondary is an old, reddish giant star of magnitude 5.2. The star HD164669 near the primary may be an optical double. 100 Herculis is a double star easily divisible in small amateur telescopes. Both components are magnitude 5.8 blue-white stars; they are 165 and 230 light-years from Earth.[10]

There are several dimmer variable stars in Hercules. 30 Herculis, also called g Herculis, is a semiregular red giant with a period of 3 months. 361 light-years from Earth, it has a minimum magnitude of 6.3 and a maximum magnitude of 4.3. 68 Herculis, also called u Herculis, is a Beta Lyrae-type eclipsing binary star. 865 light-years from Earth, it has a period of 2 days; its minimum magnitude is 5.4 and its maximum magnitude is 4.7.[10]

Mu Herculis is 27.4 light-years from Earth. The solar apex, i.e., the point on the sky which marks the direction that the Sun is moving in its orbit around the center of the Milky Way, narrowly figures in Hercules,[11] between his more outstretched foot (Omicron Herculis) and Vega (in neighboring Lyra).

Planetary systems edit

Fifteen stars in Hercules are known to be orbited by extrasolar planets.

Deep-sky objects edit

Hercules contains two bright globular clusters: M13, the brightest globular cluster in the northern hemisphere[dubious ], and M92. It also contains the nearly spherical planetary nebula Abell 39. M13 lies between the stars η Her and ζ Her; it is dim, but may be detected by the unaided eye on a very clear night.

M13, visible to both the naked eye and binoculars, is a globular cluster of the 6th magnitude that contains more than 300,000 stars and is 25,200 light-years from Earth. It is also very large, with an apparent diameter of over 0.25 degrees, half the size of the full moon; its physical diameter is more than 100 light-years. Individual stars in M13 are resolvable in a small amateur telescope.[10]

M92 is a globular cluster of magnitude 6.4, 26,000 light-years from earth. It is a Shapley class IV cluster, indicating that it is quite concentrated at the center; it has a very clear nucleus.[24] M92 is visible as a fuzzy star in binoculars, like M13; it is denser and smaller than the more celebrated cluster. The oldest globular cluster known at 14 billion years, its stars are resolvable in a medium-aperture amateur telescope.[10]

NGC 6229 is a dimmer globular cluster, with a magnitude of 9.4, it is the third-brightest globular in the constellation. 100,000 light-years from Earth, it is a Shapley class IV cluster, meaning that it is fairly rich in the center and quite concentrated at the nucleus.[25]

NGC 6210 is a planetary nebula of the 9th magnitude, 4000 light-years from Earth visible as a blue-green elliptical disk in amateur telescopes larger than 75 mm in aperture.[10]

AT2018cow, a large astronomical explosion detected on 16 June 2018.[26][27] As of 22 June 2018, this astronomical event has generated a very large amount of interest among astronomers throughout the world[28] and may be, as of 22 June 2018, considered a supernova tentatively named Supernova 2018cow.[29][30]

The Hercules Cluster (Abell 2151) is a cluster of galaxies in Hercules.

The brightest radio source in the constellation is Hercules A, an elliptical galaxy located 2.1 billion light years away with a supermassive black hole with a mass of 2.5-billion-solar-mass that has radio jets that extend for one-and-a-half million light-years.[31] Another bright radio source in Hercules is the quasar 3C 345 which has a jet that appears to move faster than the speed of light.[32]

The Hercules–Corona Borealis Great Wall, the largest structure in the universe, is in Hercules.

Visualizations edit

Traditional edit

 
Traditional view of the Hercules constellation highlighting the quadrangle which forms the Keystone asterism.

The traditional visualization imagines α Herculis as Hercules's head; its name, Rasalgethi, literally means "head of the kneeling one". Hercules's left hand then points toward Lyra from his shoulder (δ Herculis), and β Herculis, or Kornephoros ("club-bearer") forms his other shoulder. His narrow waist is formed by ε Herculis and ζ Herculis. Finally, his left leg (with θ Herculis as the knee and ι Herculis the foot) is stepping on Draco's head, the dragon/snake who Hercules has vanquished and perpetually gloats over for eternities.[33]

Keystone asterism edit

 
An alternative way to connect the stars of the constellation Hercules, suggested by H.A. Rey. Here, Hercules is shown with his head at the top.
 
Hercules as depicted in Urania's Mirror, a set of constellation cards published in London c.1825. The figure appears upside down in the sky relative to neighbouring constellations. The former constellation of Cerberus is held by Hercules before its stars were part of the constellation.

A common form found in modern star charts uses the quadrangle formed by π Her, η Her, ζ Her and ε Her (known as the "Keystone" asterism) as Hercules's torso.

H.A. Rey edit

H. A. Rey has suggested an alternative visualization in which the "Keystone" becomes Hercules's head. This quadrangle lies between two very bright stars: Vega in the constellation Lyra and α CrB (Alphecca) in the constellation Corona Borealis. The hero's right leg contains two bright stars of the third magnitude: α Her (Rasalgethi) and δ Her (Sarin). The latter is the right knee. The hero's left leg contains dimmer stars of the fourth magnitude which do not have Bayer designations but which do have Flamsteed numbers. The star β Her belongs to the hero's outstretched right hand, and is also called Kornephoros.

History edit

According to Gavin White, the Greek constellation of Hercules is a distorted version of the Babylonian constellation known as the "Standing Gods" (MUL.DINGIR.GUB.BA.MESH). White argues that this figure was, like the similarly named "Sitting Gods", depicted as a man with a serpent's body instead of legs (the serpent element now being represented on the Greek star map by the figure of Draco that Hercules crushes beneath his feet). He further argues that the original name of Hercules – the 'Kneeler' (see below) – is a conflation of the two Babylonian constellations of the Sitting and Standing Gods.[34]

The constellation is also sometimes associated with Gilgamesh, a Sumerian mythological hero.[10] Phoenician tradition is said to have associated this constellation with their sun god, who slew a dragon (Draco).[35]

The earliest Greek references to the constellation do not refer to it as Hercules. Aratus describes it as follows:

Right there in its [Draco's] orbit wheels a Phantom form, like to a man that strives at a task. That sign no man knows how to read clearly, nor what task he is bent, but men simply call him On His Knees. [Ἐγγόνασιν "the Kneeler"].[36]

Now that Phantom, that toils on his knees, seems to sit on bended knee, and from both his shoulders his hands are upraised and stretch, one this way, one that, a fathom's length. Over the middle of the head of the crooked Dragon, he has the tip of his right foot. Here too that Crown [Corona], which glorious Dionysus set to be memorial of the dead Ariadne, wheels beneath the back of the toil-spent Phantom. To the Phantom's back the Crown is near, but by his head mark near at hand the head of Ophiuchus [...] Yonder, too, is the tiny Tortoise, which, while still beside his cradle, Hermes pierced for strings and bade it be called the Lyre [Lyra]: and he brought it into heaven and set it in front of the unknown Phantom. That Croucher on his Knees comes near the Lyre with his left knee, but the top of the Bird's head wheels on the other side, and between the Bird's head and the Phantom's knee is enstarred the Lyre.[37]

The constellation is connected with Hercules in De astronomia (probably 1st century BCE/CE, and attributed to Hyginus), which describes several different myths about the constellation:

  • Eratosthenes (3rd century BCE) is said to have described it as Hercules, placed above Draco (representing the dragon of the Hesperides) and preparing to fight it, holding his lion's skin in his left hand, and a club in his right (this can be found in the Epitome Catasterismorum[38]).
  • Panyassis' Heracleia (5th century BCE) reportedly said Jupiter was impressed by this fight, and made it a constellation, with Hercules kneeling on his right knee, and trying to crush Draco's head with his left foot, while striking with his right hand and holding the lion skin in his left.
  • Araethus (3rd/4th century BCE) is said to have described the constellation as depicting Ceteus son of Lycaon, imploring the gods to restore his daughter Megisto who had been transformed into a bear.
  • Hegesianax (2nd/3rd century BCE), who it says describes it as Theseus lifting the stone at Troezen.
  • Anacreon of Alexandria, who it claims also supports the idea that it depicts Theseus, saying that the constellation Lyra (said to be Theseus' lyre in other sources) is near Theseus.
  • Thamyris blinded by the Muses, kneeling in supplication.
  • Orpheus killed by the women of Thracia for seeing the sacred rituals of Liber (Dionysus).
  • Aeschylus' lost play Prometheus Unbound (5th century BCE), which recounted that when Hercules drives the cattle of Geryon through Liguria (northern Italy), the Ligurians will join forces and attack him, attempting to steal the cattle. Hercules fights until his weapons break, before falling to his knees, wounded. Jupiter, taking pity on his son, provides many stones on the ground, which Hercules uses to fight off the Ligurians. In commemoration of this, Jupiter makes a constellation depicting Hercules in his fighting form. (A quote from this section of the play is preserved in Dionysius of Halicarnassus' Roman Antiquities: "And thou shalt come to Liguria's dauntless host, Where no fault shalt thou find, bold though thou art, With the fray: 'tis fated thy missiles all shall fail."[39])
  • Ixion with his arms bound for trying to attack Juno.
  • Prometheus bound on Mount Caucasus.[40]

The Scholia to Aratus mention three more mythical figures in connection with this constellation: Sisyphus or Tantalus, who suffered in Tartarus for having offended the gods, or Salmoneus, who was struck down by Zeus for his hubris.[38] Another classical author associated the constellation with Atlas.[35]

Equivalents edit

In Chinese astronomy, the stars that correspond to Hercules are located in two areas: the Purple Forbidden enclosure (紫微垣, Zǐ Wēi Yuán) and the Heavenly Market enclosure (天市垣, Tiān Shì Yuán).

Arab translators of Ptolemy named it in Arabic: الرقيس, romanized: al-raqis, lit.'the player'[citation needed] (not to be confused with Arabic: الراقص, romanized: al-rāqiṣ, lit.'the trotting (camel), the dancing one'), the name for the star Mu Draconis.[41][42] Hence its Swahili name Rakisi.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • The Deep Photographic Guide to the Constellations: Hercules
  • The clickable Hercules
  • Star Tales – Hercules
  • Warburg Institute Iconographic Database (ca 160 medieval and early modern images of Hercules)

hercules, constellation, hercules, constellation, named, after, hercules, roman, mythological, hero, adapted, from, greek, hero, heracles, hercules, constellations, listed, second, century, astronomer, ptolemy, remains, modern, constellations, today, fifth, la. Hercules is a constellation named after Hercules the Roman mythological hero adapted from the Greek hero Heracles Hercules was one of the 48 constellations listed by the second century astronomer Ptolemy and it remains one of the 88 modern constellations today It is the fifth largest of the modern constellations and is the largest of the 50 which have no stars brighter than apparent magnitude 2 5 HerculesConstellationList of stars in HerculesAbbreviationHerGenitiveHerculis 1 Pronunciation ˈ h ɜːr k j ʊ l iː z genitive ˈ h ɜːr k j ʊ l ɪ s SymbolismHeraclesRight ascension17hDeclination 30 QuadrantNQ3Area1225 sq deg 5th Main stars14 22Bayer Flamsteedstars106Stars with planets15Stars brighter than 3 00m2Stars within 10 00 pc 32 62 ly 9Brightest starb Her Kornephoros 2 78m Messier objects2Meteor showersTau HerculidsBorderingconstellationsDracoBootesCorona BorealisSerpens CaputOphiuchusAquilaSagittaVulpeculaLyra 1 Visible at latitudes between 90 and 50 Best visible at 21 00 9 p m during the month of July Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Stars 3 Planetary systems 4 Deep sky objects 5 Visualizations 5 1 Traditional 5 2 Keystone asterism 5 3 H A Rey 6 History 7 Equivalents 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksCharacteristics edit nbsp The constellation Hercules as it may appear to the naked eye Hercules is bordered by Draco to the north Bootes Corona Borealis and Serpens Caput to the east Ophiuchus to the south Aquila to the southwest and Sagitta Vulpecula and Lyra to the west Covering 1225 1 square degrees and 2 970 of the night sky it ranks fifth among the 88 constellations in size 2 The three letter abbreviation for the constellation as adopted by the International Astronomical Union in 1922 is Her 3 The official constellation boundaries as set by Eugene Delporte in 1930 are defined by a polygon of 32 segments illustrated in infobox In the equatorial coordinate system epoch 2000 the right ascension coordinates of these borders lie between 16h 00m 26 64s and 18h 57m 49 50s while the declination coordinates are between 3 67 and 51 32 4 In mid northern latitudes Hercules is best observed from mid spring until early autumn culminating at midnight on June 13 1 The solar apex is the direction of the Sun s motion with respect to the Local Standard of Rest This is located within the constellation of Hercules around coordinates right ascension 18h 00m and declination 30 00 5 The north pole of the supergalactic coordinate system is located within this constellation at right ascension 18h 55m 01s and declination 15 42 32 6 Stars editSee also List of stars in Hercules Hercules has no first or second magnitude stars However it does have several stars above magnitude 4 Alpha Herculis traditionally called Rasalgethi is a triple star system partly resolvable in small amateur telescopes 359 light years from Earth Its common name means the kneeler s head 7 The primary is an irregular variable star it is a bright giant with a minimum magnitude of 4 and a maximum magnitude of 3 It has a diameter of roughly 400 solar diameters 8 The secondary a spectroscopic binary that orbits the primary every 3600 years is a blue green hued star of magnitude 5 6 Beta Herculis also called Kornephoros is the brightest star in Hercules It is a yellow giant of magnitude 2 8 148 light years from Earth kornephoros means club bearer 9 Delta Herculis A is a double star divisible in small amateur telescopes The primary is a blue white star of magnitude 3 1 and is 78 light years from Earth The optical companion is of magnitude 8 2 Gamma Herculis is also a double star divisible in small amateur telescopes The primary is a white giant of magnitude 3 8 195 light years from Earth The optical companion widely separated is 10th magnitude Zeta Herculis is a binary star that is becoming divisible in medium aperture amateur telescopes as the components widen to their peak in 2025 The system 35 light years from Earth has a period of 34 5 years The primary is a yellow tinged star of magnitude 2 9 and the secondary is an orange star of magnitude 5 7 10 Hercules hosts further quite bright double stars and binary stars Kappa Herculis is a double star divisible in small amateur telescopes The primary is a yellow giant of magnitude 5 0 388 light years from Earth the secondary is an orange giant of magnitude 6 3 470 light years from Earth Rho Herculis is a binary star 402 light years from Earth divisible in small amateur telescopes Both components are blue green giant stars the primary is magnitude 4 5 and the secondary is magnitude 5 5 95 Herculis is a binary star divisible in small telescopes 470 light years from Earth The primary is a silvery giant of magnitude 4 9 and the secondary is an old reddish giant star of magnitude 5 2 The star HD164669 near the primary may be an optical double 100 Herculis is a double star easily divisible in small amateur telescopes Both components are magnitude 5 8 blue white stars they are 165 and 230 light years from Earth 10 There are several dimmer variable stars in Hercules 30 Herculis also called g Herculis is a semiregular red giant with a period of 3 months 361 light years from Earth it has a minimum magnitude of 6 3 and a maximum magnitude of 4 3 68 Herculis also called u Herculis is a Beta Lyrae type eclipsing binary star 865 light years from Earth it has a period of 2 days its minimum magnitude is 5 4 and its maximum magnitude is 4 7 10 Mu Herculis is 27 4 light years from Earth The solar apex i e the point on the sky which marks the direction that the Sun is moving in its orbit around the center of the Milky Way narrowly figures in Hercules 11 between his more outstretched foot Omicron Herculis and Vega in neighboring Lyra Planetary systems editFifteen stars in Hercules are known to be orbited by extrasolar planets 14 Herculis has two planets The planet 14 Herculis b had the longest period 4 9 years 12 and widest orbit 2 8 AU at the time of discovery The planet 14 Herculis c orbits much further out with very low eccentricity It was discovered in 2005 but was only confirmed in 2021 13 14 HD 149026 has a transiting hot Jupiter planet 15 HD 154345 has the planet HD 154345 b a long period 9 095 years and wide orbit 4 18 AU HD 164922 has the first long period Saturn like planet discovered The mass is 0 36 MJ and semimajor axis of 2 11 AU 16 More planets have been discovered since 17 14 HD 147506 has the most massive transiting planet HAT P 2b at the time of discovery 18 The mass is 8 65 MJ HD 155358 has two planets around the lowest metallicity planet harboring star 21 Sun Both planets orbit in mild eccentricities 19 GSC 03089 00929 has a short transiting planet TrES 3b The period was 31 hours Gliese 649 has a saturnian planet around the red dwarf star 20 HD 156668 has an Earth mass planet with a minimum mass of four Earth masses 21 HD 164595 is a G type star with one known planet HD 164595 b 22 23 TOI 561 has four or possibly five planets The innermost of which TOI 561 b is notable because it is an ultra short period planet Deep sky objects editHercules contains two bright globular clusters M13 the brightest globular cluster in the northern hemisphere dubious discuss and M92 It also contains the nearly spherical planetary nebula Abell 39 M13 lies between the stars h Her and z Her it is dim but may be detected by the unaided eye on a very clear night M13 visible to both the naked eye and binoculars is a globular cluster of the 6th magnitude that contains more than 300 000 stars and is 25 200 light years from Earth It is also very large with an apparent diameter of over 0 25 degrees half the size of the full moon its physical diameter is more than 100 light years Individual stars in M13 are resolvable in a small amateur telescope 10 M92 is a globular cluster of magnitude 6 4 26 000 light years from earth It is a Shapley class IV cluster indicating that it is quite concentrated at the center it has a very clear nucleus 24 M92 is visible as a fuzzy star in binoculars like M13 it is denser and smaller than the more celebrated cluster The oldest globular cluster known at 14 billion years its stars are resolvable in a medium aperture amateur telescope 10 NGC 6229 is a dimmer globular cluster with a magnitude of 9 4 it is the third brightest globular in the constellation 100 000 light years from Earth it is a Shapley class IV cluster meaning that it is fairly rich in the center and quite concentrated at the nucleus 25 NGC 6210 is a planetary nebula of the 9th magnitude 4000 light years from Earth visible as a blue green elliptical disk in amateur telescopes larger than 75 mm in aperture 10 AT2018cow a large astronomical explosion detected on 16 June 2018 26 27 As of 22 June 2018 this astronomical event has generated a very large amount of interest among astronomers throughout the world 28 and may be as of 22 June 2018 considered a supernova tentatively named Supernova 2018cow 29 30 The Hercules Cluster Abell 2151 is a cluster of galaxies in Hercules The brightest radio source in the constellation is Hercules A an elliptical galaxy located 2 1 billion light years away with a supermassive black hole with a mass of 2 5 billion solar mass that has radio jets that extend for one and a half million light years 31 Another bright radio source in Hercules is the quasar 3C 345 which has a jet that appears to move faster than the speed of light 32 The Hercules Corona Borealis Great Wall the largest structure in the universe is in Hercules Visualizations editTraditional edit nbsp Traditional view of the Hercules constellation highlighting the quadrangle which forms the Keystone asterism The traditional visualization imagines a Herculis as Hercules s head its name Rasalgethi literally means head of the kneeling one Hercules s left hand then points toward Lyra from his shoulder d Herculis and b Herculis or Kornephoros club bearer forms his other shoulder His narrow waist is formed by e Herculis and z Herculis Finally his left leg with 8 Herculis as the knee and i Herculis the foot is stepping on Draco s head the dragon snake who Hercules has vanquished and perpetually gloats over for eternities 33 Keystone asterism edit nbsp An alternative way to connect the stars of the constellation Hercules suggested by H A Rey Here Hercules is shown with his head at the top nbsp Hercules as depicted in Urania s Mirror a set of constellation cards published in London c 1825 The figure appears upside down in the sky relative to neighbouring constellations The former constellation of Cerberus is held by Hercules before its stars were part of the constellation A common form found in modern star charts uses the quadrangle formed by p Her h Her z Her and e Her known as the Keystone asterism as Hercules s torso H A Rey edit H A Rey has suggested an alternative visualization in which the Keystone becomes Hercules s head This quadrangle lies between two very bright stars Vega in the constellation Lyra and a CrB Alphecca in the constellation Corona Borealis The hero s right leg contains two bright stars of the third magnitude a Her Rasalgethi and d Her Sarin The latter is the right knee The hero s left leg contains dimmer stars of the fourth magnitude which do not have Bayer designations but which do have Flamsteed numbers The star b Her belongs to the hero s outstretched right hand and is also called Kornephoros History editAccording to Gavin White the Greek constellation of Hercules is a distorted version of the Babylonian constellation known as the Standing Gods MUL DINGIR GUB BA MESH White argues that this figure was like the similarly named Sitting Gods depicted as a man with a serpent s body instead of legs the serpent element now being represented on the Greek star map by the figure of Draco that Hercules crushes beneath his feet He further argues that the original name of Hercules the Kneeler see below is a conflation of the two Babylonian constellations of the Sitting and Standing Gods 34 The constellation is also sometimes associated with Gilgamesh a Sumerian mythological hero 10 Phoenician tradition is said to have associated this constellation with their sun god who slew a dragon Draco 35 The earliest Greek references to the constellation do not refer to it as Hercules Aratus describes it as follows Right there in its Draco s orbit wheels a Phantom form like to a man that strives at a task That sign no man knows how to read clearly nor what task he is bent but men simply call him On His Knees Ἐggonasin the Kneeler 36 Now that Phantom that toils on his knees seems to sit on bended knee and from both his shoulders his hands are upraised and stretch one this way one that a fathom s length Over the middle of the head of the crooked Dragon he has the tip of his right foot Here too that Crown Corona which glorious Dionysus set to be memorial of the dead Ariadne wheels beneath the back of the toil spent Phantom To the Phantom s back the Crown is near but by his head mark near at hand the head of Ophiuchus Yonder too is the tiny Tortoise which while still beside his cradle Hermes pierced for strings and bade it be called the Lyre Lyra and he brought it into heaven and set it in front of the unknown Phantom That Croucher on his Knees comes near the Lyre with his left knee but the top of the Bird s head wheels on the other side and between the Bird s head and the Phantom s knee is enstarred the Lyre 37 The constellation is connected with Hercules in De astronomia probably 1st century BCE CE and attributed to Hyginus which describes several different myths about the constellation Eratosthenes 3rd century BCE is said to have described it as Hercules placed above Draco representing the dragon of the Hesperides and preparing to fight it holding his lion s skin in his left hand and a club in his right this can be found in the Epitome Catasterismorum 38 Panyassis Heracleia 5th century BCE reportedly said Jupiter was impressed by this fight and made it a constellation with Hercules kneeling on his right knee and trying to crush Draco s head with his left foot while striking with his right hand and holding the lion skin in his left Araethus 3rd 4th century BCE is said to have described the constellation as depicting Ceteus son of Lycaon imploring the gods to restore his daughter Megisto who had been transformed into a bear Hegesianax 2nd 3rd century BCE who it says describes it as Theseus lifting the stone at Troezen Anacreon of Alexandria who it claims also supports the idea that it depicts Theseus saying that the constellation Lyra said to be Theseus lyre in other sources is near Theseus Thamyris blinded by the Muses kneeling in supplication Orpheus killed by the women of Thracia for seeing the sacred rituals of Liber Dionysus Aeschylus lost play Prometheus Unbound 5th century BCE which recounted that when Hercules drives the cattle of Geryon through Liguria northern Italy the Ligurians will join forces and attack him attempting to steal the cattle Hercules fights until his weapons break before falling to his knees wounded Jupiter taking pity on his son provides many stones on the ground which Hercules uses to fight off the Ligurians In commemoration of this Jupiter makes a constellation depicting Hercules in his fighting form A quote from this section of the play is preserved in Dionysius of Halicarnassus Roman Antiquities And thou shalt come to Liguria s dauntless host Where no fault shalt thou find bold though thou art With the fray tis fated thy missiles all shall fail 39 Ixion with his arms bound for trying to attack Juno Prometheus bound on Mount Caucasus 40 The Scholia to Aratus mention three more mythical figures in connection with this constellation Sisyphus or Tantalus who suffered in Tartarus for having offended the gods or Salmoneus who was struck down by Zeus for his hubris 38 Another classical author associated the constellation with Atlas 35 Equivalents editIn Chinese astronomy the stars that correspond to Hercules are located in two areas the Purple Forbidden enclosure 紫微垣 Zǐ Wei Yuan and the Heavenly Market enclosure 天市垣 Tian Shi Yuan Arab translators of Ptolemy named it in Arabic الرقيس romanized al raqis lit the player citation needed not to be confused with Arabic الراقص romanized al raqiṣ lit the trotting camel the dancing one the name for the star Mu Draconis 41 42 Hence its Swahili name Rakisi citation needed See also editHercules Chinese astronomy References edit a b c Thompson Robert Bruce Fritchman Barbara 2007 Illustrated Guide to Astronomical Wonders From Novice to Master Observer Sebastopol California O Reilly Media Inc pp 256 63 ISBN 978 0 596 52685 6 Ridpath Ian Constellations Andromeda Indus Star Tales Retrieved 2016 09 12 Russell Henry Norris 1922 The New International Symbols for the Constellations Popular Astronomy Vol 30 p 469 Bibcode 1922PA 30 469R Hercules Constellation Boundary The Constellations International Astronomical Union Retrieved 2016 09 12 Karttunen Hannu Kroger Pekka Oja Heikki Poutanen Markku Donner Karl J eds 2013 The Milky Way Fundamental Astronomy 3rd ed Springer Science amp Business Media p 392 ISBN 978 3662032152 Darling David supergalactic plane Encyclopedia of Science Retrieved 2016 09 12 Kaler Jim 4 May 2007 Rasalgethi STARS University of Illinois Retrieved 6 July 2019 Moravveji Ehsan Guinan Edward F Khosroshahi Habib Wasatonic Rick December 2013 The Age and Mass of the a Herculis Triple star System from a MESA Grid of Rotating Stars with 1 3 lt M M lt 8 0 The Astronomical Journal 146 6 13 arXiv 1308 1632 Bibcode 2013AJ 146 148M doi 10 1088 0004 6256 146 6 148 S2CID 117872505 148 Kaler Jim Kornephoros STARS University of Illinois Retrieved 6 July 2019 a b c d e f g Ridpath Ian Tirion Wil 2001 Stars and Planets Guide Princeton University Press pp 154 156 ISBN 0 691 08913 2 Struve Otto Lynds Beverly Pillans Helen 1959 Elementary Astronomy New York Oxford University Press p 150 Wittenmyer Robert A et al January 2007 Long Period Objects in the Extrasolar Planetary Systems 47 Ursae Majoris and 14 Herculis The Astrophysical Journal 654 1 625 632 arXiv astro ph 0609117 Bibcode 2007ApJ 654 625W doi 10 1086 509110 S2CID 14707902 Gozdziewski K Konacki M Maciejewski A J 2006 Orbital Configurations and Dynamical Stability of Multiplanet Systems around Sun like Stars HD 202206 14 Herculis HD 37124 and HD 108874 PDF The Astrophysical Journal 645 1 688 703 arXiv astro ph 0511463 Bibcode 2006ApJ 645 688G doi 10 1086 504030 S2CID 15012577 a b Rosenthal Lee J Fulton Benjamin J Hirsch Lea A Isaacson Howard T Howard Andrew W Dedrick Cayla M Sherstyuk Ilya A Blunt Sarah C Petigura Erik A Knutson Heather A Behmard Aida Chontos Ashley Crepp Justin R Crossfield Ian J M Dalba Paul A Fischer Debra A Henry Gregory W Kane Stephen R Kosiarek Molly Marcy Geoffrey W Rubenzahl Ryan A Weiss Lauren M Wright Jason T 2021 The California Legacy Survey I A Catalog of 178 Planets from Precision Radial Velocity Monitoring of 719 Nearby Stars over Three Decades The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series 255 1 8 arXiv 2105 11583 Bibcode 2021ApJS 255 8R doi 10 3847 1538 4365 abe23c S2CID 235186973 Sato Bun ei et al 2005 The N2K Consortium II A Transiting Hot Saturn around HD 149026 with a Large Dense Core The Astrophysical Journal 633 1 465 473 arXiv astro ph 0507009 Bibcode 2005ApJ 633 465S doi 10 1086 449306 S2CID 629648 Butler R P et al 2006 Catalog of Nearby Exoplanets The Astrophysical Journal 646 1 505 522 arXiv astro ph 0607493 Bibcode 2006ApJ 646 505B doi 10 1086 504701 S2CID 119067572 Benatti S Damasso M Desidera S Marzari F Biazzo K Claudi R Di Mauro M P Lanza A F Pinamonti M Barbato D Malavolta L Poretti E Sozzetti A Affer L Bignamini A Bonomo A S Borsa F Brogi M Bruno G Carleo I Cosentino R Covino E Frustagli G Giacobbe P Gonzalez M Gratton R Harutyunyan A Knapic C Leto G et al 2020 The GAPS programme at TNG Astronomy amp Astrophysics 639 A50 arXiv 2005 03368 doi 10 1051 0004 6361 202037939 S2CID 218538033 Bakos G A et al 2007 HD 147506b A Supermassive Planet in an Eccentric Orbit Transiting a Bright Star The Astrophysical Journal 670 1 826 832 arXiv 0705 0126 Bibcode 2007ApJ 670 826B doi 10 1086 521866 S2CID 18286425 Cochran W et al 2007 A Planetary System Around HD 155358 The Lowest Metallicity Planet Host Star The Astrophysical Journal 665 2 1407 1412 arXiv 0705 3228 Bibcode 2007ApJ 665 1407C doi 10 1086 519555 S2CID 14591389 Johnson John Asher et al 2010 The California Planet Survey II A Saturn Mass Planet Orbiting the M Dwarf Gl649 The Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 122 888 149 155 arXiv 0912 2730 Bibcode 2010PASP 122 149J doi 10 1086 651007 S2CID 119254409 Howard Andrew W et al January 2011 The NASA UC Eta Earth Program II A Planet Orbiting HD 156668 with a Minimum Mass of Four Earth Masses The Astrophysical Journal 726 2 73 arXiv 1003 3444 Bibcode 2011ApJ 726 73H doi 10 1088 0004 637X 726 2 73 S2CID 15559379 HD 164595 b Confirmed Planet Overview Page NASA Retrieved 31 August 2016 Courcol Bastien Bouchy Francois Pepe Francesco Santerne Alexandre Delfosse Xavier Arnold Luc Astudillo Defru Nicola Boisse Isabelle Bonfils Xavier 2015 09 01 The SOPHIE search for northern extrasolar planets Astronomy amp Astrophysics 581 A38 arXiv 1506 07144 Bibcode 2015A amp A 581A 38C doi 10 1051 0004 6361 201526329 ISSN 0004 6361 S2CID 119181352 Levy David H 2005 Deep Sky Objects Prometheus Books p 150 ISBN 1 59102 361 0 Levy David H 2005 Deep Sky Objects Prometheus Books p 154 ISBN 1 59102 361 0 Smartt S J et al 17 June 2018 ATLAS18qqn AT2018cow a bright transient spatially coincident with CGCG 137 068 60 Mpc The Astronomer s Telegram Retrieved 22 June 2018 Crane Leah 21 June 2018 We ve just seen a huge space explosion and don t know what it is New Scientist Retrieved 22 June 2018 Staff 22 June 2018 The Astronomer s Telegram Main Page 22 June 2018 The Astronomer s Telegram Archived from the original on 22 June 2018 Retrieved 22 June 2018 Bishop David 22 June 2018 Latest SuperNovae RochesterAstronomy org Retrieved 22 June 2018 Bishop David 22 June 2018 Supernovae 2018cow in CGCG 137 068 RochesterAstronomy org Retrieved 22 June 2018 A Multi Wavelength View of Radio Galaxy Hercules A hubblesite org 29 November 2012 Retrieved 30 June 2023 Zensus J A Cohen M H Unwin S C April 1995 The Parsec scale jet in quasar 3C 345 The Astrophysical Journal 443 35 doi 10 1086 175501 Chartrand III Mark R 1983 Skyguide A Field Guide for Amateur Astronomers Golden Press p 150 ISBN 0 307 13667 1 Babylonian Star lore by Gavin White Solaria Pub 0 2008 pp 199ff a b Hercules Star Myths of the Greeks and Romans A Sourcebook Translated by Condos Theony Grand Rapids Phanes Press 1997 p 117 ISBN 9781890482930 Ἐggonasin ἐn gonasin Arat 66 669 Gal 9 936 etc 1 Henry George Liddell and Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon Oxford Clarendon Press 1940 Aratus Phaenomena trans Mair A W amp G R Loeb Classical Library Volume 129 London William Heinemann 1921 a b Hercules originally known as Engonasin the Kneeler Constellation Myths Translated by Hard Robin Oxford University Press 2015 ISBN 9780191026539 Dionysius of Halicarnassus Roman Antiquities 1 41 3 Topos Text Retrieved 2024 05 05 Grant Mary Hyginus Astronomica 2 6 The Kneeler Theoi Project Archived from the original on 2017 12 24 Retrieved 2017 12 24 Kunitzsch P Smart T 2006 A Dictionary of Modern star Names A Short Guide to 254 Star Names and Their Derivations 2nd rev ed Cambridge MA Sky Pub p 35 ISBN 978 1 931559 44 7 Allen R H 1963 Star Names Their Lore and Meaning rep ed New York NY Dover Publications Inc p 211 ISBN 978 0 486 21079 7 Further reading editH A Rey The Stars A New Way To See Them Enlarged World Wide Edition Houghton Mifflin Boston 1997 ISBN 0 395 24830 2 Ian Ridpath and Wil Tirion 2007 Stars and Planets Guide Collins London ISBN 978 0 00 725120 9 Princeton University Press Princeton ISBN 978 0 691 13556 4 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hercules constellation category The Deep Photographic Guide to the Constellations Hercules The clickable Hercules Star Tales Hercules Warburg Institute Iconographic Database ca 160 medieval and early modern images of Hercules Portals nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hercules constellation amp oldid 1222882877, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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