Title: The Constellation Orion
1TheConstellation Orion
RyukyuAstronomy Club28 March 2009
2Discussion Topics
- Locating Orion
- Mythology of Orion
- Brightest Stars in Orion
- Orion Nebula
- Trapezoid Star Cluster
- Horsehead Nebula
- Double stars in Orion
3Locating Orion
Orion is the key to locating the
constellations of the Winter Sky
4Locating Orion
5Mythology of Orion
- In Greek mythology, Orion was a great hunter who
eventually offended the gods, especially Apollo.
Apollo tricked Artemis, the Goddess of the hunt,
into shooting Orion on a bet. When she discovered
that she had shot Orion, she quickly lifted him
to the heavens and made him immortal, where he
now hunts eternally with his two dogs, Canis
Major and Canis Minor. In front of him is his
prey Taurus the Bull.
6Brightest Stars of OrionAnd Deep Sky Objects
Meisaa
Betelgeuse
Bellatrix
Mintaka
Alnilam
Alnitak
Horsehead Nebula
Trapezium
M42 Orion Nebula
Rigel
Saiph
7Brightest Stars of Orion
- Betelgeuse "Alpha Orionis" is a massive red
supergiant star nearing the end of its life. It
is the second brightest star in the Orion
constellation and the twelfth brightest star in
the night sky. - Rigel "Beta Orionis" is a blue supergiant that
is the seventh brightest star in the night sky. - Bellatrix "Gamma Orionis is the twenty-second
brightest star in the night sky. Bellatrix is
considered a blue giant, though it is too small
to explode in a supernova. Its luminosity is
derived from its high temperature rather than its
radius. Bellatrix serves as Orion's "left
shoulder. - Mintaka "Delta Orionis is the faintest of the
three stars in Orions belt. It is a multiple
star system composed of a large blue giant and a
more massive white star. Mintaka is the
westernmost of the three stars that constitute
Orion's Belt. - Alnilam "Epsilon Orionis," is a blue supergiant,
despite being nearly twice as far from the Sun as
Mintake and Alnitak, the other two belt stars. - Alnitak "Zeta Orionis" is the easternmost star
in Orion's Belt. It is a triple star 800 light
years distant, with the primary star being a hot
blue supergiant. -
- Saiph "Kappa Orionis serves as Orion's right
foot. It is of a similar distance and size to
Rigel, but appears much fainter, as its hot
surface temperature (46,000F or 26,000C) causes
it to emit most of its light in the ultraviolet
region of the spectrum.
8M42 TheOrion Nebula
- - Interstellar cloud of hydrogen,
- dust, and plasma.
- 1300 light years away
- 24 light years across
- Visible to naked eye
9Trapezium Star Cluster
- Over 1000 young stars
- Estimated 1M years old
- Most stars clouded from
- view by dust
- Only 4-5 stars visible
- with small scope
10The Horsehead Nebula
11Double Stars in Orion
Star Magnitudes Separation Notes
Rigel (beta) 0.1, 6.8 9.5 Difficult because of glare from primary.
Alnitak (zeta) 1.9, 4.0 2.3 Test for 75mm telescope
Mintaka (delta) 2.2, 6.3 53 Wide separation
Eta 3.8, 4.8 1.5 Test for 100mm telescope
Sigma 3.7, 10, 7.5, 6, 8 11, 13, 42, 30 Quintuple star all components visible to small telescope
Theta_1 6.8, 7.0, 5.4, 6.3 - The Trapezium (see earlier slide)
Iota 2.7, 6.9, 11 11, 50
?747 4.7, 5.5 36 Wide separation same field as Iota
Lambda 3.6, 5.5 4.4
Rho 4.5, 8.3 7
12OrionStars to mag 7.0 Double stars indicated
by
13Finally, The Okinawan Mythology for Orion