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Horologium (constellation)

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

An illustration of the constellation Horologium, also known as the Clock, located in the southern sky.

Horologium is a group of stars that looks like a pendulum clock. You can see it in the southern part of the sky. A French astronomer named Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille first described it in 1756. He thought it looked like a clock with a pendulum and a second hand.

The brightest star in Horologium is called Alpha Horologii. It is an orange star that is bigger than our Sun. Another special star, R Horologii, changes how bright it looks a lot over time.

Four star systems in Horologium have planets around them. One of these planets might be able to have liquid water, which is important for life.

History

The French astronomer Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille first described the constellation in 1756. He looked at and wrote down almost 10,000 stars in the southern sky when he was at the Cape of Good Hope. He made fourteen new constellations, including this one, in parts of the sky that cannot be seen from Europe. Most of these constellations were named after scientific instruments, showing the spirit of the Age of Enlightenment. The name of this constellation was later changed to its Latin form, Horologium, in a book published after he died in 1763. The name comes from Ancient Greek, where it meant a tool for showing the time.

Characteristics

Horologium constellation: showing the tangent line, or viewer's horizon, at latitude approx 23°N, which is parallel to the line of −67.04 declension, the lower declination boundary of the constellation.

The constellation Horologium covers an area of 248.9 square degrees. It is the 58th largest of the 88 modern constellations. People living south of 23°N can see the whole constellation.

Horologium is bordered by five other constellations: Eridanus (the Po river or Nile river), Caelum (the chisel), Reticulum (the reticle), Dorado (the dolphin/swordfish), and Hydrus (the male water snake). The International Astronomical Union decided its borders in 1922. The short name for this constellation is "Hor". The positions of its borders range from 02h 12.8m to 04h 20.3m in one direction and from −39.64° to −67.04° in another.

Features

Stars

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

See also: List of stars in Horologium

Horologium has one star that looks very bright, and 41 stars that you can see. A French scientist named Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille drew 11 stars in this group of stars long ago, giving them special names from Alpha (α Hor) through Lambda Horologii (λ Hor) in 1756. Later, another scientist decided two of these stars were too faint to name, and one star’s name was changed.

The brightest star in Horologium is Alpha Horologii. It looks about as bright as a candle about 115 light-years away. This star is bigger and older than our Sun. The second-brightest star is Delta Horologii, which looks like two stars close together but is really two stars orbiting each other. There are also stars that change how bright they look over time, like R Horologii.

Composite image of NGC 1512 (left) and the dwarf galaxy NGC 1510

Some stars in Horologium have planets going around them, like Iota Horologii, which has a planet about 2.5 times the size of Jupiter. Another star, Gliese 1061, is one of the closest stars to us and also has planets.

Deep-sky objects

Horologium has many interesting things far away in space, like groups of stars called globular clusters. One of these is NGC 1261, which is 53,000 light-years from us. There is also a very faraway group of stars called Arp-Madore 1, which is the farthest known group of this kind in our galaxy, the Milky Way.

Another interesting object is NGC 1512, a spiral galaxy that is merging with a smaller galaxy nearby. There is also a huge group of galaxies called the Horologium-Reticulum Supercluster, which is one of the biggest structures of galaxies close to us.

Images

The Crab Nebula: A colorful view of a star's explosion remnant captured by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope.
Portrait of Christiaan Huygens, a famous scientist from the 17th century.
An artist's depiction of HE 1523-0901, one of the oldest known stars in our galaxy, located about 7,500 light-years from Earth.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Horologium (constellation), available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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