Asterism and constellation: terminological dilemmas
Abstract
In contemporary astronomical literature, there is no uniform definition of the term asterism. This inconsistency is the consequence of differences between the traditional understanding of the term constellation, from the standpoint of the naked eye astronomy, and its contemporary understanding from the standpoint of the International Astronomical Union. A traditional constellation is a recognizable star configuration with a well-established name, whereas the International Astronomical Union defines a constellation as an exactly defined sector of the cosmic space that belongs to a particular traditional constellation. Asterism is a lower rank term in comparison to constellation, and as such it may not denote a whole traditional constellation, as these terms would become synonymous and parts of constellations would become "asterisms of asterisms". Similarly, asterism cannot define a macro configuration composed of the brightest stars in more constellations, thus, the Summer Triangle and ...other sky polygons are not asterisms. Therefore, asterisms are neither constellations nor sky polygons, but the third - easily recognizable parts of traditional constellations with historically well-established names, including separate groups of smaller stars that belong to star clusters (autonomous asterisms). Forms and names of asterisms may or may not be consistent with the parent constellation, and accordingly asterisms can be divided into compatible and incompatible. If asterisms have outlived the exact division of the celestial sphere and remained irreplaceable celestial landmarks in the naked eye astronomy, then it is high time for the International Astronomical Union to agree on the definition of asterism and to compile their official list.
Keywords:
asterism / constellation / star configuration / sky polygon / naked eye astronomySource:
Zbornik radova Geografskog instituta "Jovan Cvijić", SANU, 2017, 67, 1, 1-10Publisher:
- Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti SANU - Geografski institut 'Jovan Cvijić', Beograd
Collections
Institution/Community
Geografski fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Prnjat, Zorica AU - Tadić, Milutin PY - 2017 UR - https://gery.gef.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/865 AB - In contemporary astronomical literature, there is no uniform definition of the term asterism. This inconsistency is the consequence of differences between the traditional understanding of the term constellation, from the standpoint of the naked eye astronomy, and its contemporary understanding from the standpoint of the International Astronomical Union. A traditional constellation is a recognizable star configuration with a well-established name, whereas the International Astronomical Union defines a constellation as an exactly defined sector of the cosmic space that belongs to a particular traditional constellation. Asterism is a lower rank term in comparison to constellation, and as such it may not denote a whole traditional constellation, as these terms would become synonymous and parts of constellations would become "asterisms of asterisms". Similarly, asterism cannot define a macro configuration composed of the brightest stars in more constellations, thus, the Summer Triangle and other sky polygons are not asterisms. Therefore, asterisms are neither constellations nor sky polygons, but the third - easily recognizable parts of traditional constellations with historically well-established names, including separate groups of smaller stars that belong to star clusters (autonomous asterisms). Forms and names of asterisms may or may not be consistent with the parent constellation, and accordingly asterisms can be divided into compatible and incompatible. If asterisms have outlived the exact division of the celestial sphere and remained irreplaceable celestial landmarks in the naked eye astronomy, then it is high time for the International Astronomical Union to agree on the definition of asterism and to compile their official list. PB - Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti SANU - Geografski institut 'Jovan Cvijić', Beograd T2 - Zbornik radova Geografskog instituta "Jovan Cvijić", SANU T1 - Asterism and constellation: terminological dilemmas VL - 67 IS - 1 SP - 1 EP - 10 DO - 10.2298/IJGI1701001P UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_gery_865 ER -
@article{ author = "Prnjat, Zorica and Tadić, Milutin", year = "2017", abstract = "In contemporary astronomical literature, there is no uniform definition of the term asterism. This inconsistency is the consequence of differences between the traditional understanding of the term constellation, from the standpoint of the naked eye astronomy, and its contemporary understanding from the standpoint of the International Astronomical Union. A traditional constellation is a recognizable star configuration with a well-established name, whereas the International Astronomical Union defines a constellation as an exactly defined sector of the cosmic space that belongs to a particular traditional constellation. Asterism is a lower rank term in comparison to constellation, and as such it may not denote a whole traditional constellation, as these terms would become synonymous and parts of constellations would become "asterisms of asterisms". Similarly, asterism cannot define a macro configuration composed of the brightest stars in more constellations, thus, the Summer Triangle and other sky polygons are not asterisms. Therefore, asterisms are neither constellations nor sky polygons, but the third - easily recognizable parts of traditional constellations with historically well-established names, including separate groups of smaller stars that belong to star clusters (autonomous asterisms). Forms and names of asterisms may or may not be consistent with the parent constellation, and accordingly asterisms can be divided into compatible and incompatible. If asterisms have outlived the exact division of the celestial sphere and remained irreplaceable celestial landmarks in the naked eye astronomy, then it is high time for the International Astronomical Union to agree on the definition of asterism and to compile their official list.", publisher = "Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti SANU - Geografski institut 'Jovan Cvijić', Beograd", journal = "Zbornik radova Geografskog instituta "Jovan Cvijić", SANU", title = "Asterism and constellation: terminological dilemmas", volume = "67", number = "1", pages = "1-10", doi = "10.2298/IJGI1701001P", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_gery_865" }
Prnjat, Z.,& Tadić, M.. (2017). Asterism and constellation: terminological dilemmas. in Zbornik radova Geografskog instituta "Jovan Cvijić", SANU Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti SANU - Geografski institut 'Jovan Cvijić', Beograd., 67(1), 1-10. https://doi.org/10.2298/IJGI1701001P https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_gery_865
Prnjat Z, Tadić M. Asterism and constellation: terminological dilemmas. in Zbornik radova Geografskog instituta "Jovan Cvijić", SANU. 2017;67(1):1-10. doi:10.2298/IJGI1701001P https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_gery_865 .
Prnjat, Zorica, Tadić, Milutin, "Asterism and constellation: terminological dilemmas" in Zbornik radova Geografskog instituta "Jovan Cvijić", SANU, 67, no. 1 (2017):1-10, https://doi.org/10.2298/IJGI1701001P ., https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_gery_865 .