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Monday, March 18, 2019

Rigel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rigel
Map of the constellation Orion
Rigel in the constellation Orion
Observation data
Epoch J2000.0      Equinox J2000.0
Constellation Orion
Pronunciation /ˈrəl/ or /-ɡəl/
A
Right ascension  05h 14m 32.27210s
Declination −08° 12′ 05.8981″
Apparent magnitude (V) 0.13 (0.05 - 0.18)
BC
Right ascension  05h 14m 32.049s
Declination −08° 12′ 14.78″
Apparent magnitude (V) 6.67[6] (7.6/7.6)
Characteristics
A
Evolutionary stage Blue supergiant
Spectral type B8 Ia
U−B color index −0.66
B−V color index −0.03
Variable type Alpha Cygni
BC
Evolutionary stage Main sequence
Spectral type B9V + B9V
Astrometry

Radial velocity (Rv)17.8±0.4 km/s
Proper motion (μ) RA: +1.31 mas/yr Dec.: +0.50 mas/yr
Parallax (π)3.78 ± 0.34 mas
Distance860 ± 80 ly
(260 ± 20 pc)
Absolute magnitude (MV)–7.84

Orbit
PrimaryBa
CompanionBb
Period (P)9.860 days
Eccentricity (e)0.1
Semi-amplitude (K1)
(primary)
25.0 km/s
Semi-amplitude (K2)
(secondary)
32.6 km/s
Orbit
PrimaryB
CompanionC
Period (P)63 yr
Details
A
Mass21±3 M
Radius78.9±7.4 R
Luminosity (bolometric)1.20+0.25
−0.21
×105 L
Surface gravity (log g)1.75±0.10 cgs
Temperature12100±150 K
Metallicity [Fe/H]−0.06±0.10 dex
Rotational velocity (v sin i)25±3 km/s
Age8±1 Myr


Ba
Mass3.84 M
Bb
Mass2.94 M

C
Mass3.84 M

Other designations
β Orionis, ADS 3823, STF 668, H II 33, CCDM J05145-0812, WDS J05145-0812
A: Rigel, Algebar, Elgebar, 19 Orionis, HD 34085, HR 1713, HIP 24436, SAO 131907, BD-08°1063, FK5 194
B: Rigel B, GCRV 3111, STF 688B, BU 555B

Rigel (/ˈrəl, -ɡəl/), also designated β Orionis (Latinized to Beta Orionis, abbreviated Beta Ori, β Ori), is on average the seventh-brightest star in the night sky and the brightest in the constellation of Orion—though occasionally it is outshone within the constellation by the variable star Betelgeuse. It varies irregularly between apparent magnitude +0.05 and +0.18.

Although appearing as a single star to the naked eye, Rigel is actually a multiple star system. The name Rigel strictly refers to the brightest component of this system. It is a massive blue-white supergiant estimated to be anywhere from 61,500 to 363,000 times as luminous as the Sun, depending on the method used to calculate its properties and assumptions about its distance, thought to be about 860 light-years (260 pc). Rigel has begun to exhaust the hydrogen in its core, causing the star to expand to over 70 times the Sun's radius. Its small intrinsic brightness changes are caused by pulsations and it is classified as an Alpha Cygni variable.

Rigel's brightest companion is itself a likely triple star system, separated from Rigel by 9.5. Often referred to as Rigel B, it has a combined apparent magnitude of 6.7, but is still over 400 times fainter than the primary star and visible only with a telescope. Rigel B is a spectroscopic binary composed of the components Ba and Bb. It also has a very close visual companion, component C, of almost equal brightness to B, making the BC subsystem a triple star system.

Nomenclature

The name Rigel was likely first recorded in the Alfonsine Tables of 1252. It is derived from the Arabic name Rijl Jauzah al Yusrā, "the left leg (foot) of Jauzah" (i.e. rijl meaning "leg, foot"), which can be traced to the 10th century. "Jauzah" was a proper name of the Orion figure, an alternative Arabic name was رجل الجبار riǧl al-ǧabbār, "the foot of the great one", which is the source of the rarely used variant names Algebar or Elgebar. The Alphonsine Tables saw its name split into "Rigel" and "Algebar", with the note, et dicitur Algebar. Nominatur etiam Rigel. Alternate spellings from the 17th century include Regel by Italian astronomer Giovanni Battista Riccioli, Riglon by German astronomer Wilhelm Schickard, and Rigel Algeuze or Algibbar by English scholar Edmund Chilmead. In 2016, the name Rigel was officially entered in the IAU Catalog of Star Names for β Orionis A, the blue supergiant component visible to the naked eye.

β Orionis (Latinized to Beta Orionis) is the star's Bayer designation, although it is usually the brightest star in Orion. Astronomer James B. Kaler has speculated that perhaps Rigel was designated by Bayer during a rare period where it was outshone by the variable star Betelgeuse, resulting in the latter star being designated alpha and Rigel designated beta. Rigel is included in the General Catalogue of Variable Stars, but since it already has a Bayer designation, β Orionis, it has no separate variable star designation.

Observation

Rigel is the seventh-brightest star in the celestial sphere excluding the Sun—usually fainter than Capella, although both are slightly variable in brightness. Rigel is an irregular pulsating variable with a range in apparent magnitude from 0.05 to 0.18. Although Rigel has the Bayer designation "beta", it is almost always brighter than Alpha Orionis (Betelgeuse). Since 1943, the spectrum of this star has served as the spectral reference, for class B8Ia, by which other stars are classified. Rigel has a color index (B–V) of −0.06, meaning it appears slightly blue-white, almost white.

Culminating at midnight on 12 December, and at 9 pm on 24 January, Rigel is most visible in winter evenings in the northern hemisphere and summer in the southern. In the southern hemisphere, Rigel is the first bright star of Orion visible as the constellation rises. The star forms the starting vertex of the "Winter Hexagon", an asterism that includes Aldebaran, Capella, Pollux, Procyon, and Sirius. This formation is visible from most locations on Earth and is prominent in the night sky from December through March. In stellar navigation, Rigel is one of the most important navigation stars, since it is bright, easily located and equatorial, which means it is visible all around the world's oceans (the exception is the area within 8° of the North Pole).

Spectroscopy

Orion with Rigel at bottom right, at optical wavelengths plus to emphasize gas clouds
 
The general spectral type of Rigel as B8 is well-established and it has been used as a defining point of the spectral classification sequence for supergiants. The overall spectrum is typical for a late B class star, with strong absorption lines of the hydrogen Balmer series together with neutral helium lines and some of heavier elements such as oxygen, calcium, and magnesium. The luminosity class for B8 stars is determined from the strength and narrowness of the hydrogen spectral lines, and Rigel is assigned to the bright supergiant class Ia.

As early as 1888, the radial velocity of Rigel, as determined from the Doppler shifts of its spectral lines, was seen to vary. This was confirmed and interpreted as a spectroscopic companion with a period of about 22 days. The radial velocity has since been measured to vary by about 10 km/s around a mean of 21.5 km/s.

In 1933, the spectral line was seen to be unusually weak and shifted 0.1 nm towards shorter wavelengths, while there was a narrow emission spike about 1.5 nm to the long wavelength side of the main absorption line. This is now known as a P Cygni profile after a star that shows this feature strongly in its spectrum. It is associated with strong mass loss where there is simultaneously emission from dense wind close to the star and absorption from circumstellar material expanding away from the star.

The unusual Hα line profile has since been observed to vary unpredictably: around a third of the time it is a normal absorption line; about a quarter of the time it is a double-peaked line, that is an absorption line with an emission core or an emission line with an absorption core; about a quarter of the time it has a P Cygni profile; most of the rest of the time the line has an inverse P Cygni profile, where the emission component is on the short wavelength side of the line; rarely there is a pure emission Hα line. The line profile changes are interpreted as variations in the quantity and velocity of material being expelled from the star. Occasional very high velocity outflows are seen, and even more rarely infalling material. The overall picture is one of large looping structures arising from the photosphere and driven by magnetic fields.

The variations in the spectrum have been reflected in published spectral classes, such as B8 Ia, B8 Iab, and B8 Iae.

Variability

Rigel has been known to vary in brightness since at least 1930, although the exact range and type of variability was unclear. Published results showed variations of less than 0.1 magnitudes with no obvious period. Observations over 18 nights in 1984 showed variations at red, blue, and yellow wavelengths of up to 0.13 magnitudes on timescales of a few hours to several days, but again no clear period. The colour index also varied but in general was not strongly correlated with the brightness variations.

From an analysis of Hipparcos satellite photometry, Rigel was identified as belonging to the Alpha Cygni class of variable star in 1998, which are defined as "non-radially pulsating supergiants of the Bep–AepIa spectral types". (The 'e' indicates it displays emission lines in the spectrum, while the 'p' means it has an unspecified spectral peculiarity.) It was added to the General Catalogue of Variable Stars in the following year in the 74th namelist of variable stars. The Hipparcos photometry showed variations with a photographic amplitude of 0.039 magnitudes and a possible period of 2.075 days.

Rigel was observed with the Canadian MOST satellite for nearly 28 days in 2009. The light variations in this supergiant star were at the milli-magnitude level. The gradual changes in the flux highlights the presence of long-period pulsation modes in the star.

Mass loss

By observing the Hα spectral line, in 2009 Chesneau and colleagues calculated the mass loss from Rigel to be (1.5±0.4)×10−7 solar masses per year (M/yr), around ten million times more than the mass loss from the Sun.

More detailed optical and K band infrared spectroscopic observations, together with VLTI interferometry, were taken from 2006 to 2010. Analysis of the Hα and spectral line profiles, and measurement of the regions producing the lines, show that the stellar wind varies greatly in structure and strength. Loop and arm structures were also detected within the wind. Calculations of mass loss from the Hγ line give (9.4±0.9)×10−7 M/yr in 2006-7 and (7.6±1.1)×10−7 M/yr in 2009-10. Calculations using the Hα line give lower results, around 1.5×10−7 M/yr. The terminal wind velocity is 300 km·s−1.

Distance

Rigel and reflection nebula IC 2118 in Eridanus. Rigel B is not visible in the glare of the main star.
 
The distance to Rigel has been difficult to measure with any accuracy, as its brightness is not easy to determine independently and it is too distant for very accurate parallax measurements. As it is both bright and moving through a region of nebulosity, Rigel lights up several dust clouds in its vicinity, most notably the 5°–long IC 2118 (the Witch Head Nebula), located at an angular separation of 2.5° from the star. These are thought to be about 40 light-years (12 parsecs) distant from the star itself. For stars associated with this nebulosity, Kounkel and colleagues in a 2018 study gave a distance estimate of 949 ± 7 light-years (291 ± 2 parsecs).

Rigel has been classified as an outlying member of the Orion OB1 Association, which is located at a distance of up to 1,600 light-years (500 parsecs) from Earth. It has also been listed as a member of the poorly-defined Taurus-Orion R1 Association, somewhat closer at 1,200 light-years (360 parsecs). Rigel is thought to be considerably closer than most of the members of Orion OB1 and the Orion Nebula. Betelgeuse and Saiph lie at a similar distance as Rigel, although Betelgeuse is a runaway star with a complex history and might have originally formed in the main body of the association.

The revised 2007 Hipparcos reduction of Rigel's parallax gives a distance of 863 light-years (265 parsecs), with a margin of error of about 9%. A companion star to Rigel, usually considered to be physically associated and at the same distance, has a Gaia Data Release 2 parallax of 2.9186±0.0761 mas, implying a distance around 1,100 light-years (340 parsecs). However, the measurements for this object show a number of features suggesting they may be unreliable, possibly because it is a close double star.

Stellar system

Rigel forms a multiple star system with up to five or six components. The blue supergiant primary has a visual companion which is itself a likely a close triple star, plus a more distant visual companion that may also form part of the multiple star system. 

William Herschel discovered Rigel to be a visual double star on 1 October 1781, and it was catalogued as H II 33 (or H 2 33). Friedrich Georg Wilhelm von Struve first measured the relative position of the companion in 1822, cataloging the visual pair as Σ 668. The secondary star can be referred to as Rigel B or β Ori B. The angular separation of β Ori B from the primary star is 9.5 arc seconds to its south along position angle 204°. Although not particularly faint at visual magnitude 6.7, the overall difference in brightness from the primary (about 6.6 magnitudes or 440 times fainter) makes it a challenging target for telescope apertures smaller than 15 cm (6 in).

At Rigel's estimated distance, β Ori B's projected separation from its primary is over 2,200 AU. Since its discovery, there has been no sign of orbital motion, although both stars share similar common proper motion. The pair would have a minimum orbital period of around 18,000 years. Gaia Data Release 2 (DR2) contains a somewhat unreliable parallax for β Ori B, placing it at about 1,100 light-years (340 parsecs), further away than the Hipparcos distance for Rigel, but similar to the Taurus-Orion R1 association. There is no parallax for Rigel in Gaia DR2. The Gaia DR2 proper motions for β Ori B and the Hipparcos proper motions for Rigel are both small, although not quite the same.

Sherburne Wesley Burnham in 1871 suspected β Ori B to be double, and in 1878 resolved it into two nearly equal components. Their measured separation varies from less than 0.1" to nearly 0.2". In 2009, speckle interferometry showed two almost identical components separated by 0.124". The companion is designated as component C (β Ori C). Both stars have apparent visual magnitudes of 7.6. Their derived orbital period is 63 years.

β Ori B appears to be a double-lined spectroscopic binary system, which indicates that the individual absorption lines of both components is visible in the spectrum. It consists of two main sequence stars that orbit each other every 9.86 days. These two stars do not seem to correspond to the visual binary components B and C, so the BC sub-system might be a triple, although the actual arrangement is unclear.

In 1878, Burnham also found another nearby 15th magnitude star, catalogued as component D (β Ori D), whose 2017 separation from Rigel was 44.5 almost due north at position angle of 1°, although it is unclear whether it is physically related or a coincidental alignment. Gaia DR2 finds it to be a 12th magnitude sunlike star at approximately the same distance as Rigel. Most likely to be an orange dwarf, this star would have an orbital period of around 250,000 years, if it is part of the stellar system.

Another spectroscopic companion to Rigel has been reported on the basis of radial velocity variations, and even an orbit calculated, but it is thought that the star does not exist and the pulsations are intrinsic to Rigel itself.

Physical characteristics

Rigel's place at top center on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram
 
Rigel is the most luminous star within 1,000 light-years of the Sun. Moravveji and colleagues calculate a luminosity for Rigel of 120,000 times that of the Sun. Its surface temperature is around 12,100 K. The interferometer-measured angular diameter of this star, after correction for limb darkening, is 2.75±0.01 mas. At its estimated distance, this yields a size of about 78.9 times the radius of the Sun (R). Norbert Przybilla and colleagues assumed a distance of 1,170 ± 130 light-years (360 ± 40 parsecs). They calculated it to be around 218,000 times as luminous as the Sun, and have around 21±3 solar masses and 109±12 R.

A 2018 study using the Navy Precision Optical Interferometer measured the angular diameter of 2.606±0.009 mas, yielding the radius as 74.1+6.1
−7.3
 R, and luminosity 61,515±11,486 times that of the Sun. Based on the Hipparcos distance of 780 light-years (240 parsecs) and an Orion OB1 association distance of 1,600 light-years (500 parsecs), the relative luminosity is calculated to be somewhere between 83,000 L and 363,000 L 

Rigel is a blue supergiant that has exhausted burning the hydrogen fuel in its core and left the main sequence, expanded, and brightened as it progresses across the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram. Puzzlingly, the pulsation properties of this star suggest it passed through the red supergiant phase, whereas the surface abundances indicate it evolved directly to a blue supergiant. Przybilla estimated that it has lost around 3 solar masses since beginning life as a star of 24±3 solar masses 7 to 9 million years ago. It is expected to eventually end its stellar life by exploding as a type II supernova from a red supergiant, in the process flinging out material that will serve to seed future generations of stars. It is one of the closest known potential supernova progenitors to Earth, and would be expected to have an apparent magnitude of around −11 at its peak.

Rigel's variability is complex and is caused by stellar pulsations similar to those of Deneb, the prototype of the class of Alpha Cygni pulsating stars. The radial velocity variations of Rigel prove that it simultaneously oscillates in at least 19 non-radial modes with periods ranging from about 1.2 to 74 days. While its pulsations are powered by the nuclear reactions in a hydrogen-burning shell that is at least partially non-convective, the star also burns helium in its core.

Visual double star β Ori B appears to be a close triple star system (Rigel Ba, Bb, and C), but due to their proximity, little is known about their individual intrinsic properties. All seem to be near equally hot B class main sequence stars that weigh between 3 to 4 M.

Etymology and cultural significance

In ancient Egypt, Rigel is thought to have been called Seba-en-Sah Sb3-n-S3ḥ, which means Star of Sah.  Rigel is thought to denote either Orion's knee or (as its name suggests) his foot; with the nearby star Beta Eridani marking the footstool. Rigel is presumably the star known as "Aurvandil's toe" in Norse mythology.

In Chinese, 參宿 (Shēn Sù), meaning Three Stars (asterism), refers to an asterism consisting of Rigel, Alnitak, Alnilam, Mintaka, Betelgeuse, Bellatrix and Saiph. Consequently, Rigel are known as 參宿七 (Shēn Sù qī, the Seventh Star of Three Stars).

In Japan, the Minamoto or Genji clan chose Rigel and its white color as its symbol, calling the star Genji-boshi (源氏星), while the Taira or Heike clan adopted Betelgeuse and its red color. The two powerful families fought a legendary war; the stars were seen as facing each other off and only kept apart by Orion's Belt. Rigel was also known as Gin-waki, (銀脇), "the Silver (Star) beside (Mitsu-boshi)". 

Rigel was known as Yerrerdet-kurrk to the Wotjobaluk koori of southeastern Australia, and held to be the mother-in-law of Totyerguil (Altair). The distance between them signified the taboo preventing a man from approaching his mother-in-law. The indigenous Boorong people of northwestern Victoria named Rigel as Collowgullouric Warepil. The Wardaman people of northern Australia know Rigel as the Red Kangaroo Leader Unumburrgu and chief conductor of ceremonies in a songline when Orion is high in the sky. Eridanus, the river, marks a line of stars in the sky leading to it, and the other stars of Orion are his ceremonial tools and entourage. Betelgeuse is Ya-jungin "Owl Eyes Flicking", watching the ceremonies.

The Māori people named Rigel as Puanga; this was said to be a daughter of Rehua (Antares), the chief of all stars. Its heliacal rising also presaged the appearance of Matariki (the Pleiades) in the dawn sky which marked the Māori New Year in late May or early June. The Moriori people of the Chatham Islands, as well as some Maori groups in New Zealand, marked the start of their New Year with Rigel rather than the Pleiades. Puaka was a local variant used in the South Island.

In the Caribbean, Rigel represented the severed leg of the folkloric figure Trois Rois, himself represented by the three stars of Orion's Belt. The leg had been severed with a cutlass by the maiden Bįhi (Sirius). The Lacandon people of southern Mexico knew it as tunsel ("little woodpecker").

In modern culture

Rigel and escort under attack
 
The MS Rigel was originally a Norwegian ship, built in Copenhagen in 1924. It was requisitioned by the Germans during the World War II and sunk in 1944 while being used to transport prisoners of war. Two US Navy ships have borne the name USS Rigel after the star. 

The SSM-N-6 Rigel, named after the star, was a cruise missile program for the US Navy that was cancelled in 1953 before reaching deployment.

The Rigel Skerries are a chain of small islands in Antarctica, renamed after originally being called Utskjera. They were given their current name as Rigel was used as an astrofix. Mount Rigel, also in Antarctica, is also named after the star.

The name Rigel, or reference to the star itself, occurs frequently in fictional works.

Orion (constellation)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Orion
Constellation
Orion
AbbreviationOri
GenitiveOrionis
Pronunciation/ɒˈr.ən/
SymbolismOrion, the Hunter
Right ascension 5h
Declination+5°
QuadrantNQ1
Area594 sq. deg. (26th)
Main stars7
Bayer/Flamsteed
stars
81
Stars with planets10
Stars brighter than 3.00m8
Stars within 10.00 pc (32.62 ly)8
Brightest starRigel (β Ori) (0.12m)
Messier objects3
Meteor showersOrionids
Chi Orionids
Bordering
constellations
Gemini
Taurus
Eridanus
Lepus
Monoceros
Visible at latitudes between +85° and −75°.
Best visible at 21:00 (9 p.m.) during the month of January.

Orion is a prominent constellation located on the celestial equator and visible throughout the world. It is one of the most conspicuous and recognizable constellations in the night sky. It was named after Orion, a hunter in Greek mythology. Its brightest stars are Rigel (Beta Orionis) and Betelgeuse (Alpha Orionis), a blue-white and a red supergiant, respectively.

History and mythology

Star formation in the constellation Orion as photographed in infrared by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope
 
The earliest depiction that has been linked to the constellation of Orion is a prehistoric (Aurignacian) mammoth ivory carving found in a cave in the Ach valley in West Germany in 1979. Archaeologists have estimated it to have been fashioned approximately 32,000 to 38,000 years ago. The distinctive pattern of Orion has been recognized in numerous cultures around the world, and many myths have been associated with it. Orion has also been used as a symbol in the modern world.

Ancient Near East

The Babylonian star catalogues of the Late Bronze Age name Orion MULSIPA.ZI.AN.NA, "The Heavenly Shepherd" or "True Shepherd of Anu" – Anu being the chief god of the heavenly realms. The Babylonian constellation was sacred to Papshukal and Ninshubur, both minor gods fulfilling the role of 'messenger to the gods'. Papshukal was closely associated with the figure of a walking bird on Babylonian boundary stones, and on the star map the figure of the Rooster was located below and behind the figure of the True Shepherd—both constellations represent the herald of the gods, in his bird and human forms respectively.

In ancient Egypt, the stars of Orion were regarded as a god, called Sah. Because Orion rises before Sirius, the star whose heliacal rising was the basis for the Solar Egyptian calendar, Sah was closely linked with Sopdet, the goddess who personified Sirius. The god Sopdu was said to be the son of Sah and Sopdet. Sah was syncretized with Osiris, while Sopdet was syncretized with Osiris' mythological wife, Isis. In the Pyramid Texts, from the 24th and 23rd centuries BC, Sah was one of many gods whose form the dead pharaoh was said to take in the afterlife.

The Armenians identified their legendary patriarch and founder Hayk with Orion. Hayk is also the name of the Orion constellation in the Armenian translation of the Bible.

The Bible mentions Orion three times, naming it "Kesil" (כסיל, literally – fool). Though, this name perhaps is etymologically connected with "Kislev", the name for the ninth month of the Hebrew calendar (i.e. November–December), which, in turn, may derive from the Hebrew root K-S-L as in the words "kesel, kisla" (כֵּסֶל, כִּסְלָה, hope, positiveness), i.e. hope for winter rains.: Job 9:9 ("He is the maker of the Bear and Orion"), Job 38:31 ("Can you loosen Orion's belt?"), and Amos 5:8 ("He who made the Pleiades and Orion"). 

In ancient Aram, the constellation was known as Nephîlā′, the Nephilim may have been Orion's descendants.

Greco-Roman antiquity

Major stars in Orion constellation (connected and labelled)

Orion's current name derives from Greek mythology, in which Orion was a gigantic, supernaturally strong hunter of ancient times, born to Euryale, a Gorgon, and Poseidon (Neptune), god of the sea in the Graeco-Roman tradition. One myth recounts Gaia's rage at Orion, who dared to say that he would kill every animal on the planet. The angry goddess tried to dispatch Orion with a scorpion. This is given as the reason that the constellations of Scorpius and Orion are never in the sky at the same time. However, Ophiuchus, the Serpent Bearer, revived Orion with an antidote. This is said to be the reason that the constellation of Ophiuchus stands midway between the Scorpion and the Hunter in the sky.

The constellation is mentioned in Horace's Odes (Ode 3.27.18), Homer's Odyssey (Book 5, line 283) and Iliad, and Virgil's Aeneid (Book 1, line 535)

Middle East

In medieval Muslim astronomy, Orion was known as al-jabbar, "the giant". Orion's sixth brightest star, Saiph, is named from the Arabic, saif al-jabbar, meaning "sword of the giant".

Asian antiquity

In China, Orion was one of the 28 lunar mansions Sieu (Xiu) (宿). It is known as Shen (參), literally meaning "three", for the stars of Orion's Belt.

The Chinese character 參 (pinyin shēn) originally meant the constellation Orion (Chinese: 參宿; pinyin: shēnxiù); its Shang dynasty version, over three millennia old, contains at the top a representation of the three stars of Orion's belt atop a man's head (the bottom portion representing the sound of the word was added later).

The Rig Veda refers to the Orion Constellation as Mriga (The Deer). It is said that two bright stars in the front and two bright stars in the rear are The hunting dogs, the one comparatively less bright star in the middle and ahead of two front dogs is The hunter and three aligned bright stars are in the middle of all four hunting dogs is The Deer (The Mriga) and three little aligned but less brighter stars is The Baby Deer. The Mriga means Deer, locally known as Harnu in folk parlance. There are many folk songs narrating the Harnu. The Malay called Orion's Belt Bintang Tiga Beradik (the "Three Brother Star").

In India, Nataraja ‘the cosmic dancer’ (an avatar of Shiva) is seen in the constellation called Orion.

European folklore

Constellation Orion as it can be seen by the naked eye
 
In old Hungarian tradition, "Orion" is known as (magic) Archer (Íjász), or Reaper (Kaszás). In recently rediscovered myths, he is called Nimrod (Hungarian "Nimród"), the greatest hunter, father of the twins "Hunor" and "Magor". The "π" and "o" stars (on upper right) form together the reflex bow or the lifted scythe. In other Hungarian traditions, "Orion's belt" is known as "Judge's stick" (Bírópálca).

In Scandinavian tradition, "Orion's belt" was known as Frigg's Distaff (friggerock) or Freyja's distaff.

The Finns call Orion's belt and the stars below it Väinämöisen viikate (Väinämöinen's scythe). Another name for the asterism of Alnilam, Alnitak and Mintaka is Väinämöisen vyö (Väinämöinen's Belt) and the stars "hanging" from the belt as Kalevanmiekka (Kaleva's sword).

In Siberia, the Chukchi people see Orion as a hunter; an arrow he has shot is represented by Aldebaran (Alpha Tauri), with the same figure as other Western depictions.

Americas

The Seri people of northwestern Mexico call the three stars in the belt of Orion Hapj (a name denoting a hunter) which consists of three stars: Hap (mule deer), Haamoja (pronghorn), and Mojet (bighorn sheep). Hap is in the middle and has been shot by the hunter; its blood has dripped onto Tiburón Island.

The same three stars are known in Spain and most of Latin America as "Las tres Marías" (Spanish for "The Three Marys"). In Puerto Rico, the three stars are known as the "Los Tres Reyes Magos" (Spanish for The three Wise Men).

The Ojibwa (Chippewa) Native Americans call this constellation Kabibona'kan, the Winter Maker, as its presence in the night sky heralds winter.

To the Lakota Native Americans, Tayamnicankhu (Orion's Belt) is the spine of a bison. The great rectangle of Orion are the bison's ribs; the Pleiades star cluster in nearby Taurus is the bison's head; and Sirius in Canis Major, known as Tayamnisinte, is its tail. Another Lakota myth mentions that the bottom half of Orion, the Constellation of the Hand, represented the arm of a chief that was ripped off by the Thunder People as a punishment from the gods for his selfishness. His daughter offered to marry the person who can retrieve his arm from the sky, so the young warrior Fallen Star (whose father was a star and whose mother was human) returned his arm and married his daughter, symbolizing harmony between the gods and humanity with the help of the younger generation. The index finger is represented by Rigel; the Orion Nebula is the thumb; the Belt of Orion is the wrist; and the star Beta Eridani is the pinky finger.

Polynesian

The seven primary stars of Orion make up the Polynesian constellation Heiheionakeiki which represents a child's string figure similar to a cat's cradle.

Contemporary symbolism

The imagery of the belt and sword has found its way into popular western culture, for example in the form of the shoulder insignia of the 27th Infantry Division of the United States Army during both World Wars, probably owing to a pun on the name of the division's first commander, Major General John F. O'Ryan.

The film distribution company Orion Pictures used the constellation as its logo.

In fiction

In J. R. R. Tolkien's mythology surrounding Middle-earth, Orion is known as Menelvagor, which is Sindarin for "The Swordsman of the Sky".

In the movie Blade Runner, the dying replicant Roy Batty introspectively delivers his "Tears in Rain" soliloquy: "I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die." 

In the sci-fi comedy Men In Black, the last words of a dying alien disguised as a human were 'To prevent war, the Galaxy is on Orion's belt'. It was later revealed that 'Orion's belt' referred to the collar of a cat named 'Orion'. 

In the sci-fi television series Haven, the Orionid meteor shower is known as the Hunter Meteor Shower. It comes to Haven once every twenty-seven years when the Barn, a space between two worlds, comes to take the mysterious woman away. When the Barn leaves, the Hunter passes safely overhead and The Troubles end, making the town of Haven a haven for the Troubled again.

Depictions

Orion in the 9th century Leiden Aratea
 
In artistic renderings, the surrounding constellations are sometimes related to Orion: he is depicted standing next to the river Eridanus with his two hunting dogs Canis Major and Canis Minor, fighting Taurus. He is sometimes depicted hunting Lepus the hare. He sometimes is depicted to have a lion's hide in his hand. 

There are alternative ways to visualise Orion. From the Southern Hemisphere, Orion is oriented south-upward, and the belt and sword are sometimes called the saucepan or pot in Australia and New Zealand. Orion's Belt is called Drie Konings (Three Kings) or the Drie Susters (Three Sisters) by Afrikaans speakers in South Africa and are referred to as les Trois Rois (the Three Kings) in Daudet's Lettres de Mon Moulin (1866). The appellation Driekoningen (the Three Kings) is also often found in 17th- and 18th-century Dutch star charts and seaman's guides. The same three stars are known in Spain, Latin America, and the Philippines as "Las Tres Marías" (The Three Marys), and as "Los Tres Reyes Magos" (The three Wise Men) in Puerto Rico.

Even traditional depictions of Orion have varied greatly. Cicero drew Orion in a similar fashion to the modern depiction. The Hunter held an unidentified animal skin aloft in his right hand; his hand was represented by Omicron2 Orionis and the skin was represented by the 5 stars designated Pi Orionis. Kappa and Beta Orionis represented his left and right knees, while Eta and Lambda Leporis were his left and right feet, respectively. As in the modern depiction, Delta, Epsilon, and Zeta represented his belt. His left shoulder was represented by Alpha Orionis, and Mu Orionis made up his left arm. Lambda Orionis was his head and Gamma, his right shoulder. The depiction of Hyginus was similar to that of Cicero, though the two differed in a few important areas. Cicero's animal skin became Hyginus's shield (Omicron and Pi Orionis), and instead of an arm marked out by Mu Orionis, he holds a club (Chi Orionis). His right leg is represented by Theta Orionis and his left leg is represented by Lambda, Mu, and Epsilon Leporis. Further Western European and Arabic depictions have followed these two models.

Characteristics

Orion is bordered by Taurus to the northwest, Eridanus to the southwest, Lepus to the south, Monoceros to the east, and Gemini to the northeast. Covering 594 square degrees, Orion ranks twenty-sixth of the 88 constellations in size. The constellation boundaries, as set by Eugène Delporte in 1930, are defined by a polygon of 26 sides. In the equatorial coordinate system, the right ascension coordinates of these borders lie between  04h 43.3m and  06h 25.5m, while the declination coordinates are between 22.87° and −10.97°. The constellation's three-letter abbreviation, as adopted by the International Astronomical Union in 1922, is "Ori".

Orion is most visible in the evening sky from January to March, winter in the Northern Hemisphere, and summer in the Southern Hemisphere. In the tropics (less than about 8° from the equator), the constellation transits at the zenith. 

In the period May–July (summer in the Northern Hemisphere, winter in the Southern Hemisphere), Orion is in the daytime sky and thus not visible at most latitudes. However, for much of Antarctica in the Southern Hemisphere's winter months, the Sun is below the horizon even at midday. Stars (and thus Orion) are then visible at twilight for a few hours around local noon, low in the North. At the same time of day at the South Pole itself (Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station), Rigel is only 8° above the horizon, and the Belt sweeps just along it. In the Southern Hemisphere's summer months, when Orion is normally visible in the night sky, the constellation is actually not visible in Antarctica because the sun does not set at that time of year south of the Antarctic Circle.

In countries close to the equator (e.g. Kenya, Indonesia, Colombia, Ecuador), Orion appears overhead in December around midnight and in the February evening sky.

Navigational aid

Using Orion to find stars in neighbor constellations
 
Orion is very useful as an aid to locating other stars. By extending the line of the Belt southeastward, SiriusCMa) can be found; northwestward, AldebaranTau). A line eastward across the two shoulders indicates the direction of ProcyonCMi). A line from Rigel through Betelgeuse points to Castor and PolluxGem and β Gem). Additionally, Rigel is part of the Winter Circle asterism. Sirius and Procyon, which may be located from Orion by following imaginary lines (see map), also are points in both the Winter Triangle and the Circle.

Features

Orion as depicted in Urania's Mirror, a set of constellation cards published in London c.1825
 
Orion's seven brightest stars form a distinctive hourglass-shaped asterism, or pattern, in the night sky. Four stars—Rigel, Betelgeuse, Bellatrix and Saiph—form a large roughly rectangular shape, in the centre of which lie the three stars of Orion's BeltAlnitak, Alnilam and Mintaka. Descending from the 'belt' is a smaller line of three stars, Orion's Sword (the middle of which is in fact not a star but the Orion Nebula), also known as the hunter's sword. 

Many of the stars are luminous hot blue supergiants, with the stars of the belt and sword forming the Orion OB1 Association. Standing out by its red hue, Betelgeuse may nevertheless be a runaway member of the same group.

Stars

  • Betelgeuse, alternatively by its Bayer designation Alpha Orionis, is a massive M-type red supergiant star nearing the end of its life. When it explodes it will even be visible during the day. It is the second brightest star in Orion, and is a semiregular variable star. It serves as the "right shoulder" of the hunter it represents (assuming that he is facing the observer), and is the eighth brightest star in the night sky.
  • Rigel, also known as Beta Orionis, is a B-type blue supergiant that is the sixth brightest star in the night sky. Similar to Betelgeuse, Rigel is fusing heavy elements in its core and will pass its supergiant stage soon (on an astronomical timescale), either collapsing in the case of a supernova or shedding its outer layers and turning into a white dwarf. It serves as the left foot of Orion, the hunter.
  • Bellatrix was designated Gamma Orionis by Johann Bayer, but is known colloquially as the "Amazon Star". It is the twenty-seventh brightest star in the night sky. Bellatrix is considered a B-type blue giant, though it is too small to explode in a supernova. Bellatrix's luminosity is derived from its high temperature rather than its radius, a factor that defines Betelgeuse. Bellatrix serves as Orion's left shoulder.
  • Mintaka garnered the name Delta Orionis from Bayer, even though it is the faintest of the three stars in Orion's Belt. Its name means "the belt". It is a multiple star system, composed of a large B-type blue giant and a more massive O-type main-sequence star. The Mintaka system constitutes an eclipsing binary variable star, where the eclipse of one star over the other creates a dip in brightness. Mintaka is the westernmost of the three stars of Orion's Belt, as well as the northernmost.
Orion constellation map.
  • Alnilam is designated Epsilon Orionis, a consequence of Bayer's wish to name the three stars in Orion's Belt (from north to south) in alphabetical order. Also called Al Nathin, Alnilam is named for the Arabic phrase meaning "string of pearls". Alnilam is a B-type blue supergiant; despite being nearly twice as far from the Sun as Mintaka and Alnitak, the other two belt stars, its luminosity makes it nearly equal in magnitude. Alnilam is losing mass quickly, a consequence of its size; it is approximately four million years old.
  • Alnitak, meaning "the girdle", was designated Zeta Orionis by Bayer, and is the easternmost star in Orion's Belt. It is a triple star some 800 light years distant, with the primary star being a hot blue supergiant and the brightest class O star in the night sky.
  • Saiph was designated Kappa Orionis by Bayer, and 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 (46,000 °F / 26,000 °C) causes it to emit most of its light in the ultraviolet region of the spectrum.
Of the lesser stars, Meissa (or Lambda Orionis) forms Orion's head, whilst Hatsya (or Iota Orionis) forms the tip of Orion's sword. Iota Orionis is also called Nair al-Saif, Arabic for "the brightest in the sword".

Proper
name
Apparent
magnitude
Approx. distance
(Light years)
Radius
(R)
Betelgeuse 0.0–1.3 643 887
Rigel 0.05–0.18 860 78.9
Bellatrix 1.659–1.64 250 5.75
Mintaka 2.23 (3.2/3.3) 1,200 16.5
Alnilam 1.64–1.74 2,000 42
Alnitak 1.77 (2.08/4.28/4.01) 1,260 20
Saiph 2.09 650 22.2

Belt

Orion's Belt
 
Closeup Image of Orion's Belt
 
Orion's Belt or The Belt of Orion is an asterism within the constellation. It consists of the three bright stars Zeta (Alnitak), Epsilon (Alnilam), and Delta (Mintaka). Alnitak is around 800 light years away from earth and is 100,000 times more luminous than the Sun; much of its radiation is in the ultraviolet range, which the human eye cannot see. Alnilam is approximately 1340 light years away from Earth, shines with magnitude 1.70, and with ultraviolet light is 375,000 times more luminous than the Sun. Mintaka is 915 light years away and shines with magnitude 2.21. It is 90,000 times more luminous than the Sun and is a double star: the two orbit each other every 5.73 days. Looking for Orion's Belt in the night sky is the easiest way to locate the constellation. In the Northern Hemisphere, Orion's Belt is best visible in the night sky during the month of January around 9:00 pm, when it is approximately around the local meridian.

Just southwest of Alnitak lies Sigma Orionis, a multiple star system composed of five stars that have a combined apparent magnitude of 3.7 and lying 1150 light years distant. Southwest of Mintaka lies the quadruple star Eta Orionis.

Sword

Orion's Sword contains the Orion Nebula, the Messier 43 nebula, the Running Man Nebula, and the stars Theta Orionis, Iota Orionis, and 42 Orionis.

Head

Three stars comprise a small triangle that marks the head. The apex is marked by Meissa (Lambda Orionis), a hot blue giant of spectral type O8 III and apparent magnitude 3.54, which lies some 1100 light years distant. Phi-1 and Phi-2 Orionis make up the base. Also nearby is the very young star FU Orionis.

Club

Stretching north from Betelgeuse are the stars that make up Orion's club. Mu Orionis marks the elbow, Nu and Xi mark the handle of the club, and Chi1 and Chi2 mark the end of the club. Just east of Chi1 is the Mira-type variable red giant U Orionis.

Shield

West from Bellatrix lie six stars all designated Pi Orionis (π1 Ori, π2 Ori, π3 Ori, π4 Ori, π5 Ori and π6 Ori) which make up Orion's shield.

Meteor showers

Around 20 October each year the Orionid meteor shower (Orionids) reaches its peak. Coming from the border with the constellation Gemini as many as 20 meteors per hour can be seen. The shower's parent body is Halley's Comet.

Deep-sky objects

This view brings out many fainter features, such as Barnard's Loop.
 
Hanging from Orion's belt is his sword, consisting of the multiple stars θ1 and θ2 Orionis, called the Trapezium and the Orion Nebula (M42). This is a spectacular object that can be clearly identified with the naked eye as something other than a star. Using binoculars, its clouds of nascent stars, luminous gas, and dust can be observed. The Trapezium cluster has many newborn stars, including several brown dwarfs, all of which are at an approximate distance of 1,500 light-years. Named for the four bright stars that form a trapezoid, it is largely illuminated by the brightest stars, which are only a few hundred thousand years old. Observations by the Chandra X-ray Observatory show both the extreme temperatures of the main stars—up to 60,000 kelvins—and the star forming regions still extant in the surrounding nebula.

M78 (NGC 2068) is a nebula in Orion. With an overall magnitude of 8.0, it is significantly dimmer than the Great Orion Nebula that lies to its south; however, it is at approximately the same distance, at 1600 light-years from Earth. It can easily be mistaken for a comet in the eyepiece of a telescope. M78 is associated with the variable star V351 Orionis, whose magnitude changes are visible in very short periods of time. Another fairly bright nebula in Orion is NGC 1999, also close to the Great Orion Nebula. It has an integrated magnitude of 10.5 and is 1500 light-years from Earth. The variable star V380 Orionis is embedded in NGC 1999.

Another famous nebula is IC 434, the Horsehead Nebula, near ζ Orionis. It contains a dark dust cloud whose shape gives the nebula its name. 

NGC 2174 is an emission nebula located 6400 light-years from Earth.

Besides these nebulae, surveying Orion with a small telescope will reveal a wealth of interesting deep-sky objects, including M43, M78, as well as multiple stars including Iota Orionis and Sigma Orionis. A larger telescope may reveal objects such as Barnard's Loop and the Flame Nebula (NGC 2024), as well as fainter and tighter multiple stars and nebulae.

All of these nebulae are part of the larger Orion Molecular Cloud Complex, which is located approximately 1,500 light-years away and is hundreds of light-years across. It is one of the most intense regions of stellar formation visible within our galaxy.

Future

Animation showing Orion's proper motion from 50000 BC to 50000 AD. As you can see, Pi3 Orionis moves the most rapidly.
 
Orion is located on the celestial equator, but it will not always be so located due to the effects of precession of the Earth's axis. Orion lies well south of the ecliptic, and it only happens to lie on the celestial equator because the point on the ecliptic that corresponds to the June solstice is close to the border of Gemini and Taurus, to the north of Orion. Precession will eventually carry Orion further south, and by AD 14000 Orion will be far enough south that it will become invisible from the latitude of Great Britain.

Further in the future, Orion's stars will gradually move away from the constellation due to proper motion. However, Orion's brightest stars all lie at a large distance from the Earth on an astronomical scale—much farther away than Sirius, for example. Orion will still be recognizable long after most of the other constellations—composed of relatively nearby stars—have distorted into new configurations, with the exception of a few of its stars eventually exploding as supernovae, for example Betelgeuse, which is predicted to explode sometime in the next million years.

Green development

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