Thursday, 3 April 2025

A little ramble through Apus the Bird of Paradise

 Stars in the southern hemisphere were of course unknown to European astronomers because no one had travelled there before the 1400s. This is why most of the constellations in this part of the sky are referred to as modern constellations.

One example is Apus the Bird of Paradise which unfortunately like many of these modern constellations contains few if any bright stars. Johann Bayer called the constellation Apus Indica the Indian Bird. That title has been dropped today and it is just referred to as Apus.

Apus is what is called a circumpolar southern hemisphere constellation, this means that from countries like Australia and New Zealand it can be seen all year around. This is much like the familiar group of stars we call the Plough which can be seen all year from countries such as Britain and is called a northern circumpolar constellation.

This constellation is best seen in July which of course in the southern hemisphere is during the winter.

Apus the bird of paradise was introduced to the sky in the 1590s by the Dutch astronomer and cartographer Petrus Plancius from the observations of Dutch navigators Pieter Keyser and Frederick Houtman, when they voyaged to the southern hemisphere and visited countries such as Indonesia or what at that time was known as the Dutch East Indies.

Plancius had produced in 1589 a celestial globe using what information was available regarding the southern stars. These included constellations such as Crux the Southern Cross and Triangulum Australe the Southern Triangle as well as the Magellanic Clouds which were called Nubecula Major and Minor. These were reported by the Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan c 1480-1521 as he journeyed around the world. These we know today are nearby Large and Small Magellanic Clouds which are nearby galaxies to our own Milky Way Galaxy.

Plancius knew that the Dutch navigators Pieter Keyser and Frederick Houtman would be travelling to the southern hemisphere so he met them and trained them to draw and note features in the sky so he could replicate them on a new star globe he was producing. With the knowledge that Keyser and Houtman provided Plancius in either 1597 or early 1598 produced a new celestial globe with an additional 12 constellations. None of these can be seen from Britain and they describe mostly animals and subjects that travellers of the day had seen as they explored the southern hemisphere.

The name of the constellation is derived from the Greek word apous, which means “footless.” (Birds of paradise were at one point in history believed to lack feet). The Greater Bird of Paradise known in India had a magnificent white, yellow and red plumage but unsightly legs, which were cut off by the natives desiring to offer the white man only the attractive part of the bird. There are no myths associated with the constellation.

In China the constellation was referred to as E Cho the Curious Sparrow or the Little Wonder Bird.


Apus is located near the south pole star, there are no bright stars in Apus, the brightest are alpha at magnitude 3.8 and is around 430 light years away. The sky must be clear and dark to see this star.  It is a K class giant star with a surface temperature of around 4,000 degrees it is cooler than the Sun.

Apus is an example of a constellation where using Johann Bayer’s Greek alphabet sequence does not work. This is because the second brightest star is gamma with a magnitude of 3.9 compared to the brightness of beta which is magnitude 4.2.

Although the Milky Way flows through Apus there are no bright clusters of stars to be seen. The brightest is NGC 6101 a globular cluster lying around 50,000 light years away. However, at magnitude 9.2 a telescope would be needed to see it.


                                                     www.theramblingastronomer.co.uk


 

No comments:

Post a Comment