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Winter: Orion   Canis Major   Canis Minor   Monoceros   Lepus   Eridanus   Taurus   Auriga   Camelopardalis   Lynx   Gemini   Cancer  
Spring: Hydra   Sextans   Crater   Corvus   Leo   Leo Minor   Ursa Major   Ursa Minor   Canes Venatici   Coma Berenices   Virgo   Bootes  
Summer: Draco   Corona Borealis   Hercules   Ophiuchus   Serpens   Libra   Scorpius   Sagittarius   Scutum   Aquila   Sagitta   Vulpecula   Lyra   Cygnus  
Autumn: Andromeda   Perseus   Pegasus   Cassiopeia   Cephus   Cetus   Lacerta   Delphinus   Equuleus   Capricornus   Aquarius   Pisces   Aries  
Southern Skies: Centaurus   Crux   Lupus   Corona Australis   Piscis Australis   Sculptor   Tucana   Fornax   Dorado   Columba   Puppis   Carina  
(alphabetical links)

CAMELOPARDALIS

The Giraffe

Camelopardalis (also Camelopardus) is a modern constellation, named by Jacob Bartsch in 1624. Something was needed to fill in the space between the queen Cassiopeia, and the great bear, Ursa Major. It was a space with only a few dim stars that did not inspire any particular form, so he used the shape of the space itself, which suggested the figure of a giraffe. He used the Greek name for giraffe, which literally means leopard camel. Camelopardalis hugs the north celestial pole, keeping watch over the north star, Polaris, and harbouring some interesting deep sky objects.

camelopardalis (21K)




NGC 2403

NGC 2403 is a large spiral galaxy discovered by William Herschel in 1788. With a magnitude of 8.4, and 17.8 arc minutes wide, it is easily visible in binoculars. The galaxy is 37,000 light years in diameter, and twelve million light years away. Photo below by the Hubble Space Telescope

NGC2403-Hubble-sm (139K)


NGC 2655

With a magnitude of 10.9 and only 4.9 arc minutes wide, the spiral galaxy NGC 2655 does not appear as large and bright as NGC 2403, but it is still visible - just barely - in large binoculars on a dark night. In small telescopes it is characterized by a bright central core, surrounded by a soft, indistinct halo. Larger telescopes reveal faint wispy spiral arms. The galaxy is 220,000 light years in diameter, and 71 million light years away.

NGC 1501

NGC 1501 is a planetary nebula. Planetary nebulae have nothing to do with planets, and are so named because of their historically round, planetary appearance in early telescopes. The nebula is a small, faint object, less than one arc minute in size, with a central star of magnitude 14. It is 5,000 light years away.




NGC 1502

NGC 1502 is an open star cluster. It contains approximately 45 stars at a distance of 2,700 light years, and is a fine sight for small telescopes, considered by many to be the finest sight in the entire constellation. The star cluster is made even more notable by Kemble's Cascade, pictured below in a photo by Walter MacDonald. This is a "waterfall" of about twenty magnitude nine stars that "cascades" into the sparkling "pool" of NGC 1502. Kemble's Cascade is named for the famed Canadian astronomer, Father Lucian Kemble.

kemblescascade1502 (47K)

Extrasolar Planets

There are two stars with planetary systems discovered so far in Camelopardalis, and both of these stars are visible with the naked eye. The brightest of these stars is HD 33564, with a magnitude of 5.08, 64 light years away. HD 32518 is much fainter, with a magnitude of 6.44, and much farther at a distance of 381 light years. Their locations are shown on the chart below.

camelopardalis-planets (27K)
cometarrowbauriga (2K) cometarrowflynx (3K)

Alphabetical Links to the Constellations

ANDROMEDA   AQUARIUS   AQUILA   ARIES   AURIGA   BOOTES   CAMELOPARDALIS   CANCER   CANES VENATICI   CANIS MAJOR   CANIS MINOR   CAPRICORNUS   CARINA   CASSIOPEIA   CENTAURUS   CEPHEUS   CETUS   COLUMBA   COMA BERENICES   CORONA AUSTRALIS   CORONA BOREALIS   CORVUS   CRATER   CRUX   CYGNUS   DELPHINUS   DORADO   DRACO   EQUULEUS   ERIDANUS   FORNAX   GEMINI   HERCULES   HYDRA   LACERTA   LEO   LEO MINOR   LEPUS   LIBRA   LUPUS   LYNX   LYRA   MONOCEROS   OPHIUCHUS   ORION   PEGASUS   PERSEUS   PISCES   PISCIS AUSTRALIS   PUPPIS   SAGITTA   SAGITTARIUS   SCORPIUS   SCULPTOR   SCUTUM   SERPENS   SEXTANS   TAURUS   TUCANA   URSA MAJOR   URSA MINOR   VIRGO   VULPECULA  



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