(alphabetical links)
LEO MINOR
The Little Lion

Leo Minor - Alexander Jamieson - 1822
Leo Minor is one of seven constellations introduced by the famous Polish astronomer Johannes Hevelius (1611-1687). In his catalogue of 1564 stars, Prodromus Astronomiae, he included the seven new constellations: Canes Venatici, Lacerta, Leo Minor, Lynx, Scutum, Sextans, and Vulpecula. To the brightest star in Leo Minor, Hevelius attached the name Praecipua, the Latin term for chief, or leader. Praecipua has a visual magnitude of 3.83, and it is 98 light years away from Earth. One must have quite an imagination to see a lion cub in the small grouping of stars squeezed between Leo and Ursa Major, for much like its corporeal namesake, the constellation of Leo Minor keeps itself safely hidden in the celestial undergrowth.
There has been one exoplanet found so far in Leo Minor. It has a mass of 1.78 Jupiters, and orbits a star labeled HD 87883, just beyond the limits of naked eye visibility. For more information, see NASA's Planet Quest.
NGC 3344
There are a few faint galaxies in Leo Minor, the brightest of which is NGC 3344, a face-on spiral with a magnitude of 11. It is 15 million light years away.
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