Astronomy, Chronology, Zodiac

Astronomy: Zodiac

ConstellationDescriptionDatesBrightest Star
AriesRam21.03-19.04Hamal
TaurusBull20.04-20.05Aldebaran
GeminiTwins21.05-21.06Castor & Pollux
CancerCrab22.06-22.07Al Tarf
LeoLion23.07-22.08Regulus
VirgoVirgin23.08-22.09Spica
LibraScales23.09-22.10Zubeneschamali
Scorpius Scorpion23.10-21.11Antares
SagittariusArcher22.11-21.12Kaus Australis
(Ophiuchus)Serpent-bearer29.11-17.12Rasalhague
CapricornusSea-goat22.12-19.01Deneb Algedi
AquariusWater-bearer20.01-18.02Sadalmelik 
PiscesFishes19.02-20.03Alpherg

From day to day the Sun, Moon and all the other planets except Pluto (inclination ≈17.1º) appear to move anticlockwise across the sky within the zodiac, a strip ≈8º either side of the ecliptic. The Moon overtakes the Sun about once a month.

The Greeks divided the zodiac into twelve areas and named them after the constellations that occupied the positions at the time. Due to precession the constellations are now 30º east of the constellations for which they were named. The astrological dates are therefore about a month out from those of the constellations, the astronomy dates advancing by approximately one day every seventy-one years.

Claudius Ptolemaeus (c.100-c.170) listed forty-eight constellations, all of them, of course, visible from the northern hemisphere. More were added in the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, especially when explorers began to visit the southern hemisphere.

In 1930 the sky was divided up into eighty-eight areas. This was primarily to help make the work of the astronomers more efficient, and so the revised boundaries of the constellations do not therefore in any meaningful sense equate to those of the zodiac signs. Along with the twelve original constellations a thirteenth constellation, Ophiuchus, was included within the bounds of the zodiac. The direction of any celestial object can be indicated by saying that it ‘lies in’ a certain constellation.

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