Online Encyclopedia

TAURUS (" the Bull ")

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 456 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TAURUS (" the Bull ")  , in astronomy, the second sign of the zodiac (q.v.), denoted by the symbol 'd . It is also a constellation of very
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great antiquity, the Pleiades and Hyades, two
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star clusters, being possibly referred to in the Old Testament; Aldebaran, a star, is mentioned by
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Hesiod and Homer . Ptolemy catalogued 44 stars, Tycho Brahe 43, Hevelius 51 . The Greeks fabled this constellation to be the bull which
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bore Europa across the seas to Crete, and was afterwards raised to the heavens by
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Jupiter. a
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Tauri, or Aldebaran, is a brilliant star of a reddish colour and magnitude 1.2; this star is the
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principal
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object of the
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group named the Hyades, named after the seven daughters of
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Atlas and Aethra—Ambrosia, Coronis,• Eudora, Pasithoe, Plexaris, Pytho and Tycho—fabled by the Greeks to have been transformed into stars by Jupiter for bewailing the
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death of their
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brother Hyas . Another star group in this constellation is the Pleiades . X Tauri is an "
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Algol " variable, varying in magnitude from 3.4 to 4.2 . Nebula M.1 Tauri is a famous " crab " nebula, so named by Lord Rosse from its clawlike protuberances; it is the first of the series of nebula on the enumeration of Messier .

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