Stars in Leo

 Leo is one of the 88 modern constellations today, and one of the most easily recognizable due to its many bright stars and a distinctive shape that is resemblance of the crouching lion it depicts. The lion's mane and shoulders also form an asterism known as "The Sickle," which looks like backwards "question mark."

StarsEdi

Leo contains many bright stars.There are four stars of first or second magnitude, which render this constellation especially prominent:


  • Regulus designated Alpha Leonis, is a blue-white main-sequence star of magnitude 1.34, 77.5 light-years from Earth. It is a double star .Its traditional name (Regulus) means "the little king".
  • Beta Leonis, called Denebola, is at the opposite end of the constellation to Regulus. It is a blue-white star of magnitude 2.23, 36 light-years from Earth. The name Denebola means "the lion's tail".
  • Algieba, Gamma Leonis, is a binary star. The primary is a gold-yellow giant star of magnitude 2.61 and the secondary is similar but at magnitude 3.6; they have a period of 600 years and are 126 light-years from Earth. Its traditional name, Algieba, means "the forehead".
  • Delta Leonis, called Zosma, is a blue-white star of magnitude 2.58, 58 light-years from Earth.
  • Epsilon Leonis is a yellow giant of magnitude 3.0, 251 light-years from Earth.
  • Zeta Leonis, called Adhafera, is an optical triple star. It is a white giant star of magnitude 3.65, 260 light-years from Earth. The second-brightest, 39 Leonis, is widely spaced to the south and of magnitude 5.8. 35 Leonis is to the north and of magnitude 6.0.
  • Iota Leonis is a binary star divisible in medium amateur telescopes; they are divisible in small amateur telescopes at their widest in the years 2053–2063. To the unaided eye, Iota Leonis appears to be a yellow-tinged star of magnitude 4.0. The system, 79 light-years from Earth, has components of magnitude 4.1 and 6.7 with a period of 183 years.
  • Tau Leonis is a double star visible in binoculars. The primary is a yellow giant of magnitude 5.0, 621 light-years from Earth. The secondary is a star of magnitude 8. 54 Leonis is a binary star 289 light-years from Earth, divisible in small telescopes. The primary is a blue-white star of magnitude 4.5 and the secondary is a blue-white star of magnitude 6.3.

Other named stars in Leo include Mu Leonis, Rasalas (an abbreviation of "Al Ras al Asad al Shamaliyy", meaning "The Lion's Head Toward the South"); and Theta Leonis, Chertan or Coxa ("hip").

Leo is also home to one bright variable star, the red giant R Leonis. It is a Mira variable with a minimum magnitude of 10 and normal maximum magnitude of 6; it periodically brightens to magnitude 4.4. R Leonis, 330 light-years from Earth.

So this is about the Leo.

As per Indian mythology the lion is vehicle of mother goddess.

Ok.bye then.next will be the story of month Falgun.

Don't forget to comment.

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