The Reticle
Abbreviation: | Ret |
Genitive: | Reticuli |
Origin: | Nicolas Louis de Lacaille, 1756 |
Fully Visible: | 90°S – 22°N |
French astronomer Nicolas Louis de Lacaille (1713–1762) travelled to South Africa in the mid-eighteenth century where he constructed an observatory and spent two years observing the southern skies. Not only did he catalogue nearly 10,000 southern stars, he also surveyed 42 'nebulous' objects and devised over a dozen new constellations. Originally named Le Reticule Romboide, this faint southern hemisphere constellation was later Latinised to Reticulus and eventually Reticulum. This constellation is one of a number of 'modern' constellations named after scientific instruments and commemorates the reticle in the eyepiece of de Lacaille's telescope.
Notable Features
Visible Named Stars |
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The brightest star in the constellation, α Ret, is third-magnitude. None of the visible stars in this constellation have an official name. |
Other Interesting Stars |
HD 23079 |
Tupi |
This seventh-magnitude star is known to have at least one exoplanet. It is located near the northern boundary of the constellation. 'Tupi' is the name of an indigenous people living in the Amazonian basin of South America. |