For more information about Pegasus, read the transcript of Great Square of Pegasus, the 28 August 1997 StarDate, the daily astronomy-related radio program produced by the McDonald Observatory, University of Texas.
Associated Mythology - Pegasus, created by the power of Poseidon, sprang from the blood of Medusa after Perseus had decapitated her.
The Tropic of Capricorn (23.5 degrees South latitude) is named
after Capricornus; on 22 December (on average), the Sun is directly
overhead (at the zenith) at Noon along the Tropic of Capricorn.
Associated Mythology - For a time, the Greeks identified
Capricornus with the god of nature, Pan, who was pictured as half-man,
half-goat. In fear, Pan escaped the giant Typhon by leaping into the Nile
River and changing his tail to that of a fish. This is the origin of the
word, "panic."
Credits: CoM entries excerpted from Your Guide to
the Constellations, by Lowell L. Koontz, former Planetarium Teacher at
Edison High School, Fairfax County Public Schools.
CoM | SCSA Home | Geoscience-Related Information Servers | Geosystems in FCPS
Capricornus, the Sea Goat
Sign of the Zodiac for
birthdates between 22 December and 19 January; it is the leading
constellation of the "wet" or "water" constellations. Capricornus (KAP-rih-KOR-nus) has a symmetrical shape resembling
a bikini bottom (how appropriate, for a "water" constellation!), but the
stars of Capricornus (FCPS Starfinder, No. 11, Southern Sky) are very faint with no star
brighter than third magnitude. Capricornus appears low in the southern sky
(never at higher altitudes).