Exploring the Famous Southern Cross Constellation (2024)

Exploring the Famous Southern Cross Constellation (1)

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  • Southern Cross stars
  • Skywatching targets
  • Locating the Southern Cross
  • Navigation uses
  • Cultural significance
  • Additional resources
  • Bibliography

The Southern Cross is an asterism made up of the most visible stars in the constellation Crux.

The iconic group of stars is visible mainly from the Southern Hemisphere. Because of its orientation in the night sky, the Southern Cross has historically served as an essential navigational guide: two of its major stars form a line that points to the South Pole. The Southern Cross is also featured in the flags of several Southern Hemisphere countries.

Crux is the smallest of the 88 official constellations defined by the International Astronomical Union (IAU). The Southern Cross is not the entire region of the sky that makes up Crux, but rather just the four (or five) stars that make its iconic cross shape: That's what makes it an asterism.

Related: How many stars are in the universe?

What stars are in the Southern Cross?

Exploring the Famous Southern Cross Constellation (2)

The Southern Cross is made up of four or five stars, depending on who you ask. The four main stars, according to Constellation Guide, are Acrux (also known as Alpha Crucis), Mimosa (Beta Crucis), Gacrux (Gamma Crucis) and Imai (Delta Crucis). Acrux is the southernmost star, while Gacrux is the farthest north. Mimosa and Imai form the crossbeam.

The Southern Cross on Brazil's national flag

Brazil's national flag shows the Southern Cross in reverse compared to the stars on Australia, Samoa, Papua New Guinea and New Zealand's flags. That's because, according toUniversidade Federal de Santa Catarina, the Brazilian flag shows the stars across the Southern Hemisphere in a mirror image. Imagine observing the stars over Rio de Janeiro from a fictional place "outside of the sky."

The fifth brightest star in the Crux constellation, Ginan (Epsilon Crucis), is included in some depictions of the Southern Cross: for example, the national flags of Australia, Papua New Guinea, Samoa and Brazil. Ginan appears in the space between Imai and Acrux, not as part of the main cross formation. It's left off of the national flag of New Zealand, which features only the four brightest stars of the cross.

Alpha, beta and delta Crucius — also known as Acrux, Mimosa and Imai — likely share a common origin, wrote Constellation Guide, as they are all made up of massive, hot-burning B-type stars.

Acrux, the brightest and southernmost star in the Southern Cross, is the 13th-brightest star in the night sky with a visual magnitude of +.76, according to a 1966 paper published in the journal Monthly Notes of the Astronomical Society of Southern Africa. The lower a star's visual magnitude is, the brighter that star is. For comparison, the brightest star in Earth's sky is Sirius, with a magnitude of -1.46.

While for magnitude purposes it is considered to be one star, Acrux is actually a multiple star system, according to the Astronomical Society of Southern Africa. While it looks like one star to an unassisted observer on Earth, more sensitive telescopes reveal that it is made up of several components.

What else can you see in the Southern Cross?

Astronomers have identified several other objects of interest in or near the Southern Cross. For the best view of these objects, we recommend using binoculars or a telescope. If you need equipment, our best binoculars and best telescopes guides may help.

In order to find the planetary nebulae, it's helpful to know their magnitude, right ascension (RA) and declination (Dec).

Magnitude tells you how bright an object is as it appears from the Earth. The lower the number of an object's magnitude, the brighter the object. For example, an object of a -1 magnitude is brighter than one with a magnitude of +2.

Right ascension is to the sky what longitude is to the surface of the Earth, corresponding to east and west directions. It's measured in hours, minutes and seconds.

Declination tells you how high an object will rise in the sky. Like Earth's latitude, declination measures north and south. Its units are degrees, arcminutes and arcseconds. There are 60 arcmins in a degree and 60 arcsecs in an arcmin.

The Coalsack Nebula

This image featuring the Coalsack nebula was taken by the Wide Field Imager on the MPG/ESO 2.2-meter telescope (Image credit: ESO)

Coalsack Nebula

Approximate distance from Earth: 600 light-years

Location: 12h 50m (right ascension), −62° 30' (declination)

The Coalsack Nebula according to the European Southern Observatory (ESO) forms a conspicuous dark silhouette against the Milky Way. The nebula, wrote the ESO, has been recognizable to people in the southern hemisphere for "as long as our species has existed." That's because it is one of the most prominent objects of its kind visible to the unaided eye — an inky blotch in an otherwise bright area at night. Millions of years from now, the ESO wrote, the Coalsack will end this dark phase and ignite with new stars, flammable just like the dark coal it's named after.

The Jewel Box

Exploring the Famous Southern Cross Constellation (4)

The Jewel Box

Magnitude: +4.2

Approximate distance from Earth: 6,440 light-years

Location: 12h 53m 42s (right ascension), −60° 22.0' (declination)

Another object of interest in the Southern Cross is the Jewel Box, a galactic star cluster located about 6400 light-years away. According to the European Space Agency (ESA) it is approximately 16 million years old, and is just bright enough to be seen with the naked eye. Its nickname dates back to the 1830s and comes from the English astronomer John Herschel (son of astronomer William Herschel), the ESA wrote, because its twinkling blue and orange stars made Herschel think of a piece of exotic jewelry.

How can you find Southern Cross?

According to the IAU, Crux is the smallest of the 88 officially recognized constellations. But it's still easy to spot for viewers in the Southern Hemisphere, especially those more than 35 degrees south where the stars are visible any time of night, all year round. It's even visible some times of year for those in the Northern Hemisphere below about 26 degrees, wrote EarthSky. Hawaii, southern Florida, and some parts of Texas, for example, will see the stars of the cross clear the horizon on clear May evenings.

To spot the Southern Cross, viewers use two "pointer stars," Alpha Centauri and Beta Centauri, wrote The Australian Broadcasting Corporation (the ABC). That's in part how skywatchers can separate the true Southern Cross from a number of false crosses in the night sky.

From the Northern Hemisphere, the cross will generally appear vertical. But in the Southern Hemisphere, according to the ABC, the cross could appear to be lying on its side or upside down depending on the month and the time of night.

The easiest way to make sure you're looking at the right Southern Cross is to use a compass. Look south, follow the Milky Way, and draw a line between the bright pointer stars to find the cross.

How is the Southern Cross used for navigation?

The Southern Cross can be used to point a navigator on the Earth's surface toward the celestial south pole, according to EarthSky. A line drawn from Gacrux at the top of the cross through Acrux at the bottom will point to the south.

Navigators using traditional Polynesian wayfinding techniques also use the stars of the Southern Cross as one of many pointers to the south, according to the Polynesian Voyaging Society.

The cultural significance of the Southern Cross

The Southern Cross asterism appears in multiple national flags, as noted above. The stars were valuable guides to European explorers who left the stars they knew — Polaris and the Big Dipper, for example — to navigate seas in the Southern Hemisphere. The first European to describe the five stars of the Southern Cross, Andrea Corsali, wrote of their beauty and behavior in 1515 for his patrons in the Medici family, according to a 2019 article from Hordern House. Corsali's description provided a resource for centuries of later European explorers.

But the stars were first known by civilizations that far predated the European seafarers: for example, the ABC lists several myths from Indigenous peoples of Australia identifying the stars as part of a wedge-tailed eagle, an emu's head, or a group of trouble-making youngsters. In fact, the IAU recognizes the star Ginan by the name given to it thousands of years ago by the Wardaman people of northern Australia, according to a news article in the Sydney Morning Herald. The Indigenous Knowledge Institute at the University of Melbourne notes that Indigenous Australians used the Southern Cross stars to navigate.

The Maori, the Indigenous people of New Zealand, also named and referred to the stars identified by the IAU as the Southern Cross. The Maori considered the asterism to be the anchor of a celestial canoe, according to Te Aka, a Maori language dictionary.

Incan astronomers associated the same area of the sky with the tinamou, a ground-dwelling, seed-eating bird. In a 1981 paper in the Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, the author speculates that while the stars of the Southern Cross rose in the sky each year, tinamous likely thrived on the arrival of the rainy season. The cycle of those stars corresponded with the time in which farmers would have been planting their vulnerable seed.

Additional resources

For more on the Southern Cross and traditional Polynesian wayfinding, watch this video of navigator Nainoa Thomson talking about those stars. And to get another insight into why people choose particular stars as constellations and asterisms, check out this article from Science News Explores.

Bibliography

Annab, R. (2020, May 28). Stellar navigation and mathematics. Indigenous Knowledge Institute. https://indigenousknowledge.unimelb.edu.au/curriculum/resources/stellar-navigation-and-mathematics

Blane, D. (2014, February 24). Alpha crucis — double star of the month. ASSA. http://assa.saao.ac.za/sections/double-and-variable-stars/double-stars/news-and-articles/alpha-crucis-double-star-of-the-month/

Corben, P. M. (1966). Photoelectric magnitudes and colours for bright southern stars. Monthly Notes of the Astronomical Society of South Africa, 25, 44. https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1966MNSSA..25...44C

Duarte, P. A. (2008, May 2). Astronomia da bandeira brasileira. Departamento de Geociências da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina. https://web.archive.org/web/20080502120005/http://www.cfh.ufsc.br/~planetar/textos/astroban.htm

Hook, R. (2015, October 14). A cosmic sackful of black coal—Part of the coalsack nebula in close-up. Www.Eso.Org; European Southern Observatory. https://www.eso.org/public/news/eso1539/

Lomb, N. (2008, July 21). Finding south using the Southern Cross — an essential skill. Observations. https://www.maas.museum/observations/2008/07/21/finding-south-using-the-southern-cross-an-essential-skill/

Mannix, L. (2018, January 16). Southern Cross star given new name to recognise Aboriginal astronomy. The Sydney Morning Herald. https://www.smh.com.au/technology/southern-cross-star-renamed-to-recognise-aboriginal-astronomy-20180116-h0j1yf.html

McClure, B. (2021, April 1). How to see the southern cross from the northern hemisphere | favorite star patterns | earthsky. EarthSky.org. https://earthsky.org/favorite-star-patterns/the-southern-cross-signpost-of-southern-skies/

Meridian pointers to south. Hōkūleʻa. Retrieved October 29, 2022, from https://www.hokulea.com/education-at-sea/polynesian-navigation/polynesian-non-instrument-wayfinding/meridian-pointers-to-south/

Sharkey, C. (2009, October 29). Opening up a colourful cosmic Jewel Box. Www.Spacetelescope.Org; European Space Agency. https://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic0913/

Southern cross: Guide to south celestial pole — constellation guide. (n.d.). Retrieved October 29, 2022, from https://www.constellation-guide.com/the-southern-cross/

The Constellations. The International Astronomical Union; IAU. Retrieved October 27, 2022, from https://www.iau.org/public/themes/constellations/

Virtual tours » beginner's guide to the night sky(Abc science). (2019). Australian Broadcasting Corporation. https://www.abc.net.au/science/starhunt/tour/virtual/

Waka o tamarēreti, te—Te aka māori dictionary. Waka o Tamarēreti, Te - Te Aka Māori Dictionary. Retrieved October 29, 2022, from https://www.maoridictionary.co.nz/

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Exploring the Famous Southern Cross Constellation (5)

Vicky Stein

Contributing Writer

Vicky Stein is a science writer based in California. She has a bachelor's degree in ecology and evolutionary biology from Dartmouth College and a graduate certificate in science writing from the University of California, Santa Cruz (2018). Afterwards, she worked as a news assistant for PBS NewsHour, and now works as a freelancer covering anything from asteroids to zebras. Follow her most recent work (and most recent pictures of nudibranchs) on Twitter.

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Exploring the Famous Southern Cross Constellation (2024)

FAQs

Exploring the Famous Southern Cross Constellation? ›

The Southern Cross is made up of four or five stars, depending on who you ask. The four main stars, according to Constellation Guide, are Acrux

Acrux
Acrux is the brightest star in the southern constellation of Crux. It has the Bayer designation α Crucis, which is Latinised to Alpha Crucis and abbreviated Alpha Cru or α Cru. With a combined visual magnitude of +0.76, it is the 13th-brightest star in the night sky.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Acrux
(also known as Alpha Crucis), Mimosa (Beta Crucis), Gacrux (Gamma Crucis) and Imai (Delta Crucis). Acrux is the southernmost star, while Gacrux is the farthest north.

How to see the Southern Cross constellation? ›

How to find the Southern Cross. Crux lies between the constellations Centaurus the Centaur and Musca the Fly. You can locate it simply by looking for four bright stars close together. The stars are less than 5 degrees apart.

What is the significance of the Southern Cross constellation? ›

The Southern Cross has been a part of Australia's First Nations cosmology for millennia. European voyagers in the late 15th century took it as a sign of divine blessing for their conquests. It was a symbol of rebellion after Eureka Stockade.

What is the myth behind the Southern Cross? ›

Among stories of indigenous Australian star lore, the Southern Cross depicts a possum hiding in a tree. For the Tainui Māori of New Zealand, it represents Te Punga, the anchor of a great sky canoe. For Wairarapa Māori, the Southern Cross is Māhutonga, an opening for storm winds to escape through the Milky Way.

What are some interesting facts about the Southern Cross? ›

The Southern Cross carries cultural significance in many countries in the southern hemisphere. A stone image of Crux constellation has been found in Machu Picchu in Peru. The Inca knew the constellation as Chakana, which means “the stair.” The Maori called it Te Punga, or “the anchor.”

Where in the US can you see the Southern Cross? ›

You can see see all of Crux from the U.S. state of Hawaii. In the contiguous U.S., you need to be in southern Florida or Texas (about 26 degrees north latitude or farther south). Even from the far-southern contiguous U.S., you have a limited viewing window for catching the Southern Cross.

Where to look for the Southern Cross? ›

Location. The Southern Cross lies in the far southern sky, at the forefeet of Centaurus. It is the most prominent of the three cross asterisms in the southern celestial hemisphere. The other two asterisms – the False Cross and the Diamond Cross – are formed by stars in the constellations Carina and Vela.

What does the Southern Cross tell you? ›

How is the Southern Cross used for navigation? The Southern Cross can be used to point a navigator on the Earth's surface toward the celestial south pole, according to EarthSky. A line drawn from Gacrux at the top of the cross through Acrux at the bottom will point to the south.

Why can t we see the Southern Cross constellation from Texas? ›

It officially became the smallest of our 88 constellations in 1920. Crux is not visible in its entirety from any location more than 27 degrees north of the equator, which includes most of the United States.

What is the Southern Cross star symbol? ›

A radiant star group helped early sailors find their way to Australia as they voyaged for many months from Europe. Known as the Southern Cross, its 5 stars were useful night-time companions to the settlers and explorers. It became one of the first symbols of the Great South Land.

What is the religious significance of the Southern Cross? ›

They also claimed it as a Christian symbol. “It was named as a cross very early on by the Portuguese and that was important to Portuguese and Spanish navigators, this idea that it was the cross of Christ placed in the Southern Hemisphere,” Dr Bush says.

What is the indigenous story of the Southern Cross? ›

The Southern Cross in most stories is connected with a story of the first man to die on Earth. The common theme of stories from all the Kamilaroi and neighbours is that during the Creation time, two men and a women came from the red country, and had been shown which plants they could eat.

What is the spiritual meaning of the Southern Cross constellation? ›

To the Aborigines and the Maori, Crux is representative of animist spirits who play a central role in their ancestral beliefs. To the ancient Egyptians, Crux was the place where the Sun Goddess Horus was crucified, and marked the passage of the winter season.

What does a Southern Cross tattoo mean? ›

The Southern Cross as a symbol began with the miners uprising against the Government near Ballarat, at the Eureka Stockade in 1854. The flag for many represented a “fair go”. Realistically, not only did it symbolise unity for many, but also division.

What is the proper name for the Southern Cross? ›

Crux (/krʌks/) is a constellation of the southern sky that is centred on four bright stars in a cross-shaped asterism commonly known as the Southern Cross. It lies on the southern end of the Milky Way's visible band. The name Crux is Latin for cross.

Can the Southern Cross only be seen in the Southern Hemisphere? ›

"A lot of people think you can't see the Southern Cross in the Northern Hemisphere, but that's not actually true," says Watson. If you're north of the equator but south of a latitude of about 25 degrees, which is around say Hawaii and parts of northern Africa, you can still see the Southern Cross.

Can you see the Southern Cross from Key West? ›

The event's primary attraction for astronomers is the 180-degree viewing of the Southern Cross and other constellations, comets and stars that are visible from that part of Florida Keys island chain — virtually the only place in the continental United States where they can be seen.

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