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Encyclopedia :
G :
GE :
GEM :
Gemini |
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Gemini
Notable featuresGemini includes two bright stars, named after the two twins, who correspond to the Dioscuri in Greek mythology - Castor (α), a pretty telescopic binary (actually sextuple), and Pollux (β), which is brighter and more southwesterly. The other stars are relatively dim - only one, Alhena (γ) is ever seen from a large city - and trace out a rectangle to the southeast. The planet Pluto was discovered in this constellation in 1930, near the star Wasat (δ Geminorum). Notable deep sky objects The brightest deep sky object of Gemini is M35, an open cluster of 5th magnitude, 2 800 light-years from earth. It is northwest of η Geminorum, near the western edge of the constellation. MythologySince this constellation is easily viewable as two parallel stick figures [1], considering faint stars visible to the naked eye, it was associated with the myth of Castor and Polydeuces (also known as the Dioscuri). The myth of these twins heavily concerns cattle theft, and may be connected to early views of the milky way, as a herd of dairy cows or cattle, by which they are situated. The orientation of the constellation can vary (since they readily form stick figures whether leaning right or left), though the twins are usually viewed as left leaning. However, when right leaning, one of the twins resides in the milky way, and the other outside it, a situation making it appear that one of the twins is stealing the cattle, and the other is observing. In this situation, together with the area of the sky that is deserted (now considered as the new and extremely faint constellations Camelopardalis and Lynx), and the other features of the area in the Zodiac sign of Gemini (i.e. Orion, Auriga, and Canis Major), this may be the origin of the myth of the cattle of Geryon, which forms one of The Twelve Labours of Herakles. Astrology The astrological sign Gemini (May 21 - June 20) is associated with the constellation. Some famous Geminians: Dante Alighieri, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Walt Whitman, Paul Gauguin, W.B. Yeats, Thomas Mann, John Maynard Keynes, Al Jolson, Johnny Depp (June 9), Stan Laurel, Cole Porter, Moe Howard, John F. Kennedy (May 29), Dean Martin, Judy Garland, George H.W. Bush (June 12), Marilyn Monroe (June 1), Allen Ginsberg, Bob Dylan (May 24), Paul McCartney (June 18), and Morrissey.
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