Ke Kā o Makaliʻi (lit.'The Canoe-Bailer of Makali‘i') is a Hawaiian constellation consisting of five stars in a curving formation in the shape of a bailer surrounding the western constellation Orion, although not including any stars from it. The constellation is seen to rise in the east like a cup and set in the west pouring onto the western horizon.[1]

Ke Kā o Makali‘i comprises five stars:

  • Capella (Hawaiian: Hoku-lei, lit.'Star-Wreath')
  • Beta Aurigae (Hawaiian: Na Mahoe, lit.'The Twins', or Nana-mua-ma, lit.'Nana-mua and associate'),
    • Castor (Hawaiian: Nana-mua, lit.'Look forward')
    • Pollux (Hawaiian: Nana-hope, lit.'Look behind')
  • Procyon (Hawaiian: Puana, lit.'Blossom')
  • Sirius (Hawaiian: ‘A‘a, lit.'Burning brightly')

References

  1. University of Hawaii. "Hawaiian Star Lines and Names for Stars".


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.