Ophiuchus is one of the 88 constellations, and was also one of the 48 listed by Ptolemy. Of the 13 zodiacal constellations (constellations that contain the Sun during the course of the year), Ophiuchus is the only one which is not counted as an astrological sign — see below for more information.
Ophiuchus is depicted as a man supporting a serpent; the interposition of his body divides the snake into two parts, Serpens Caput and Serpens Cauda, which are nonetheless counted as one constellation.
RS Ophiuchi is part of a strange class called recurrent novae, whose brightness increases at irregular intervals by hundreds of times in a period of just a few days.
Barnard's Star, one of the nearest stars to the Solar System (the only stars closer are the Alpha Centauri binary system and Proxima Centauri), lies in Ophiuchus. (It is located to the left of β and straight up from ν in the chart.)
The most recent interpretation is that the figure represents the legendary physician Asclepius, who learned the secrets of life and death from one serpent bringing another some herbs which healed it (Asclepius had previously tried to kill it). In order to avoid the human race becoming immortal under Asclepius' care, Zeus eventually killed him with a bolt of lightning, but placed him in the heavens to honour his good works. The involvement in the myth of Chiron may be connected to the nearby presence of the constellation Sagittarius, which was in later times occasionally considered to represent Chiron (who was more usually identified as the constellation Centaurus).
Another possibility is that the figure represents the demise during the Trojan War of the Trojan priest Laocoön, who was strangled by a snake or a sea serpent after warning the Trojans against accepting the Trojan Horse. A suggestive statue in the Vatican Museums depicts the tragedy.
A third possibility is Apollo wrestling with the Python to take control of the oracle at Delphi.
There is also the story of Phorbas, a Thessalonikan who rescued the people of the island of Rhodes from a plague of serpents and was granted a place in the sky in honor of this deed.
The most important historical event in Ophiuchus was the Supernova of 1604, also named Kepler's Supernova, whose explosion was first observed on October 9, 1604, near θ Ophiuchi. Johannes Kepler saw it first on October 16, but studied it so extensively that the supernova was subsequently named after him. He published his findings in a book entitled De stella nova in pede Serpentarii (On the New Star in Ophiuchus's Foot). Galileo used its brief appearance to counter the Aristotelian dogma that the heavens are changeless.
It occurred only 32 years after another supernova in Cassiopeia that had been observed by Tycho Brahe; the last supernova before then had occurred in 1054 (see Crab Nebula), and after Kepler's no further naked-eye supernovae were observed until 1987 (see Supernova 1987a.)
The reason why Ophiuchus is not a part of the western astrological zodiac is because that zodiac is defined on the basis of the sun spending an equal amount of time in twelve astrological signs starting at the vernal equinox in the northern hemisphere — this is called the tropical zodiac. There is also a sidereal zodiac, which is based on the actual location of the stars in the sky, and which is used by Hindu and some Western astrologers. At present, the sun is in Ophiuchus from November 30 to December 19.
Ophiuchus | Змиеносец (съзвездие) | Serpentari (constel·lació) | Hadonoš (souhvězdí) | Slangeholderen | Schlangenträger (Sternbild) | Οφιούχος (αστερισμός) | Ofiuco | Serpentisto (konstelacio) | Ophiuchus | Fear na bPéisteanna | 뱀주인자리 | Ophiuchus | Ophiuchus | נושא הנחש | Ophiuchus (sidus) | Gyvatnešis | Kígyótartó csillagkép | Slangendrager | へびつかい座 | Slangeberaren | Wężownik (gwiazdozbiór) | Ophiuchus | Ofiucus (constelaţie) | Змееносец (созвездие) | Súhvezdie Hadonos | Käärmeenkantaja | Ormbäraren | กลุ่มดาวคนแบกงู | Ophiuchus (takımyıldız) | Змієносець (сузір'я) | 蛇夫座
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