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      • Columba constellation is located in the southern sky. Its name means “the dove” in Latin. The constellation’s original name was Columba Noachi, meaning “Noah’s dove.” It was named after the biblical dove that informed Noah that the Great Flood was receding.
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  2. The constellation is home to the blue subgiant Phact (Alpha Columbae) and the runaway star Mu Columbae. Notable deep sky objects in Columba include the barred spiral galaxy NGC 1808 and the globular cluster NGC 1851. Facts, location and map. Columba is the 54th constellation in size, occupying an area of 270 square degrees.

  3. It can be found in the southern sky in the months around December, but is a faint constellation containing only two stars brighter than fourth magnitude. It contains only one bright deep sky object, the globular cluster NGC 1851 , which is designated C73 in the Caldwell catalogue.

  4. Columba is a faint constellation designated in the late sixteenth century, remaining in official use, with its rigid limits set in the 20th century. Its name is Latin for dove. It takes up 1.31% of the southern celestial hemisphere and is just south of Canis Major and Lepus .

  5. Latitude: 51° 28’ 47” N. Longitude: 0° 00’ 00” E. Timezone: Europe/London. Today's Columba rise, transit and set times from Greenwich, United Kingdom are the following (all times relative to the local timezone Europe/London): Azimuth: 125.7° RISE 12:36. Max altitude: 2.8° TRANSIT 14:17. Azimuth: 234.3° SET 15:58.

  6. Columba, constellation in the southern sky at about 6 hours right ascension and 35° south in declination. Its brightest star is Alpha Columbae (sometimes called Phact, from the Arabic for “ring dove”), with a magnitude of 2.6. In 1612 Dutch cartographer Petrus Plancius introduced this constellation.

  7. Columba constellation, also known as the Dove Constellation, is regarded as a fairly small and faint constellation in the Southern Celestial sky. It is listed as the 54th largest Constellation overall filling around 0.7% of the night sky.

  8. Jan 2, 2017 · Location. Columba is the 54th largest constellation in the night sky, and can be seen by observers located between +45° and -90° of latitude, although best seen in February by northern hemisphere observers, and from the southern hemisphere during the summer months.

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