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Johann Bayer

 
Scientist: Johann Bayer

German astronomer (1572–1625)

Born in Rhain in Germany, Bayer was a lawyer by profession. In 1603 he published Uranometria, the most complete catalog of pretelescopic astronomy. To Tycho Brahe's catalog of 1602, he added nearly a thousand new stars and twelve new southern constellations. The catalog's main importance, however, rests on Bayer's innovation of naming stars by letters of the Greek alphabet. Before Bayer, prominent stars were given proper names, mainly Arabic ones such as Altair and Rigel. If not individually named, they would be referred to by their position in the constellation. Bayer introduced the scheme, which is still used, of referring to the brightest star of a constellation by ‘alpha’, the second brightest by ‘beta’, and so on. Thus, Altair, which is the brightest star in the constellation Aquila, is systematically named Alpha Aquilae. If there were more stars than letters of the Greek alphabet, the dimmer ones could be denoted by letters of the Roman alphabet and, if necessary, numbers.

Bayer's other proposed innovation – to name constellations after characters in the Bible – was less successful.

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The constellation Orion in Bayers Uranometria

Johann Bayer (1572 – March 7, 1625) was a German lawyer and uranographer (celestial cartographer). He was born in Rain, Bavaria in 1572. He began his study of philosophy in Ingolstadt in 1592, and moved later to Augsburg to begin work as a lawyer. He grew interested in astronomy during his time in Augsburg. He ultimately became legal advisor to the Augsburg city council in 1612 and died in 1625.

He is most famous for his star atlas Uranometria, published in 1603, which was the first atlas to cover the entire celestial sphere. It introduced a new system of star designation which has become known as the Bayer designation. It introduced 12 new constellations to fill in the far south of the sky, which was unknown to ancient Greece and Rome.

The crater Bayer on the Moon is named after him.

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