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zodiac

 
('dē-ăk') pronunciation
n.
    1. Astronomy. A band of the celestial sphere extending about 8° to either side of the ecliptic that represents the path of the principal planets, the moon, and the sun.
    2. In astrology, this band divided into 12 equal parts called signs, each 30° wide, bearing the name of a constellation for which it was originally named but with which it no longer coincides owing to the precession of the equinoxes.
    3. A diagram or figure representing the zodiac.
  1. A complete circuit; a circle.

[Middle English, from Old French zodiaque, from Latin zōdiacus, from Greek zōidiakos (kuklos), (circle) of the zodiac, from zōidion, small represented figure, zodiacal sign, diminutive of zōion, living being. See zoon1.]

zodiacal zo·di'a·cal (-dī'ə-kəl) adj.

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A band around the sky about 18° wide, centered on the ecliptic, in which the Sun, Moon, and planets move. The band is divided into 12 signs of the zodiac, each 30° long, that were named by the ancient Greeks after the constellations that used to occupy these positions; “zodiac” means “circle of animals,” and only Libra is inanimate. Over the past 2,000 years, precession has moved the constellations eastward by over 30° so that they no longer coincide with the old signs.

The astrological images and symbols of the zodiac.
(click to enlarge)
The astrological images and symbols of the zodiac. (credit: © Merriam-Webster Inc.)
Belt around the heavens extending about 9° on either side of the ecliptic. The orbits of the Moon and the major planets lie entirely within the zodiac. In astrology, each of 12 constellations along this circle is considered to occupy 1/12 (30°) of it. The positions of the Sun and planets when a person is born and their motion through these constellations are said to exert influence on his or her life, though precession of the equinoxes has shifted the constellations eastward, and the Sun no longer passes through them on the traditional dates: Aries, the ram (March 21 – April 19); Taurus, the bull (April 20 – May 20); Gemini, the twins (May 21 – June 21); Cancer, the crab (June 22 – July 22); Leo, the lion (July 23 – August 22); Virgo, the virgin (August 23 – September 22); Libra, the balance (September 23 – October 23); Scorpius (see Scorpio), the scorpion (October 24 – November 21); Sagittarius, the archer (November 22 – December 21); Capricornus (see Capricorn), the goat (December 22 – January 19); Aquarius, the water bearer (January 20 – February 18); Pisces, the fish (February 19 – March 20).

For more information on zodiac, visit Britannica.com.

The band of sky through which the Sun, Moon, and planets apparently move in the course of the year. The Babylonians, about 2500 years ago, divided the zodiac into 12 parts, which correspond to constellations. These zodiacal constellations, in order around the sky, are Aries, the Ram; Taurus, the Bull; Gemini, the Twins; Cancer, the Crab; Leo, the Lion; Virgo, the Virgin; Libra, the Scales; Scorpius, the Scorpion; Sagittarius, the Archer, Capricornus, the Sea Goat; Aquarius, the Water Carrier; and Pisces, the Fish. These constellations are based on Greek myths.

Because of the precession of the equinoxes, the positions of the constellations in the sky have drifted from the dates of the year with which they were associated thousands of years ago. Thus the popular astrological “signs” of the zodiac are not actually those that currently correspond to the sky. Though the vernal equinox is often called the first point of Aries, precession has moved it into Pisces, not far from Aquarius. See also Precession of equinoxes.

The Sun actually passes through parts of 13 constellations, as currently defined. Also, if the zodiac is defined as the region within latitudes ±8°, which accommodates the eight planets through Neptune, it contains all or part of 24 constellations. See also Constellation; Ecliptic.


astronomy The band of our sky within which the Sun and its other planets appear to travel, divided traditionally into twelve equal-sized segments named sequentially Aries, Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn, Aquarius, and Pisces. However, while each of these is classically the name of a specific star pattern, still used, along with 76 outside this band, as one of the variously sized polygons (‘constellations’) into which the heavens are fixedly divided, they have a distinct meaning for the zodiac.

The apparent annular path of the Sun derives from the orbit of Earth in its plane, the ecliptic, hence is a line circling Earth. The apparent paths of the other planets are composites of their individual orbits, each of which is tilted somewhat relative to the ecliptic, and Earth's orbit; hence they range through a band of sky straddling the ecliptic. This band, the zodiac, has an angular width to an observer on Earth of only ±9°. Convention uses these twelve names distinctively such that the Aries segment of the zodiac begins at the point in the sky wherein sits the Sun at the moment of the northern spring equinox; this is the First Point of Aries. Since the precessional gyration of Earth's axis causes the year of the seasons, the tropical year, to arrive about 20 minutes before completion of one full orbit relative to the stars, the zodiac fails by 50.2~ arcsecs to complete a full circuit of stars. Thus, while the zodiac originated with the Sun in the constellation Aries, it is now in, and well through, the constellation Pisces, creeping one constellation back in a little over two millennia, back through the whole twelve segments in about 25 800 years. It should enter Aquarius soon after 2500.

With Aries starting on the northern spring equinox, Cancer starts with the northern summer solstice and Capricorn with the southern summer solstice, i.e. the points at which the Sun is directly overhead on the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn respectively.

See also right ascension.


The imaginary twelve-part division of the sky, through which the sun, moon, and planets pass as they move. At an early period, each Hebrew month was assigned one of the zodiacal signs, the names given to each sign being the exact Hebrew translation of the Latin signs. While the Talmud makes no mention of the zodiacal signs, later Jewish literature does on occasion. Zodiacs are often portrayed in Jewish art, ranging from mosaics in ancient synagogues in Erets Israel to prayer books to painted ceilings in 18th- century wood-built Polish synagogues. Parallels are sometimes made between the zodiacal sign and the Jewish content of a month. Thus it is suggested that the zodiacal sign of Tishri is moznayim (i.e., Libra---the scales), for in that month God weighs each human being's virtues and sins. Presumably because both the zodiacal signs and the tribes of Israel number 12, there is reference (in Yalkut Shimoni) to each tribe being linked to a specific zodiacal sign. Even earlier, Sefer Yetsirah spelled out a correspondence between the 12 zodiacal signs and the 12 organs of the human body. See also Astrology.

zodiac ('dēăk) [Gr. zoion=animal], in astronomy, zone of the sky that includes about 8° on either side of the ecliptic. The apparent paths of the sun, the moon, and the major planets all fall within this zone. The zodiac is divided into 12 equal parts of 30° each, each part being named for a constellation, each of which is represented by a sign and many of which have animal names. The constellations and their corresponding symbols and dates are listed in the table entitled The Signs of the Zodiac. The zodiac serves as a convenient means of indicating the positions of the heavenly bodies. When the constellations of the zodiac were named about 2,000 years ago, the vernal equinox coincided with the beginning of the constellation Aries. For this reason, the first 30° section of the zodiac is called Aries; it extends eastward 30° from the vernal equinox, which is therefore called the first point of Aries. However, because of the precession of the equinoxes, the vernal equinox has moved westward about 30° and now lies in the constellation Pisces; the zodiacal constellations thus no longer correspond to the segments of the zodiac represented by their signs. The constellations will again coincide with the sections of the zodiac in about 25,800 years. The zodiac probably had its origins among the Assyrians or Chaldaeans, although it may have originated among the Babylonians as early as 2000 B.C. It is of importance in astrology.


The zodiac, literally the circle of animals, is constituted by the 12 stellar constellations through which the Sun appears to pass in its annual movement through the heavens. The 12 constellations form a belt across the night sky some 8 to 9 degrees on either side of the solar orbit. The Moon and the planets of this solar system also move within that belt. The path of the Sun is called the ecliptic as eclipses occur when the Moon's orbit crosses the Sun's path.

The idea of a zodiac is relatively complex, and long-term observation of planetary motion is quite possible without it. The idea of naming the various constellations in the sky for gods and animals is ancient; the singling out of the 12 constellations that constitute the zodiac goes back at least to the second millennium B.C.E. in ancient Mesopotamia. The zodiac as it appears in modern astrology was certainly in use by the sixth century B.C.E. Each culture gave the constellations of the zodiac different names, the modern Western zodiac being derived from the Greeks. The designation of 12 constellations, a worldwide phenomenon, relates to the division of the year by the Moon's 12 complete orbits through the zodiac in each solar year.

In modern astrology, two different zodiacs are popularly recognized. The sidereal zodiac reflects the actual location of the constellations in the night sky. Practitioners of Vedic astrology use this zodiac. The position of the constellations relative to the beginning of the years shifts slightly each year due to the phenomenon known as the procession of the equinoxes. Most Western astrologers use the tropical zodiac as defined by Ptolemy in the second century C.E. According to Ptolemy, the astrological year would begin each spring equinox and it would assume that the sun was at 0 degrees Aries. Due to the progression of the equinoxes, the sun at the spring equinox is close to 0 degrees Pisces. Much of the symbolism of the signs of the zodiac in Western astrology is tied to the seasons of the year. That symbolism would be lost with the acceptance of the sidereal zodiac.

The 12 signs of the zodiac are: Aries, Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn, Aquarius, and Pisces.

Sources:

Brau, Jean Louis, Helen Weaver, and Allen Edwards. Lau-rouse Encyclopedia of Astrology. New York: New American Library, 1980.

Cirlot, J. E. A Dictionary of Symbols. New York: Philosophical Library, 1971.

McCaffery, Ellen. Astrology: Its History and Influence in the Western World. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1942.

A band of the sky along which the sun, the moon, and most of the planets move. It is divided into twelve parts, with each part named for a nearby constellation.

  • The twelve constellations, or signs, of the zodiac are important in astrology.

  • This spherical symbol of the astrological signs that bear the names of the constellations could be an indication that one's subconscious is guiding one to investigate astrology, or to have a chart cast by an astrologer-especially if this dream occurs around one's birthday. Alternatively, it could also represent a sense of feeling fated or even fatalistic.


    The imaginary band in the sky through which the sun, the moon, and the planets appear to move. The twelve constellations in the band (Aquarius, Pisces, and so on) are the familiar signs of the zodiac used in astrology.

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    Wheel of the zodiac: This 6th century mosaic pavement in a synagogue incorporates Greek-Byzantine elements, Beit Alpha, Israel.
    The Earth in its orbit around the Sun causes the Sun to appear on the celestial sphere moving over the ecliptic (red), which is tilted with respect to the equator (blue).

    In astronomy, the zodiac (Greek: ζῳδιακός, zōdiakos) is a circle of twelve 30° divisions of celestial longitude that are centered upon the ecliptic: the apparent path of the Sun across the celestial sphere over the course of the year. The paths of the Moon and visible planets also remain close to the ecliptic, within the belt of the zodiac, which extends 8-9° north or south of the ecliptic, as measured in celestial latitude. Historically, these twelve divisions are called signs. Essentially, the zodiac is a celestial coordinate system, or more specifically an ecliptic coordinate system, which takes the ecliptic as the origin of latitude, and the position of the sun at vernal equinox as the origin of longitude.

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    Usage

    It is known to have been in use by the Roman era, based on concepts inherited by Hellenistic astronomy from Babylonian astronomy of the Chaldean period (mid-1st millennium BC), which, in turn, derived from an earlier system of lists of stars along the ecliptic.[1] The construction of the zodiac is described in Ptolemy's Almagest (2nd century AD).

    The term zodiac derives from Latin zōdiacus, which in its turn comes from the Greek ζῳδιακὸς κύκλος (zōdiakos kuklos), meaning "circle of animals", derived from ζώδιον (zōdion), the diminutive of ζῶον (zōon) "animal". The name is motivated by the fact that half of the signs of the classical Greek zodiac are represented as animals (besides two mythological hybrids).

    Although the zodiac remains the basis of the ecliptic coordinate system in use in astronomy besides the equatorial one, the term and the names of the twelve signs are today mostly associated with horoscopic astrology.

    The term "zodiac" may also refer to the region of the celestial sphere encompassing the paths of the planets corresponding to the band of about eight arc degrees above and below the ecliptic. The zodiac of a given planet is the band that contains the path of that particular body; e.g., the "zodiac of the Moon" is the band of five degrees above and below the ecliptic. By extension, the "zodiac of the comets" may refer to the band encompassing most short-period comets.[2]

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    The division of the ecliptic into the zodiacal signs originates in Babylonian ("Chaldean") astronomy during the first half of the 1st millennium BC, likely during Median/"Neo-Babylonian" times (7th century BC),[3] The classical zodiac is a modification of the MUL.APIN catalogue, which was compiled around 1000 BC. Some of the constellations can be traced even further back, to Bronze Age (Old Babylonian) sources, including Gemini "The Twins", from MAŠ.TAB.BA.GAL.GAL "The Great Twins", and Cancer "The Crab", from AL.LUL "The Crayfish", among others.

    Babylonian astronomers at some stage during the early 1st millennium BC divided the ecliptic into twelve equal zones of celestial longitude to create the first known celestial coordinate system: a coordinate system that boasts some advantages over modern systems (such as equatorial coordinate system). The Babylonian calendar as it stood in the 7th century BC assigned each month to a sign, beginning with the position of the Sun at vernal equinox, which, at the time, was depicted as the Aries constellation ("Age of Aries"), for which reason the first constellation is still called "Aries" even after the vernal equinox has moved away from the Aries constellation due to the slow precession of the Earth's axis of rotation.[4]

    Knowledge of the Babylonian zodiac is also reflected in the Hebrew Bible. E. W. Bullinger interpreted the creatures appearing in the books of Ezekiel and Revelation as the middle signs of the four quarters of the Zodiac,[5][6] with the Lion as Leo, the Bull is Taurus, the Man representing Aquarius and the Eagle representing Scorpio.[7] Some authors have linked the twelve tribes of Israel with the twelve signs. Martin and others have argued that the arrangement of the tribes around the Tabernacle (reported in the Book of Numbers) corresponded to the order of the Zodiac, with Judah, Reuben, Ephraim, and Dan representing the middle signs of Leo, Aquarius, Taurus, and Scorpio, respectively.[8][9] Such connections were taken up by Thomas Mann, who in his novel Joseph and His Brothers attributes characteristics of a sign of the zodiac to each tribe in his rendition of the Blessing of Jacob.

    Hellenistic and Roman era

    The 1st century BC Dendera zodiac (19th-century engraving)

    The Babylonian star catalogs entered Greek astronomy in the 4th century BC, via Eudoxus of Cnidus and others. Babylonia or Chaldea in the Hellenistic world came to be so identified with astrology that "Chaldean wisdom" became among Greeks and Romans the synonym of divination through the planets and stars. Hellenistic astrology originated from Babylonian and Egyptian astrology. Horoscopic astrology first appeared in Ptolemaic Egypt. The Dendera zodiac, a relief dating to ca. 50 BC, is the first known depiction of the classical zodiac of twelve signs.

    Particularly important in the development of Western horoscopic astrology was the astrologer and astronomer Ptolemy, whose work Tetrabiblos laid the basis of the Western astrological tradition. Under the Greeks, and Ptolemy in particular, the planets, Houses, and signs of the zodiac were rationalized and their function set down in a way that has changed little to the present day.[10] Ptolemy lived in the 2nd century AD, three centuries after the discovery of the precession of the equinoxes by Hipparchus around 130 BC, but he ignored the problem by dropping the concept of a fixed celestial sphere and adopting what is referred to as a tropical coordinate system instead.

    Hindu zodiac

    The Hindu zodiac uses the sidereal coordinate system, which makes reference to the fixed stars. The Tropical zodiac (of Mesopotamian origin) is divided by the intersections of the ecliptic and equator, which shifts in relation to the backdrop of fixed stars at a rate of 1° every 72 years, creating the phenomenon known as precession of the equinoxes. The Hindu zodiac, being sidereal, does not maintain this seasonal alignment, but there are still similarities between the two systems. The Hindu zodiac signs and corresponding Greek signs sound very different, being in Sanskrit and Greek respectively, but their symbols are nearly identical. For example, dhanu means "bow" and corresponds to Sagittarius, the "archer", and kumbha means "water-pitcher" and corresponds to Aquarius, the "water-carrier". The correspondence of signs is taken to suggest the possibility of early interchange of cultural influences.

    Middle Ages and early modern period

    The zodiac signs as shown in a 16th-century woodcut
    A 17th-century fresco from the Cathedral of Living Pillar in Georgia depicting Christ within the Zodiac circle

    The High Middle Ages saw a revival of Greco-Roman magic, first in Kabbalism and later continued in Renaissance magic. This included magical uses of the zodiac, as found, e.g., in the Sefer Raziel HaMalakh.

    The zodiacal symbols are Early Modern simplifications of conventional pictorial representations of the signs, attested since Hellenistic times. The symbols are encoded in Unicode at positions U+2648 to U+2653 in the Miscellaneous Symbols block.

    The twelve signs

    What follows is a list of the twelve signs of the modern zodiac (with the ecliptic longitudes of their first points), where 0° Aries is understood as the vernal equinox, with their Latin, Greek, Sanskrit, and Babylonian names (but note that the Sanskrit and the Babylonian name equivalents denote the constellations only, not the tropical zodiac signs). Also, the "English translation" is not usually used by English speakers. The Latin names are standard English usage.

    Symbol Long. Latin name English translation Greek name Sanskrit name Sumero-Babylonian name[11]
    1 Aries The Ram Κριός/Kriós Meṣha (मेष) MUL LUḪUN.GA "The Agrarian Worker", Dumuzi
    2 30° Taurus The Bull Ταῦρος/Tauros Vṛiṣabha (वृषभ) MULGU4.AN.NA "The Steer of Heaven"
    3 60° Gemini The Twins Δίδυμοι/Didymoe Mithuna (मिथुन) MULMAŠ.TAB.BA.GAL.GAL "The Great Twins" (Castor and Pollux)
    4 90° Cancer The Crab Καρκῖνος/Karkinos Karkaṭa (कर्कट) MULAL.LUL "The Crayfish"
    5 120° Leo The Lion Λέων/Léōn Siṃha (सिंह) MULUR.GU.LA "The Lion"
    6 150° Virgo The Maiden Παρθένος/Parthénos Kanyā (कन्या) MULAB.SIN "The Furrow"; "The Furrow, the goddess Shala's ear of corn"
    7 180° Libra The Scales Ζυγός/Zygós Tula (तुला) zibanitum "The Scales"
    8 210° Scorpio The Scorpion Σκoρπιός/Skorpiós Vṛścika (वृश्चिक) MULGIR.TAB "The Scorpion"
    9 240° Sagittarius The (Centaur) Archer Τοξότης/Toxótēs Dhanus (धनुष) MULPA.BIL.SAG, Nedu "soldier"
    10 270° Capricorn "Goat-horned" (The Sea-Goat) Αἰγόκερως/Aegókerōs Makara (मकर) MULSUḪUR.MAŠ "The Goat-Fish"
    11 300° Aquarius The Water-Bearer Ὑδροχόος/Hydrokhóos Kumbha (कुम्भ) MULGU.LA "The Great One", later "pitcher"
    12 330° Pisces The Fish Ἰχθύες/Ιgthues Mīna (मीन) MULSIM.MAḪ "The Tail of the Swallow", later DU.NU.NU "fish-cord"
    18th century star map illustrating how the feet of Ophiuchus cross the ecliptic

    Zodiacal constellations

    It is important to distinguish the zodiacal signs from the constellations associated with them, not only because of their drifting apart due to the precession of equinoxes but also because the physical constellations by nature of their varying shapes and forms take up varying widths of the ecliptic. Thus, Virgo takes up fully five times as much ecliptic longitude as Scorpius. The zodiacal signs, on the other hand, are an abstraction from the physical constellations designed to represent exactly one twelfth of the full circle each, or the longitude traversed by the Sun in about 30.4 days.[12]

    There have always been a number of "parazodiacal" constellations that are also touched by the paths of the planets. The MUL.APIN lists Orion, Perseus, Auriga, and Andromeda. Furthermore, there are a number of constellations mythologically associated with the zodiacal ones : Piscis Austrinus, The Southern Fish, is attached to Aquarius. In classical maps, it swallows the stream poured out of Aquarius' pitcher, but perhaps it formerly just swam in it. Aquila, The Eagle, was possibly associated with the zodiac by virtue of its main star, Altair.[citation needed] Hydra in the Early Bronze Age marked the celestial equator and was associated with Leo, which is shown standing on the serpent on the Dendera zodiac.[citation needed] Corvus is the Crow or Raven mysteriously perched on the tail of Hydra.

    Due to the constellation boundaries being redefined in 1930 by the International Astronomical Union, the path of the ecliptic now officially passes through thirteen constellations: the twelve traditional 'zodiac constellations' plus Ophiuchus, the bottom part of which interjects between Scorpio and Sagittarius. Ophiuchus is an anciently recognized constellation, catalogued along with many others in Ptolemy's Almagest, but not historically referred to as a zodiac constellation.[13]

    The technically inaccurate description of Ophiuchus as a sign of the zodiac dates to the 1970s.[citation needed] This drew prominent media attention on 20 January 1985, following the BBC's opening 'Nine o'clock News' announcement that "an extra sign of the zodiac has been announced by the Royal Astronomical Society".[14] Investigation into the source of the story revealed there had been no such announcement, and that the report had merely sensationalized the 67-year-old 'news' of the IAU's decision to alter the number of designated ecliptic constellations. This was done for the purposes of promoting a forthcoming BBC astronomy program, presented by the RAS's Public Relation Officer, which touched upon the topic of precession.[15] The false assumption that Ophiuchus constitutes an astrological sign periodically resurfaces in the media, due to public misconception and failure to appreciate that the irregular astronomical demarcation of visible constellations does not relate to the separate frame of reference provided by the equally spaced twelve-fold longitude division of the ecliptic into zodiacal signs.[16]

    Table of dates

    The following table compares the Gregorian dates on which the Sun enters

    The theoretical beginning of Aries is the moment of vernal equinox, and all other dates shift accordingly. The precise Gregorian times and dates vary slightly from year to year as the Gregorian calendar shifts relative to the tropical year.[17] These variations remain within less than two days' difference in the recent past and the near-future, vernal equinox in UTC always falling either on 20 or 21 of March in the period of 1797 to 2043, falling on 19 March in 1796 the last time and in 2044 the next.[18] In the long term, if the Gregorian calendar is not reformed, the equinox will move to earlier dates: it will fall on 18 March for the first time in AD 4092.

    Sign Constellation[19][20]
    Name Symbol Tropical zodiac
    (2011)[21]
    Sidereal zodiac
    (Jyotisha)
    (2011, UTC)[22]
    Name IAU constellation
    boundaries (2011)
    Solar stay Brightest star
    Aries Aries 21 March –
    19 April
    14 April –
    14 May
    Aries 18 April – 14 May 25.5 days Hamal
    Taurus Taurus 20 April –
    20 May
    14 May –
    14 June
    Taurus 14 May – 21 June 38.2 days Aldebaran
    Gemini Gemini 21 May –
    20 June
    14 June –
    14 July
    Gemini 21 June – 20 July 29.3 days Pollux
    Cancer Cancer 21 June –
    21 July
    14 July –
    14 August
    Cancer 20 July – 10 August 21.1 days Al Tarf
    Leo Leo 22 July –
    22 August
    14 August –
    13 September
    Leo 10 August – 16 September 36.9 days Regulus
    Virgo Virgo 23 August –
    22 September
    13 September –
    14 October
    Virgo 16 September – 31 October 44.5 days Spica
    Libra Libra 23 September –
    22 October
    14 October –
    13 November
    Libra 31 October – 21 November 21.1 days Zubeneschamali
    Scorpio Scorpio 23 October –
    21 November
    13 November –
    14 December
    Scorpius 21 November – 29 November 8.4 days Antares
    Ophiuchus Ophiuchus zodiac.svg n/a Ophiuchus 29 November – 17 December 18.4 days Rasalhague/ Alpha Ophiuchi
    Sagittarius Sagittarius 22 November –
    21 December
    14 December –
    13 January
    Sagittarius 17 December – 20 January 33.6 days Kaus Australis
    Capricorn Capricornus 22 December –
    19 January
    13 January –
    12 February
    Capricornus 20 January – 16 February 27.4 days Deneb Algedi
    Aquarius Aquarius 20 January –
    19 February
    12 February –
    14 March
    Aquarius 16 February – 12 March 23.9 days Sadalsuud
    Pisces Pisces 20 February –
    20 March
    14 March –
    14 April
    Pisces 12 March – 19 April 37.7 days Eta Piscium

    Because the Earth's axis is at an angle, some signs take longer to rise than others, and the farther away from the equator the observer is situated, the greater the difference. Thus, signs are spoken of as "long" or "short" ascension.[23]

    Precession of the equinoxes

    Path taken by the point of vernal equinox along the ecliptic over the past 6000 years

    The zodiac system was developed in Babylonia, some 2,500 years ago, during the "Age of Aries". At the time, it is assumed, the precession of the equinoxes was unknown, as the system made no allowance for it. Contemporary use of the coordinate system is presented with the choice of interpreting the system either as sidereal, with the signs fixed to the stellar background, or as tropical, with the signs fixed to the point of vernal equinox.

    Western astrology takes the tropical approach, whereas Hindu astrology takes the sidereal one. This results in the originally unified zodiacal coordinate system drifting apart gradually, with an angular velocity of about 1.4 degrees per century.

    For the tropical zodiac used in Western astronomy and astrology, this means that the tropical sign of Aries currently lies somewhere within the constellation Pisces ("Age of Pisces").

    The sidereal coordinate system takes into account the ayanamsa, a Sanskrit word where literally ayan means transit or movement and amsa means small part i.e. movement of equinoxes in small parts. It is unclear when Indians became aware of the precession of the equinoxes, but Bhaskar-ii in Siddhanta Shiromani gives equations for measurement of precession of equinoxes, and says his equations are based on some lost equations of Suryasiddhanta plus the equation of Munjaala.

    It is not entirely clear how the Hellenistic astronomers responded to this phenomenon of precession once it had been discovered by Hipparchus around 130 BC. Today, some read Ptolemy as dropping the concept of a fixed celestial sphere and adopting what is referred to as a tropical coordinate system instead: in other words, one fixed to the Earth's seasonal cycle rather than the distant stars.

    Some modern Western astrologers, such as Cyril Fagan, have advocated abandoning the tropical system in favour of a sidereal one.

    In modern astronomy

    The zodiac is a spherical celestial coordinate system. It designates the ecliptic as its fundamental plane and the position of the Sun at Vernal equinox as its prime meridian.

    In astronomy, the zodiacal constellations are a convenient way of marking the ecliptic (the Sun's path across the sky) and the path of the moon and planets along the ecliptic. Modern astronomy still uses tropical coordinates for predicting the positions the Sun, Moon, and planets, except longitude in the ecliptic coordinate system is numbered from 0° to 360°, not 0° to 30° within each sign. Longitude within individual signs was still being used as late as 1740 by Jacques Cassini in his Tables astronomiques.

    Zodiac is also used to refer to the zodiacal cloud of dust grains that move among the planets and the zodiacal light that originates from their scattering of sunlight.

    Unlike the zodiac signs in astrology, which are all thirty degrees in length, the astronomical constellations vary widely in size. The boundaries of all the constellations in the sky were set by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) in 1930. This was, in essence, a mapping exercise to make the work of astronomers more efficient, and the boundaries of the constellations are not therefore in any meaningful sense an 'equivalent' to the zodiac signs. Along with the twelve original constellations, the boundaries of a thirteenth constellation, Ophiuchus (the serpent bearer), were set by astronomers within the bounds of the zodiac.

    Mnemonics

    There are many mnemonics for remembering the 12 signs of the zodiac in order. A traditional mnemonic:

    The ram, the bull, the heavenly twins,
    And next the crab, the lion shines,
      The virgin and the scales,
    The scorpion, archer, and the goat,
    The man who holds the watering-pot,
      And fish with glittering scales.
    
    [24]

    A less poetic, but succinct and perhaps more memorable, mnemonic is the following:

    The Ramble Twins Crab Liverish; Scaly Scorpions Are Good Water Fish. [25]

    ("Ramble" is for Ram, Bull (Aries and Taurus). "Twins" is for Gemini and "Crab" for Cancer. "Liverish" recalls Lion, Virgin (Leo and Virgo). "Scaly" recalls Scale (Libra). "Scorpion" is for Scorpio, and "Are" for Archer (Sagittarius). "Good" is for Goat (Capricorn), "Water" for the Water Bearer (Aquarius) and "Fish" for Pisces.)

    Mnemonics in which the initials of the words correspond to the initials of the star signs (Latin, English, or mixed):

    All The Great Constellations Live Very Long Since Stars Can't Alter Physics.[26]

    As The Great Cook Likes Very Little Salt, She Compensates Adding Pepper.

    Really Boring Teachers Can Live Very Sadly Since Apples Give Worthless Feelings.

    All That Gold Can Load Very Lazy Students Since Children Are at Play

    Unicode characters

    In Unicode, the symbols are encoded in block Miscellaneous Symbols:[27]

    1. U+2648 aries (HTML: ♈)
    2. U+2649 taurus (HTML: ♉)
    3. U+264A gemini (HTML: ♊)
    4. U+264B cancer (HTML: ♋)
    5. U+264C leo (HTML: ♌)
    6. U+264D virgo (HTML: ♍)
    7. U+264E libra (HTML: ♎)
    8. U+264F scorpius (HTML: ♏)
    9. U+2650 sagittarius (HTML: ♐)
    10. U+2651 capricorn (HTML: ♑)
    11. U+2652 aquarius (HTML: ♒)
    12. U+2653 pisces (HTML: ♓)

    See also

    References

    1. ^ see MUL.APIN. See also Lankford, John History of Astronomy Routledge 1996 ISBN 978-0-8153-0322-0P.43, books.google.co.uk
    2. ^ OED, citing J. Harris, Lexicon Technicum (1704): "Zodiack of the Comets, Cassini hath observed a certain Tract [...] within whose Bounds [...] he hath found most Comets [...] to keep."
    3. ^ Powell 2004
    4. ^ Hugh Thurston, Early Astronomy, (New York: Springer-Verlag, 1994), p. 135–137.
    5. ^ E.W. Bullinger, The Witness of the Stars
    6. ^ D. James Kennedy, The Real Meaning of the Zodiac.
    7. ^ Richard Hinckley Allen, Star Names: Their Lore and Meaning, Vol. 1 (New York: Dover Publications, 1899, p. 213-215.) argued for Scorpio having previously been called Eagle. for Scorpio.
    8. ^ Ernest L. Martin, The Birth of Christ Recalculated (Pasadena, California: Foundation for Biblical Research, second ed., 1980), p. 167ff.[clarification needed]
    9. ^ D. Guthrie, J.A. Motyer (ed.), The New Bible Commentary (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., third ed., 1970) p. 173.
    10. ^ Derek and Julia Parker, Ibid, p16, 1990
    11. ^ MUL.APIN; Peter Whitfield, History of Astrology (2001); W. Muss-Arnolt, The Names of the Assyro-Babylonian Months and Their Regents, Journal of Biblical Literature (1892).
    12. ^ 30.4368 SI days or 2629743 seconds in tropical astrology and 30.4380 SI days or 2629846 seconds in sidereal astrology on average (the time spent by the Sun in each sign varies slightly due to the eccentricity of the Earth's orbit).
    13. ^ Ptolemy (2nd cent.). "VII.5". In R. Catesby Taliaferro. Almagest (1982 ed.). p. 239.  Ptolemy refers to the constellation as Septentarius 'the serpent holder'.
    14. ^ Kollerstrom, N. (October 1995). "Ophiuchus and the media". The Observatory (KNUDSEN; OBS) 115: 261–262. Bibcode 1995Obs...115..261K.  Reproduced online at SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS), retrieved 13 July 2011.
    15. ^ Kollerstrom, N. (October 1995). "Ophiuchus and the media". The Observatory (KNUDSEN; OBS) 115: 261–262. Bibcode 1995Obs...115..261K. 
    16. ^ The notion received further international media attention in January 2011, when it was reported that astronomer Parke Kunkle, a board-member of the Minnesota Planetarium Society, had suggested that Ophiuchus was the zodiac's '13th sign'. He later issued a statement to say he had not reported that the zodiac ought to include 13 signs instead of 12, but was only mentioning that there were 13 constellations; reported in Mad Astronomy: Why did your zodiac sign change? 13 January 2011.
    17. ^ The Gregorian calendar is built to satisfy the First Council of Nicaea, which placed vernal equinox is on 21 March, but it is not possible to keep it on a single day within a reasonable system of leap days.
    18. ^ See Jean Meeus, Astronomical Tables of the Sun, Moon, and Planets, 1983 published by Willmann-Bell, Inc., Richmond, Virginia. The date in other time zones may vary.
    19. ^ "Astronomical Almanac Online!(subscribers) U.S. Naval Observatory 2008". Asa.usno.navy.mil. http://asa.usno.navy.mil/SecC/Section_C.html. Retrieved 2010-06-02. 
    20. ^ IAU concluded in 1977
    21. ^ "12 Zodiac Sign Profiles". http://my.horoscope.com/astrology/horoscope-sign-index.html. Retrieved 2011-01-16. 
    22. ^ assuming an ayanamsa of 23.86° as of 2000 according to N. C. Lahiri. The precise value used may vary, but is usually set close to 24°.
    23. ^ Julia Parker "The Astrologer's Handbook", pp 10, Alva Press, NJ, 2010
    24. ^ Project Gutenberg ebook "An Alphabet Of Old Friends"; see Z for Zodiac.
    25. ^ Rey, H.A. (1952). The Stars, Houghton Mifflin.
    26. ^ Mnemonic: Zodiac Signs "Mnemonic: Zodiac Signs"
    27. ^ "Zodiacal symbols in Unicode block Miscellaneous Symbols". The Unicode Standard>date=2010. http://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U2600.pdf#search=Zodiacal. 

    External links

    Media related to Zodiac at Wikimedia Commons


    Translations:

    Zodiac

    Top

    Dansk (Danish)
    n. - dyrekredstegn

    Nederlands (Dutch)
    dierenriem, cyclus

    Français (French)
    n. - zodiaque

    Deutsch (German)
    n. - Tierkreis, Zodiakus

    Ελληνική (Greek)
    n. - ζωδιακός κύκλος

    Italiano (Italian)
    zodiaco

    Português (Portuguese)
    n. - zodíaco (m)

    Русский (Russian)
    Зодиак, солнечный путь

    Español (Spanish)
    n. - zodiaco, zodíaco

    Svenska (Swedish)
    n. - djurkretsen, zodiaken, kretslopp (bildl.)

    中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
    十二宫图, 黄道带

    中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
    n. - 十二宮圖, 黃道帶

    한국어 (Korean)
    n. - 황도대, 수대, 일주

    日本語 (Japanese)
    n. - 黄道帯, 獣帯, 十二宮図

    العربيه (Arabic)
    ‏(الاسم) البروج, دائرة البروج‏

    עברית (Hebrew)
    n. - ‮גלגל-המזלות, מעגל או מחזור שלם‬


     
     

     

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