Sculptor: Difference between revisions

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==Etymology and History==
==Etymology and History==
[[File:Lacaille text newConst1756 scl.JPG|alt=screenshot of text|thumb|Lacaille on "Sculptor" (1752)]]
[[File:Lacaille text newConst1756 scl.JPG|alt=screenshot of text|thumb|Lacaille on "Sculptor" (1752)]]
===Origin of Constellation===
In his description from 1756, Nicolas Louis de Lacaille writes that the sculptor's workshop consists of a stool supporting a model and a block of marble on which a wooden hammer and a chisel have been placed.


The long name ‘Sculptor's Workshop’ was shortened in the course of the IAU's definition of the constellations, and the block of marble is no longer drawn in modern times. Bode had already omitted the marble block in his Uranographia (1801) and replaced it with a new constellation, ‘electric machine’. However, this did not catch on: the air pump already existed as a symbol for physics, and Lacaille's constellations are already so small that it is not worth splitting them up any further.


===Origin of Constellation===
In addition to painting, technical drawing, ocean navigation, experimental physics and chemistry, the French mathematician and astronomer has thus immortalised another profession among the stars.


===Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation===
===Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation===

Revision as of 20:02, 26 February 2026

Authors: Susanne M Hoffmann


star chart
Sculptor star chart (IAU and Sky & Telescope magazine, Roger Sinnott & Rick Fienberg).

One of the 88 IAU constellations. The constellation was invented by Lacaille in the 1750s.

Etymology and History

screenshot of text
Lacaille on "Sculptor" (1752)

Origin of Constellation

In his description from 1756, Nicolas Louis de Lacaille writes that the sculptor's workshop consists of a stool supporting a model and a block of marble on which a wooden hammer and a chisel have been placed.

The long name ‘Sculptor's Workshop’ was shortened in the course of the IAU's definition of the constellations, and the block of marble is no longer drawn in modern times. Bode had already omitted the marble block in his Uranographia (1801) and replaced it with a new constellation, ‘electric machine’. However, this did not catch on: the air pump already existed as a symbol for physics, and Lacaille's constellations are already so small that it is not worth splitting them up any further.

In addition to painting, technical drawing, ocean navigation, experimental physics and chemistry, the French mathematician and astronomer has thus immortalised another profession among the stars.

Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation

Mythology

References