Constellation Crater
CRATER
THE CELESTIAL CUP
The Cup
Crater represents the goblet of the god Apollo. It is a faint constellation, but its distinctive cup-like shape can be seen in dark skies near Hydra.
An orange giant star (Mag 4.0).
Sits on the back of Hydra.
Crater Sync
Chalice Geometry Mapping. Analyzing the "Bowl" asterism constant. The Oat monitors the southern ecliptic plane to track this delicate vessel vector.
- π· Identity: The Cup (Chalice of Apollo).
- πΊ The Bowl: A recognizable 4th-magnitude goblet shape.
- π Nature: Low-Luminosity Southern Meridian Node.
Alkes Sync
Stellar Foundation Mapping. Analyzing the Alpha Crateris luminosity constant. The Oat monitors the K-type giant vector to track this primary chalice base node.
- πΊ Al-Ka's: The "Cup" or "Chalice" Primary Anchor.
- π Giant Phase: K-type Evolved Thermal Vector.
- π°οΈ Range: Deep-Sky Foundation at ~174 Light-Years.
Void Sync
Extragalactic Aperture Mapping. Analyzing the NGC 3887 barred-spiral constant. The Oat monitors the zero-obscuration vector to track these distant island-universe nodes.
- π NGC 3511: Edge-On Spiral Interaction Vector.
- π NGC 3887: High-Definition Barred Spiral Geometry.
- π°οΈ Range: Deep-Space Window at ~60 Million LY.
Chalice Sync
Mythological Vector Mapping. Analyzing the Crater-Corvus-Hydra triad constant. The Oat monitors the celestial punishment markers to track this ancient moral node.
- πΊ The Chalice: Apolloβs Golden Vessel for the Fountain of Life.
- π Hydra Interface: Positioned on the coils of the Water Snake.
- βοΈ Judgment: A eternal reminder of the Crow's deception.
Legacy of the Cup π
Paper
CRATER SCAN π·
Objective: 10-Item Chalice Calibration.
Sources
ALKES (ALPHA)
Meaning "the cup" in Arabic, this orange giant is about **174 light-years** away. It sits at the base of the cup, anchoring the constellation's shape.
ALPHA DATALABRUM (DELTA)
The brightest star in the constellation. It is a yellow giant roughly **195 light-years** away. Its name is Latin for "the lip," marking the cup's rim.
DELTA SPECSNGC 3887
A beautiful spiral galaxy with well-defined arms. It was discovered by William Herschel in 1785 and lies about **60 million light-years** away.
DEEP SKYApollo's Goblet
Classical rendering of the chalice perched on the coils of Hydra.
Spring Sky Trio
Locating Crater alongside its neighbors Corvus and the long body of Hydra.
Stellar Plot
Identification of Delta Crateris and the faint stars forming the cup's rim.
Crater Star Catalog
Ξ΄ Crt (Delta Crateris) β Mag: 3.56
Ξ± Crt (Alkes) β Mag: 4.07
Ξ³ Crt (Gamma Crateris) β Mag: 4.08
Ξ² Crt (Al Sharas) β Mag: 4.48
Ξ· Crt β Mag: 5.17
ΞΆ Crt β Mag: 4.71