Bayer assigned a lowercase
Greek letter (alpha (α), beta (β), gamma (γ), etc.) or a Latin letter (A, b, c, etc.) to each star he catalogued, combined with the Latin name of the star's parent constellation in
genitive (possessive) form. The constellation name is frequently abbreviated to a standard three-letter form. For example,
Aldebaran in the constellation
Taurus (the Bull) is designated
α Tauri (abbreviated
α Tau, pronounced
Alpha Tauri), which means "Alpha of the Bull". Bayer used Greek letters for the brighter stars, but the Greek alphabet has only twenty-four letters, while a single constellation may contain fifty or more stars visible to the naked eye. When the Greek letters ran out, Bayer continued with Latin letters: uppercase
A, followed by lowercase
b through
z (omitting
j and
v, but
o was included), for a total of another 24 letters. Bayer did not label "permanent" stars with uppercase letters (except for
A, which he used instead of
a to avoid confusion with
α). However, a number of stars in southern constellations have uppercase letter designations, like
B Centauri and
G Scorpii. These letters were assigned by later astronomers, notably Lacaille in his
Coelum Australe Stelliferum and Gould in his
Uranometria Argentina. Lacaille followed Bayer's use of Greek letters, but this was insufficient for many constellations. He used first the lowercase letters, starting with
a, and if needed the uppercase letters, starting with
A, thus deviating somewhat from Bayer's practice. Lacaille used the Latin alphabet three times over in the large constellation
Argo Navis, once for each of the three areas that are now the constellations of
Carina,
Puppis and
Vela. That was still insufficient for the number of stars, so he also used uppercase Latin letters such as
N Velorum and
Q Puppis. Lacaille assigned uppercase letters between R and Z in several constellations, but these have either been dropped to allow the assignment of those letters to variable stars or have actually turned out to be variable. == Order by magnitude class ==