constellation boundaries, the stick figure, and labeled bright stars, from NOIRLab's 88 Constellations project. Volans has several deep-sky objects within its borders.
Stars Lacaille gave 12 stars
Bayer designations Alpha through Kappa in 1756 and labelled two stars as Gamma and Kappa. There are two
double stars within the constellation which can be observed using a small
telescope,
Gamma Volantis and
Epsilon Volantis, along with two
galaxies which may be more difficult to see clearly,
NGC 2442 and
NGC 2434. The magnitudes of the Gamma Volantis stars are 3.8 and 5.6, and of Epsilon Volantis 4.4 and 7.3. The
Astronomical Society of Southern Africa in 2003 reported that observations of the variable stars
R and
S Volantis in Volans were very urgently needed as data on their light curves was incomplete.
HD 76700 is a sunlike star some 195 light-years distant that has been found to have a planet.
Deep-sky objects The
Lindsay-Shapley ring, also categorized as AM0644-741, is a
ring galaxy located 300 million light-years from Earth. Named for its discoverers, the Lindsay-Shapley ring was found near the
Large Magellanic Cloud in 1960. Like the
Cartwheel Galaxy in
Sculptor, the unusual shape of this galaxy results from a
collision many millions of years ago. The blue ring, 150,000 light-years in diameter, was formed when a
shock wave from the collision
created a ring of hot blue stars; the yellow core is an amalgamation of the progenitors' cores.
NGC 2442, an intermediate-spiral galaxy, is also located in this constellation, with a distance of 50 million light-years from Earth. '''Graham's Object
, aka Das Rheingold
or Nibelungen Ring''' is a ring shaped galaxy at R.A. 6h 41.4m / Decl. -74° 19' (2000.0) in Volans ==See also==