Particulars:
General:
Norma is a quite small constellation of the southern
hemisphere belonging to the La Caille constellation family. It
lies north of Triangulum Australe and west of Ara .
In the north Norma is surrounded by Lupus and Scorpius.
The Milky Way still runs brilliant through this constellation.
The orginal boundaries have been changed since its stars first
have been delineated to form a star group. So nowadays there are
no stars labelled with alpha Nor and beta Nor.
Stars and other objects
The double gamma1/gamma2 Nor is a visual binary. The
two unrelated stars are a F9 supergiant of 4.99 mag and a G8
giant with 4.02 mag.
With a small telescope the 8th mag companion of the B4 main
sequence star epsilon Nor can be seen. With the large
telescopes of the observatories both stars are revealed to be
spectroscopic binaries (they are too close to be split in a
telescope but their spectra show the existence of an second
component). So this is actually a four star system.
A small telescope is sufficient to resolve the A7 subgiant iota1
Nor of 4.63 mag and its 8th mag companion (separation
11"). With a telescope of at least 200mm aperture iota1
Nor can be split into a pair of stars. They revolve each
other with a period of 26 years.
The Cepheid variable star S Nor (spectraltype F8-G0Ib;
6.49 mag) is one of the 35 star building the open star cluster NGC
6087, which is a good object for binoculars.
In early spring, from March 11th to March 21th the meteor shower Gamma
Normids is active. The maximum of the shower activity is
reached on March 16th.