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Gliese Catalogue of Nearby Stars

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7-498: The Gliese Catalogue of Nearby Stars ( German pronunciation: [ˈɡliːzə] , English GLEE -zə ) is a star catalogue listing stars located within 25  parsecs (82  ly ) of the Sun . In 1957, German astronomer Wilhelm Gliese published his first star catalogue of 915 known stars within 20 parsecs (65 ly) of Earth , listing their known properties and ordered geographically by right ascension . Stars in

14-446: A strict right ascension order. A Supplement published in 1970 by Richard van der Riet Woolley and associates, extended the range out to 25 parsecs (82 ly). This supplement added catalogue numbers in the range 9001–9850 using the now deprecated Wo prefix, sharing today the GJ prefix given to the later series of the catalogues. Gliese published an extension to the second edition of

21-595: The NN prefix has since been deprecated in favor of GJ . An online-only version of the Catalogue of Nearby Stars made by Hartmut Jahreiß in 1998 is available from the Astronomisches Rechen-Institut , Heidelberg as ARICNS. The different versions of the catalogue reflect the change in the medium of publication from printed to electronic, the format of most other large catalogues. A nearly full update to these catalogs

28-456: The catalogue in 1979 in collaboration with Hartmut Jahreiß . The combined catalogue is now commonly referred to as the Gliese–Jahreiß (GJ) catalog. This catalogue was published with two tables: Table 1 uses the designations GJ NNNN for entries numbered 1000–1294 for confirmed nearby stars; Table 2 uses the designations GJ NNNN for entries numbered 2001–2159 for suspected nearby stars. Since

35-611: The first catalogue are designated by coding GL NNN , the N representing the consecutive integer number based on this order. Gliese published an update as the Catalogue of Nearby Stars in 1969, all known stars to 22 parsecs (72 ly), which catalogued 1,529 stars, encoded as Gl NNN.NA (prefix Gl and the entries of twelve years before gained a .0 affix; the more than 500 additional stars were recorded using interspersed 0.1, 0.2 etc. numbering). This list therefore numbered from 1.0 to 915.0 as no stars were entered after 915.0. and retained

42-556: The list now containing information on more than 3,800 stars. Although this catalogue was designated as preliminary, it remained the one in current use until the publication of CNS5. This catalogue lists a total of 3,803 stars. Most of these stars already had GJ numbers, but there were also 1,388 stars which were not numbered. As no final version was forthcoming, the need to give these 1,388 some name resulted in them being numbered 3001–4388 ( NN numbers, for "no name"), and data files of this catalogue now usually include these numbers, although

49-546: The publication of this catalogue all of the stars in the combined catalogue and succeeding supplements are designated by the preferred GJ prefix. Consequently, for any of the original Gliese stars, the "Gliese" designation can therefore be shortened to "GJ"; for example, either " Gliese 876 " or "GJ 876" is valid, with "GJ" the more common format in research papers. Gliese published the Third Catalogue of Nearby Stars (CNS3) in 1991, again in collaboration with Hartmut Jahreiß;

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