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Lacaille and Johann
Two astronomers particularly known for attempting to expand Ptolemy's catalogue were Johann Bayer ( 1572 – 1625 ) and Nicolas Louis de Lacaille ( 1713 – 1762 ).
Lochium Funis ( Latin for the log and line ) was a constellation created by Johann Bode from the stars which Nicolas Louis de Lacaille created the constellation Pyxis.

Lacaille and Antlia
Antlia was created in 1756 by the French astronomer Abbé Nicolas Louis de Lacaille, who created fourteen constellations for the southern sky to fill some faint regions.
There is no mythology attached to Antlia as Lacaille discontinued the tradition of giving names from mythology to constellations and instead chose names mostly from scientific instruments.

Lacaille and used
de Lacaille originally called the constellation " Fornax Chemica " ( the chemical furnace ), representing a small solid fuel vessel used for heating chemical experiments.

Lacaille and more
Several more were created by Nicolas Louis de Lacaille in his star catalogue, published in 1756.
French astronomer Nicolas de Lacaille sails to southern oceans and begins work compiling a catalog of more than 10000 stars in the southern sky.

Lacaille and .
Caelum () is a faint constellation in the southern sky, introduced in the 1750s by Nicolas Louis de Lacaille.
It was named by French astronomer Nicolas Louis de Lacaille in 1756.
Microscopium () is a small constellation in the southern sky, created in the 18th century by Nicolas Louis de Lacaille.
AX Microscopii, better known as Lacaille 8760, is a red dwarf which lies only 12. 9 light years from our solar system.
Abbé Nicolas Louis de Lacaille ( 15 March 1713 – 21 March 1762 ) was a French astronomer.
On his return to Paris in 1754 Lacaille was distressed to find himself an object of public attention ; he withdrew to Mazarin college, where he worked actively for some years, and there died of an attack of gout aggravated by over-work in 1762.
In 1754, de Lacaille was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
Asteroid 9135 Lacaille ( AKA 7609 P-L and 1994 EK6 ), discovered on 17 October 1960 by Cornelis Johannes van Houten, Ingrid van Houten-Groeneveld and Tom Gehrels at Palomar Observatory, was also named after him.
At the Cape, Abbé de Lacaille wanted to test Newton's theory of gravitation and verify the shape of the earth in the southern hemisphere.
He found that de Lacaille had failed to take into account the gravitational attraction of the nearby mountains.
* David S. Evans: Lacaille: astronomer, traveller ; with a new translation of his journal.
From 1751 – 53, Nicolas Louis de Lacaille cataloged 42 nebulae from the Cape of Good Hope, with most of them being previously unknown.
The constellation was devised by Nicolas Louis de Lacaille in the eighteenth century.
Octans was created by Nicolas Louis de Lacaille in 1732 out of faint circumpolar stars.
Pyxis was introduced by Nicolas Louis de Lacaille in the 18th century ; he called it Pyxis Nautica, but the name was shortened.
Argo Navis was sub-divided in 1752 by the French astronomer Nicolas Louis de Lacaille, forming Puppis.
Despite the division, Lacaille kept Argo's Bayer designations.
Lacaille 9352 is a faint red dwarf star which is a mere 10. 74 light-years away.

Johann and Bode
Johann Elert Bode ( 19 January 1747 – 23 November 1826 ) was a German astronomer known for his reformulation and popularization of the Titius-Bode law.
ca: Johann Elert Bode
cs: Johann Elert Bode
cy: Johann Elert Bode
de: Johann Elert Bode
et: Johann Elert Bode
es: Johann Elert Bode
fr: Johann Elert Bode
gl: Johann Elert Bode
id: Johann Elert Bode
it: Johann Elert Bode
lb: Johann Elert Bode
hu: Johann Elert Bode
nl: Johann Elert Bode
no: Johann Elert Bode
pl: Johann Elert Bode
pt: Johann Elert Bode
sk: Johann Elert Bode
sl: Johann Elert Bode
sv: Johann Elert Bode
Also depicting it as a surveyor ’ s level, German Johann Bode gave it the alternate name of Libella in his Uranographia.
Johann Bode called it the Astronomische Fernrohr in his 1805 Gestirne and kept its size, but Baily and Gould subsequently shrank its boundaries.
It is named for Johann Daniel Titius and Johann Elert Bode.

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