Perseus, constellation in the northern sky at about 4 hours right ascension and 40° north in declination. With a magnitude of 1.8, its brightest star is Mirfak (from the Arabic for “the elbow”), which is also known as Algenib (from the Arabic for “the side”). This constellation contains the notable variable star Algol, which is the prototypical eclipsing binary in which one star is dimmed when it is eclipsed by its orbiting companion. Nova Persei, which exploded in 1901, provided important information about interstellar gas. In Greek mythology this constellation represented the hero Perseus, who slew the Medusa and rescued the princess Andromeda from the sea monster Cetus. (The other characters in the Perseus story—Andromeda’s father Cepheus, her mother Cassiopeia, and the winged horse Pegasus—are also constellations.)