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| Leo Minor | |
| Abbreviation | LMi |
| Genitive | Leonis Minoris |
| Meaning in English | the Lesser Lion |
| Right ascension | 10 h |
| Declination | 35° |
| Visible to latitude | Between 90° and −45° |
| Best visible | April |
| Area - Total | Ranked 64th 232 sq. deg. |
| Number of stars with apparent magnitude < 3 | 0 |
| Brightest star - Apparent magnitude | Praecipua 3.83 |
| Meteor showers | None |
| Bordering constellations | |
Leo Minor (the Lesser Lion) is a rather dim constellation that can - barely - be recognized as a triangle and lies between the easily discerned constellations Ursa Major and Leo. In contrast to Leo it does not belong to the ancient list of 48 constellations drawn up by Ptolemy in the 2nd century AD, but was instead created by Johannes Hevelius in 1687.
There is little to see for owners of small telescopes. There is only one star brighter than 4m:
Leo Minor does not contain any notable deep sky objects. The brightest one is NGC 3003, a galaxy with an apparent brightness of 11.7m and an angular size of 5.9 arcmin. It is seen almost edge-on.
Being a rather new constellation there is no real mythology attached to it.