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Removed wikilink from the knowledge example (#1266)
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- Removed wikilink code
- Added an array for the document section

/cc @juliadenham

Signed-off-by: JJ Asghar <awesome@ibm.com>
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194 changes: 69 additions & 125 deletions README.md
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created_by: juliadenham
seed_examples:
- context: |
**Phoenix** is a minor [constellation](constellation "wikilink") in the
[southern sky](southern_sky "wikilink"). Named after the mythical
[phoenix](Phoenix_(mythology) "wikilink"), it was first depicted on a
celestial atlas by [Johann Bayer](Johann_Bayer "wikilink") in his 1603
*[Uranometria](Uranometria "wikilink")*. The French explorer and
astronomer [Nicolas Louis de
Lacaille](Nicolas_Louis_de_Lacaille "wikilink") charted the brighter
stars and gave their [Bayer designations](Bayer_designation "wikilink")
**Phoenix** is a minor constellation in the southern sky. Named after the mythical
phoenix, it was first depicted on a celestial atlas by Johann Bayer in his 1603
*Uranometria*. The French explorer and astronomer Nicolas Louis de
Lacaille charted the brighter stars and gave their Bayer designations
in 1756. The constellation stretches from roughly −39 degrees to −57 degrees
[declination](declination "wikilink"), and from 23.5h to 2.5h of [right
ascension](right_ascension "wikilink"). The constellations Phoenix,
[Grus](Grus_(constellation) "wikilink"),
[Pavo](Pavo_(constellation) "wikilink") and [Tucana](Tucana "wikilink"),
are known as the Southern Birds.
declination, and from 23.5h to 2.5h of right ascension. The constellations Phoenix,
Grus, Pavo, are known as the Southern Birds.
questions_and_answers:
- question: |
What is the Phoenix constellation?
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The phoenix constellation stretches from roughly −39° to −57°
declination, and from 23.5h to 2.5h of right ascension.
- context: |
Phoenix was the largest of the 12 constellations established by [Petrus
Plancius](Petrus_Plancius "wikilink") from the observations of [Pieter
Dirkszoon Keyser](Pieter_Dirkszoon_Keyser "wikilink") and [Frederick de
Houtman](Frederick_de_Houtman "wikilink"). It first appeared on a 35cm
diameter celestial globe published in 1597 (or 1598) in Amsterdam by
Plancius with [Jodocus Hondius](Jodocus_Hondius "wikilink"). The first
depiction of this constellation in a celestial atlas was in [Johann
Bayer](Johann_Bayer "wikilink")'s
*[Uranometria](Uranometria "wikilink")* of 1603. De Houtman included
it in his southern star catalog the same year under the Dutch name *Den
voghel Fenicx*, "The Bird Phoenix", symbolising the
[phoenix](Phoenix_(mythology) "wikilink") of classical mythology. One
name of the brightest star [Alpha
Phoenicis](Alpha_Phoenicis "wikilink")—Ankaa—is derived from the Arabic:
العنقاء, romanized: al-‘anqā’, lit. 'the phoenix', and
was coined sometime after 1800 in relation to the constellation.
Phoenix was the largest of the 12 constellations established by Petrus
Plancius from the observations of Pieter Dirkszoon Keyser and Frederick de
Houtman. It first appeared on a 35cm diameter celestial globe published
in 1597 (or 1598) in Amsterdam by Plancius with Jodocus Hondius. The first
depiction of this constellation in a celestial atlas was in Johann Bayer's
*Uranometria* of 1603. De Houtman included it in his southern star catalog
the same year under the Dutch name *Den voghel Fenicx*, "The Bird Phoenix",
symbolising the phoenix of classical mythology. One name of the brightest star Alpha
Phoenicis—Ankaa—is derived from the Arabic: العنقاء, romanized: al-‘anqā’,
lit. 'the phoenix', and was coined sometime after 1800 in relation to the constellation.
questions_and_answers:
- question: |
What is the brightest star in the Phoenix constellation
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answer: |
"The Bird Phoenix" symbolizes the phoenix of classical mythology.
- context: |
Phoenix is a small constellation bordered by [Fornax](Fornax "wikilink")
and Sculptor to the north, Grus to the west, Tucana to the south,
touching on the corner of [Hydrus](Hydrus "wikilink") to the south, and
[Eridanus](Eridanus_(constellation) "wikilink") to the east and
southeast. The bright star [Achernar](Achernar "wikilink") is
nearby. The three-letter abbreviation for the constellation, as
adopted by the [International Astronomical
Union](International_Astronomical_Union "wikilink") in 1922, is
"Phe". The official constellation boundaries, as set by Belgian
astronomer [Eugène Delporte](Eugène_Joseph_Delporte "wikilink") in 1930,
are defined by a polygon of 10 segments. In the [equatorial coordinate
system](equatorial_coordinate_system "wikilink"), the [right
ascension](right_ascension "wikilink") coordinates of these borders lie
between 23<sup>h</sup> 26.5<sup>m</sup> and 02<sup>h</sup> 25.0<sup>m</sup>,
while the [declination](declination "wikilink")
coordinates are between −39.31° and −57.84°. This means it remains
below the horizon to anyone living north of the [40th
parallel](40th_parallel_north "wikilink") in the [Northern
Hemisphere](Northern_Hemisphere "wikilink"), and remains low in the sky
for anyone living north of the [equator](equator "wikilink"). It is most
visible from locations such as Australia and South Africa during late
[Southern Hemisphere](Southern_Hemisphere "wikilink") spring. Most
of the constellation lies within, and can be located by, forming a
triangle of the bright stars Achernar, [Fomalhaut](Fomalhaut "wikilink")
and [Beta Ceti](Beta_Ceti "wikilink")—Ankaa lies roughly in the centre
of this.
Phoenix is a small constellation bordered by Fornax and Sculptor to the north,
Grus to the west, Tucana to the south, touching on the corner of Hydrus to the
south, and Eridanus to the east and southeast. The bright star Achernar is
nearby. The three-letter abbreviation for the constellation, as adopted by the
International Astronomical Union in 1922, is "Phe". The official constellation
boundaries, as set by Belgian astronomer Eugène Delporte in 1930,
are defined by a polygon of 10 segments. In the equatorial coordinate system, the right
ascension coordinates of these borders lie between 23h 26.5m and 02h 25.0m,
while the declination coordinates are between −39.31° and −57.84°. This means it remains
below the horizon to anyone living north of the 40th parallel in the Northern
Hemisphere, and remains low in the sky for anyone living north of the equator.
It is most visible from locations such as Australia and South Africa during
late Southern Hemisphere spring. Most of the constellation lies within, and
can be located by, forming a triangle of the bright stars Achernar, Fomalhaut
and Beta Ceti—Ankaa lies roughly in the centre of this.
questions_and_answers:
- question: What are the characteristics of the Phoenix constellation?
answer: |
Expand All @@ -391,22 +367,17 @@ seed_examples:
segments.
- context: |
Ten stars have been found to have planets to date, and four planetary
systems have been discovered with the [SuperWASP](SuperWASP "wikilink")
project. [HD 142](HD_142 "wikilink") is a yellow giant that has an
apparent magnitude of 5.7, and has a planet ([HD 142b](HD_142_b
"wikilink")) 1.36 times the mass of Jupiter which orbits every 328 days.
[HD 2039](HD_2039 "wikilink") is a yellow subgiant with an apparent
magnitude of 9.0 around 330 light years away which has a planet ([HD 2039
b](HD_2039_b "wikilink")) six times the mass of Jupiter. [WASP-18](WASP-18
"wikilink") is a star of magnitude 9.29 which was discovered to have a hot
Jupiter-like planet ([WASP-18b](WASP-18b "wikilink")) taking less than a
day to orbit the star. The planet is suspected to be causing WASP-18 to
appear older than it really is. [WASP-4](WASP-4 "wikilink") and
[WASP-5](WASP-5 "wikilink") are solar-type yellow stars around 1000
light years distant and of 13th magnitude, each with a single planet
larger than Jupiter. [WASP-29](WASP-29 "wikilink") is an orange
dwarf of spectral type K4V and visual magnitude 11.3, which has a
planetary companion of similar size and mass to Saturn. The planet
systems have been discovered with the SuperWASP project. HD 142 is a yellow
giant that has an apparent magnitude of 5.7, and has a planet HD 142b 1.36
times the mass of Jupiter which orbits every 328 days. HD 2039 is a yellow
subgiant with an apparent magnitude of 9.0 around 330 light years away which
has a planet HD 2039 b six times the mass of Jupiter. WASP-18 is a star of
magnitude 9.29 which was discovered to have a hot Jupiter-like planet taking
less than a day to orbit the star. The planet is suspected to be causing WASP-18 to
appear older than it really is. WASP-4 and WASP-5 are solar-type yellow stars around 1000
light years distant and of 13th magnitude, each with a single planet larger
than Jupiter. WASP-29 is an orange dwarf of spectral type K4V and visual magnitude
11.3, which has a planetary companion of similar size and mass to Saturn. The planet
completes an orbit every 3.9 days.
questions_and_answers:
- question: In the Phoenix constellation, how many stars have planets?
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years distant and of 13th magnitude, each with a single planet
larger than Jupiter.
- context: |
The constellation does not lie on the
[galactic plane](galactic_plane "wikilink") of the Milky Way, and there
are no prominent star clusters. [NGC 625](NGC_625 "wikilink") is a dwarf
[irregular galaxy](irregular_galaxy "wikilink") of apparent magnitude 11.0
The constellation does not lie on the galactic plane of the Milky Way, and there
are no prominent star clusters. NGC 625 is a dwarf irregular galaxy of apparent magnitude 11.0
and lying some 12.7 million light years distant. Only 24000 light years in
diameter, it is an outlying member of the [Sculptor Group](Sculptor_Group
"wikilink"). NGC 625 is thought to have been involved in a collision and
is experiencing a burst of [active star formation](Active_galactic_nucleus
"wikilink"). [NGC 37](NGC_37 "wikilink") is a
[lenticular galaxy](lenticular_galaxy "wikilink") of apparent magnitude
14.66. It is approximately 42 [kiloparsecs](kiloparsecs "wikilink")
(137,000 [light-years](light-years "wikilink")) in diameter and about
12.9 billion years old. [Robert's Quartet](Robert's_Quartet "wikilink")
(composed of the irregular galaxy [NGC 87](NGC_87 "wikilink"), and three
spiral galaxies [NGC 88](NGC_88 "wikilink"), [NGC 89](NGC_89 "wikilink")
and [NGC 92](NGC_92 "wikilink")) is a group of four galaxies located
around 160 million light-years away which are in the process of colliding
and merging. They are within a circle of radius of 1.6 arcmin,
corresponding to about 75,000 light-years. Located in the galaxy ESO
243-49 is [HLX-1](HLX-1 "wikilink"), an
[intermediate-mass black hole](intermediate-mass_black_hole
"wikilink")—the first one of its kind identified. It is thought to be a
remnant of a dwarf galaxy that was absorbed in a
[collision](Interacting_galaxy "wikilink") with ESO 243-49. Before its
discovery, this class of black hole was only hypothesized.
diameter, it is an outlying member of the Sculptor Group. NGC 625 is
thought to have been involved in a collision and is experiencing a burst
of active star formation. NGC 37 is a lenticular galaxy of apparent magnitude
14.66. It is approximately 42 kiloparsecs in diameter and about 12.9 billion years old.
Robert's Quartet , and three spiral galaxies NGC 88 and NGC 92) is a group of
four galaxies located around 160 million light-years away which are in the process of colliding
and merging. They are within a circle of radius of 1.6 arcmin, corresponding to about
75,000 light-years. Located in the galaxy ESO 243-49 is HLX-1, an intermediate-mass
black hole intermediate-mass_black_hole —the first one of its kind identified.
It is thought to be a remnant of a dwarf galaxy that was absorbed in a collision
with ESO 243-49. Before its discovery, this class of black hole was only hypothesized.
questions_and_answers:
- question: |
Is the Phoenix Constellation part of the Milky Way?
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -503,37 +463,21 @@ snippet of `phoenix_constellation.md` might look like in your Git repository.
```markdown
# Phoenix (constellation)
**Phoenix** is a minor [constellation](constellation "wikilink") in the
[southern sky](southern_sky "wikilink"). Named after the mythical
[phoenix](Phoenix_(mythology) "wikilink"), it was first depicted on a
celestial atlas by [Johann Bayer](Johann_Bayer "wikilink") in his 1603
*[Uranometria](Uranometria "wikilink")*. The French explorer and
astronomer [Nicolas Louis de
Lacaille](Nicolas_Louis_de_Lacaille "wikilink") charted the brighter
stars and gave their [Bayer designations](Bayer_designation "wikilink")
**Phoenix** is a minor constellation in the southern sky. Named after the mythical
phoenix, it was first depicted on a celestial atlas by Johann Bayer in his 1603
*Uranometria*. The French explorer and astronomer Nicolas Louis de
Lacaille charted the brighter stars and gave their Bayer designations
in 1756. The constellation stretches from roughly −39 degrees to −57 degrees
[declination](declination "wikilink"), and from 23.5h to 2.5h of [right
ascension](right_ascension "wikilink"). The constellations Phoenix,
[Grus](Grus_(constellation) "wikilink"),
[Pavo](Pavo_(constellation) "wikilink") and [Tucana](Tucana "wikilink"),
are known as the Southern Birds.
The brightest star, [Alpha Phoenicis](Alpha_Phoenicis "wikilink"), is
named Ankaa, an [Arabic](Arabic "wikilink") word meaning 'the Phoenix'.
It is an orange giant of apparent magnitude 2.4. Next is [Beta
Phoenicis](Beta_Phoenicis "wikilink"), actually a
[binary](Binary_star "wikilink") system composed of two yellow giants
with a combined apparent magnitude of 3.3. [Nu
Phoenicis](Nu_Phoenicis "wikilink") has a dust disk, while the
constellation has ten star systems with known planets and the recently
discovered [galaxy clusters](galaxy_cluster "wikilink") [El
Gordo](El_Gordo_(galaxy_cluster) "wikilink") and the [Phoenix
Cluster](Phoenix_Cluster "wikilink")—located 7.2 and 5.7 billion light
years away respectively, two of the largest objects in the [visible
universe](visible_universe "wikilink"). Phoenix is the
[radiant](radiant_(meteor_shower) "wikilink") of two annual [meteor
showers](meteor_shower "wikilink"): the
[Phoenicids](Phoenicids "wikilink") in December, and the July
declination, and from 23.5h to 2.5h of right ascension. The constellations Phoenix,
Grus, Pavo, are known as the Southern Birds.
The brightest star, Alpha Phoenicis, is named Ankaa, an Arabic word meaning 'the Phoenix'.
It is an orange giant of apparent magnitude 2.4. Next is Beta Phoenicis, actually a
binary system composed of two yellow giants with a combined apparent magnitude of 3.3. Nu
Phoenicis has a dust disk, while the constellation has ten star systems with known planets and the recently
discovered galaxy clusters El Gordo and the Phoenix
Cluster—located 7.2 and 5.7 billion light years away respectively, two of the largest objects in the visible
universe. Phoenix is the radiant of two annual meteor showers: the Phoenicids in December, and the July
Phoenicids.
```

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