Dipping the Sky

What Else Can You Find?

Ursa Major and the Big Dipper. Use the curved handle of the Dipper to "arc to Arcturus".
Use the curved handle of the Big Dipper to arc to Arcturus.

In another entry, I talked about the Big Dipper and how you can find the North Star with it.  It turns out the Big Dipper is a great pointer to another bright star in the sky. If you take the curve of the handle of the Dipper and follow it out in an arc, you come to the bright star Arcturus, the brightest star in the constellation of Boötes.

A star chart showing Bootes and Arcturus.

Arcturus is an interesting star. It’s slightly orangy-colored K-type star (making it older, cooler, 1.5 times more massive than the Sun and appears larger than the Sun).  I was interested to read over at Jim Kaler’s Stars site that astronomers think that Arcturus comes from an older population of stars in the Milky Way. It’s even possible that Arcturus was part of a smaller, dwarf galaxy that merged with the Milky Way in the distant past.

Arcturus compared to the Sun.

Arcturus is seismically active  — meaning that it goes through physical oscillations,  just as other red giants do. It’s a variable star, meaning that its brightness changes slightly every few days.  Interestingly, when you look at Arcturus, you’re seeing what the Sun could look like as it goes into its red giant phase in a few billion years.

Arcturus is another one of those bright stars that everybody on the planet (well, nearly everybody) seemed to observe throughout history. People used it for navigation and seasonal predictions having to do with harvesting food.  Today, you can simply look up and marvel at this star that lies only about 37 light-years away from us. Just remember to “arc to Arcturus” from the handle of the Big Dipper. It’ll take you on a curvy path across the sky to this slightly reddish, bloated star.  Enjoy!

2 thoughts on “Dipping the Sky”

  1. CC:
    I read somewhere that calling this asterism a bear is common through Northern latitudes (where bears are common). In the early evening it is easiest to do astronomy (don’t I know it!) and early humans would sit by the fire and make up stories while looking at the stars. In the fall, the dipper is setting at that hour, and in the spring it’s rising then. Thus it became easy to think of this constellation as a bear, going to hibernation in the fall (going to ground) and rising in the Spring when hibernation is over.

    If this is true, then calling this constellation a bear is the oldest cultural artifact that humanity has. It could be 50,000 years old. It’s purely speculation, of course, but it would explain the Northern tendency to call it a bear.

    Do you know of any Northern areas where it isn’t a bear? It’d be worth looking into…

  2. The constellation itself is a bear in many cultures. The asterism of the dipper is also a plough in some places.

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