I like winter skies. They always seem more glittery and lovely. Maybe it’s because the constellation Orion is giving us a show. Or, maybe it’s because it gets dark earlier and we have longer to look at the skies (from here in the northern hemisphere). One of my favorite things is go out and find the Orion Nebula. Another is to look for the Hyades and the Pleiades. Actually, you can see those now (in early November) if you go out and look late in the evening. By the end of the month, they’ll be higher in the sky earlier in the evening. So, it’s worth sneaking a preview look at the pretties of the winter sky.
In my current episode of “Our Night Sky” at Astrocast.TV, we take a little tour of those last two objects — a couple of star clusters that you can see pretty easily. And, for southern hemisphere viewers (who are heading into the warm spring and summer months) we take a little look at some neighboring galaxies to the Milky Way.
I just got back from a lecture gig on board a study-cruise program in the Mediterranean. We visited Italy, Greece, Turkey, and the Greek Islands, and the theme of the educational program was “Gods and Heroes”. My job was to talk to people about the ancient connections to the sky that the Greeks and Romans (in particular) had in ancient times. In contrast to today, when we get all our time information from gadgets like watches and cell phones, our calendars hang on the wall, and we don’t even think about whether it’s night or day, ancient people had no mechanical means of understanding the sky. They used it, but they didn’t really get what it was they were seeing. At least, not in the scientific sense that we do today.
Yes, they were incredible observationalists and their charts were the basis of astrology, which was the predecessor to the science of astronomy. But, the ancients only really had what they could see with the naked eye. They had a one-dimensional view of the sky — things appeared in it, sometimes they seemed to move against the backdrop of stars, and there was no scientifically rigorous study of the celestial realm. People weren’t stupid back then — they just had different priorities (like survival) and belief systems (“things in the sky must be gods and goddesses”).
So, the Sun, for example, became more than a bright shiny thing in the sky. People imagined that it had a purpose, it had a reason for being there — and, being humans — they endowed it with human and superhuman powers. They created a god/goddess in their own image and then made it bigger, mightier, and mysterious.
Of course, we all have a link to the Sun today — it’s what helped us devise the units of day and night. It provides warmth and stimulates life processes. So, it’s no surprise that such a powerful influence on the planet would have been an object of worship among ancient people. Heck, some people worship the Sun today — I often refer to them as the “SPF 50 Cult”.
It didn’t take long for people to figure out that the Sun could be used as a timekeeper, a way to mark the passage of days. Along with the Moon’s cycle of phases — it became the basis for what eventually have become the various world calendars. The ancients used the sky as a tool to capture time, to define their daily lives, and as a place for their gods/goddesses/heroes/villains. In a sense, it provided not just orderliness, but entertainment and a sense of cultural unity (“We all believe in Ra, the Sun God, therefore we are people of the Sun God”.)
Today, of course, we know the Sun is a star. There’s nothing mysterious about it. There are certainly parts of its processes that scientists are still working to understand and explain — that’s the nature of the science of solar physics. But, as a former deity — well, the Sun’s WAY bigger than that. It’s more real to us as a star and we have a very good idea of how stars work (mechanically and astrophysically). And, we know where it lies in the hierarchy of stars that make up the stellar city we live in — the Milky Way.
Still, it was a lot of fun to go back to the “ancient world” for ten days and look at things like the Sun and Moon and planets through the eyes of those who lived in those times. The work they did in charting the sky, the apparent motions of the Sun, Moon, planets, and stars, were the cartographica basis for the sky charts we use today. And, if certain “natural philosophers” among the ancient peoples around the world hadn’t looked up and wondered “What is that we see?” about sky objects, we wouldn’t have the science of astronomy to help us understand the universe in the straightforward, rigorous way we do today.