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II June 2007 Highways in the Sky (Asterisms) The most frequently asked question I’m hearing at stargazing meetings is: “Where is it?” The stars are up there and for all practical purposes they stay put. Our Earth, however, is rotating around its axis. Look at a star and take note of its location. One hour later the star has moved 15 degrees, going around the polar star (Polaris), just like the Sun. Relative to other stars the star's position has not changed at all. All stars circle around Polaris at 15 degrees/hr. And that is because the Earth rotates that fast and its axis lines up with Polaris! To make things interesting, our earth goes also around the Sun in one year. That's 30 degrees per month (roughly 1 degree per day). If I look up (to the south) at a star at 9:00 PM, then at 11:00 PM it has turned westward by 30 degrees. But if I look a month from now at the same star at 9:00 PM again, it has done the same! Think about it and you might get the idea that star charts can be drawn with time and date markings on it; you'll find some details further explained on our web-site (http://www.wyalusing.org); under <star gazing>, click <Lessons>, and select "Highways and Coordinates". There are two problems with the star charts. The constellations are so nicely drawn on the maps, but no such lines or pictures in the sky to help you out. The second problem lies in the fact that we see the stars as projected on a sphere, the celestial sphere or simply ‘The Sky’. Maps are drawn on flat pieces of paper. Pounding a sphere into flat pieces causes distortions, which make things hard for beginners. Laser pointers are a great help for me in pointing objects out to you. Good sky charts are even better, but you have to practice to use them. Let me show you: Earth’s axis points right to the pole star… well almost. It misses it by ‘that much’, about ¾ degree. Where is Polaris? Do you remember the trick? Find the Big Dipper, that pan with a handle; extend the line going from the bottom end star of the pan to the top star of the pan, away from the handle. At about 6-7 times that distance along the line is Polaris. The end of the handle is about straight overhead in early June around 10 PM and the pan is to the West. Circumpolar drwg Can we use the Big Bear for other directions in the sky? Yes, we can! You do not think it looks much like a bear? Neither do I, so let’s call the constellation just UMA (remember Ursa Major?), pronounce it as ‘you Ma’. UMA is the constellation and Big Dipper (that ‘pan’ of 7 stars) is the “asterism”. The brightest one, alpha, at the far end and top of the dipper (also called Dubhe, like DO-be) and ‘eta’ (or Alkaid, like all-KAID) at the end of the handle, mark 25 degrees of arc in the sky. By the way, the sun and the moon are ½ degree-of-arc wide in the sky. Your pinky’s nail, held at arm’s length, covers 1 degree of the sky. The rest of your outstretched hand can be used too, three fingers closed together is 5 degrees; ring and index finger spread out is 10; pinky and index finger, spread as far as you can, cover 15 degrees; and finally check that pinky-to-thumb matches the 25 degrees from Dubhe to Alkaid . Checked it? Now we can go to the sketch and you should be able to find the stars in the clear night sky, using your calibrated hand. Is the sketch a bit too small? For me it is; send me an e-mail and I’ll send you the JPEG file so that you can print it out B I G. Big Sketch Since it is summer we go for the ‘summer triangle’. This is another great road sign or asterism in the sky. Let us find Deneb, an easy-to-find and bright star. We go from beta to alpha UMA (that is the side of the dipper-pan away from the handle), continue 15x this distance (through Polaris again) and then curving through the 2 stars forming the SE side of the ‘house’-like asterism (in Cepheus), that is 60 degrees of arc or two pink-to-thumb distances plus a little. There is Deneb or alpha CYG, the tail of the Swan (or the top of the Northern Cross). As a check, you can imagine a circle around Polaris from Alkaid (end of Big Dipper’s handle) going 50 degrees to Vega (will be at your Zenith on Aug 1 at 10 PM). Along that circle continue 20 degrees clockwise and you should be at Deneb again. Early September at 10 PM Deneb will be in Zenith, straight above, and Vega will have moved on to the West. Deneb and Vega (alpha LYR) are 20 degrees of arc apart. Now make a triangle, point down and you come to Altair (all-TER) or alpha-AQUILA (ACK-will-uh), in the constellation The Eagle. Don’t think it looks like an eagle? Then likely you did not see a swan in CYGNUS either. You have to use a lot of imagination. Otherwise just see the triangle with its 20 degrees base and 30 arcdegrees sides; that’s our road sign anyway. More “highways” around the Big Dipper are in the drawing, with distances expressed in degrees. Use your stretched arm and calibrated hand and be on your way. Now go way down along the Deneb-Altair line, twice that distance, and you might see the Teapot (in Sagittarius, like sai-jeTER-ee-us, the Bowhunter) just above the horizon. It has only second and third magnitude stars; if it is not yet above the horizon wait a while; it is a neat constellation. You can find the Keystone-4 of Hercules between Vega and Arcturus. These four are only third magnitude stars, but the Keystone quadrangle is still easily recognizable. Going from Vega through Deneb, twice that distance and you’ll notice the fuzzy M31 or large Andromeda galaxy (looks interesting through binoculars or telescopes). On the line from Vega to Altair you’ll find a little parallelogram of third and fourth magnitude stars. With the bright Vega so nearby, you can easily miss the one in the corner near Vega. Try hard or use binoculars. We will come back here later! At our latitude of almost 43 degrees, Polaris is way down (47 degrees) and North of Zenith. Begin July Vega is right above you at midnight. If you draw a large circle in the sketch with Vega as center, you have the picture of what you see in the sky. To the South you’ll be able to see a little (20 degrees if clear near the horizon) farther. Two hours later and also begin August at midnight; you should draw the circle around Deneb. Likely you remember: ‘follow the arch of the Big Dipper’s handle to Arcturus (in Bootes or ice-cream cone), continue and spy Spica in Virgo’. Practice a bit more and you’ll never be lost again in the night sky. You know your way around! From November to early April you have also Orion to guide you. Try it using this drawing. Highways around Orion (winter) You might consider buying the “Seasonal Star Chart”, published by Discovery Channel, $ 20. The 18” by 12” map has the horizoncircle as a cutout and you can rotate the star chart behind it. Timeof-night and day-of-month markings help to reveal the right “view”. Rand McNeally publishes a smaller one for $7, also called a ‘plani-sphere’. However, you might be better off spending $20 on SKY&Telescope’s Pocket Sky Atlas by the well-known cartographer Roger Sinnott. With your highways-in-the-sky skills you just mastered, you’re ready for it! That little atlas has 8 groups of 10 maps, very logically and clearly organized, showing 30,000 stars and 1500 interesting deepsky objects. It is 7” by 9”, requiring thus a rather big pocket. With the binocs (binoculars) you saw a lot more stars and much easier, but the stars were still just little point sources of light. How come? Our eyes have lenses with 3/8 to ½ inch diameter (pupils). The binocs have 1.5 to 2 inch lenses and can bring the light so caught into your eyes, gathering thus 15 times as much light as compared to looking without the binocs. Remember the 2.5 rule of a mag 1 increase? 15 x corresponds with 2.5 x 2.5 x 2.5, this means we can now see to mag 8 instead of 5! The stars are so far away, many light-years (1 l-y = 6 trillion miles!), that you still see them as points. A useful trick for orientation on star-charts is via the RA of your meridian (line due South from your zenith). You’ve noticed that the latitude on Earth relates to declination in the sky and longitude is akin to “RA”, Right Ascension (and no, I don’t know where Left Ascension is). RA is measured in hours and minutes. Since 24 hours comes to 360 degrees (one full rotation of Earth), 1 hr RA equals 15 degrees; and 1 RA-minute is 15 arc-minutes. There is a small correction since Earth revolves around the Sun in one year; you get in effect one “extra” rotation in one year. You can figure out how small the correction is: 360 degrees in 365 days, 1 year, amounts to almost 1 degree per day. That is 1/15-th of 1 hr RA or 4 RA-minutes. The sidereal day, star-day, is only 4 minutes shorter than our Earth-day. But keep in mind that in the course of a whole year the star-time is falling 24 hrs short of our regular clock. On January 1 at 5:21 PM your “South” is at 0 h RA at WSP (Wyalusing State Park at 91 deg. longitude); believe me. For every month later you add 2 h (and add for days 4 min/day) to it and for every hour past 5:21 PM, you add 1 (you figured that out already, I’m sure; and 1 min/min of course)). When there is daylight savings time you have to subtract 1 from your answer (don’t blame me, I hate DST). You want an example? OK: July 7th here at the Park at 10:00 PM (note that daylight savings time is in effect). From January 1 to July 7th is 6 months and 6 days; add 12 h-24 min. From 5:21 PM to 10:00 PM is 4 h-39 min; DST makes you subtract 1. My due south point is thus at RA = 0 + 12:24 + 4:39 - 1 = 15:63 = 16:03. If this RA-result is larger than 24, subtract 24, of course. You’re almost pros now! You’ve just calculated SIDEREAL TIME! You can do it almost by heart. The meridian on your star chart at that time and place is thus the N-S line having that RA! You should be able now to locate, on the charts and in the sky, the objects that are being mentioned in future columns here or elsewhere. On our big sketch, as an example, draw your meridian through Polaris and the RA-value listed on the outer circle; the RA that you just calculated for Wyalusing and the time and date of your observation. Line up that South with the actual S, likely you know where that is or use a compass. Have fun crisscrossing the Sky with you Highways sketches. Clear Skies GW 1 page from Sinnott’s Pocket Sky Atlas