As soon as darkness falls these evenings, step outside and
look skyward. What is the most prominent and easiest star pattern to recognize?
If you live in the Northern Hemisphere you only need to look overhead and
toward the north where you will find the seven bright stars that comprise the
famous Big Dipper.
For most sky gazers, the Big Dipper is probably the most important
group of stars in the sky. For anyone in the latitude of New York (41 degrees
north) or points northward, it never goes below the horizon. It is one of the
most recognizable patterns in the sky and thus one of the easiest for the
novice to find.
In other parts of the world, these seven stars are known not
as a Dipper, but as some sort of a wagon. In Ireland, for instance, it was
recognized as "King David's Chariot," from one of that island's early
kings; in France, it was the "Great Chariot." Another popular name
was Charles's Wain (a wain being a large open farm wagon). And in the British Isles, these seven stars are known widely as "The Plough."
Of greatest importance is the ability to utilize the Big
Dipper to locate Polaris,
the North Star. This is made possible by the two bright stars that mark the
outer edge of the bowl of the Big Dipper. These two stars Dubhe and Merak
are known as the "Pointers," because they always point to Polaris. Just draw a
line, in your imagination, between these two stars and prolong it about 5 times
the distance between these two stars and this line will ultimately hit a
moderately bright star. That will be Polaris.
The Southern Cross
But for those who live in the Southern Hemisphere, it's not the
Big Dipper that people choose as their guide to the night sky but rather,
it's the constellation known as Crux, the Southern
Cross. Those south of the equator (where the season is now midautumn),
need only cast a glance toward the south where they'll see the distinctive
shape of the Cross hanging well up in the sky. To some, it looks more like a
kite, though the Cross is clearly outlined by four bright stars, two of which,
Acrux and Becrux, are of the first magnitude. From top to bottom, Crux measures
just 6 degrees only a little taller than the distance between the Pointer
stars of the Big Dipper. In fact, the Southern Cross is the smallest (in area)
of all the constellations. Like the Big Dipper of the northern sky, the
Southern Cross indicates the location of the pole and as such is often utilized
by navigators. The longer bar of the Cross points almost exactly toward the
south pole of the sky which some aviators and navigators have named the
"south polar pit" because, unfortunately, it is not marked by any
bright star.
It is thought that Amerigo Vespucci was the first of the
European voyagers to see the "Four Stars," as he called them, while
on his third voyage in 1501. But actually, Crux was plainly visible everywhere
in the United States some 5,000 years ago, as well as in ancient Greece and Babylonia. According to Richard Hinckley Allen (1838-1908), an expert in stellar
nomenclature, the Southern Cross was last seen on the horizon of Jerusalem about the time that Christ was crucified. But thanks to precession an
oscillating motion of the Earth's axis over the centuries, the Cross ended up
getting shifted out of view well to the south.
Immediately to the south and east of the Cross is a
pear-shaped, inky spot, about as large as the Cross itself, looking like a
great black hole in the midst of the Milky Way. When Sir John Herschel first
saw it from the Cape of Good Hope, South Africa in 1835, it is said that he
wrote his aunt, Caroline about this "hole in the sky." Indeed, few
stars are seen within this hole and it soon became popularly known as the
"Coalsack" which initially was thought to be some sort of window into
outer space. Today we know that the celebrated Coalsack is really a great cloud
of gas and dust that absorbs the light of the stars that must lie beyond it.
Limits of visibility
There are likely a number of
readers who have never seen either the Big Dipper or the Southern Cross and
might wonder about how far they might have to travel in order to get a view of
them. Coincidentally, at this time of the year, both are attaining their
highest positions in the sky at the same time: right after nightfall in late
May and early June. To see Crux, one must go at least as far south as latitude
25 degrees north. That means heading to the Florida Keys in the continental United States, where you'll see it just lifting fully above the southern horizon.
So far as seeing the Big
Dipper, you must go north of latitude 25 degrees south to see it in its
entirety. Across the northern half of Australia, for instance, you can now just
see the upside-down Dipper virtually scraping the northern horizon soon after
sundown. In fact, it's just the opposite effect as opposed to those who live in
north temperate latitudes (like New York), whose inhabitants see the Dipper at
a similar altitude above the northern horizon on early evenings in late
November or early December except the Dipper appears right-side up!
Interestingly, the Big Dipper and the Southern Cross have
also been depicted on a number of flags.
The Dipper is depicted on the Alaskan state flag. The Southern Cross can be
found on the national flags of Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Samoa and Brazil. Interestingly, on the flags of Australia, Brazil, Papua New
Guinea and Samoa, Crux is represented with five stars, while on the New Zealand
flag only the four brightest stars of the Cross are depicted, the faintest
fifth star (Epsilon Crucis) being omitted.