- We now follow the line diagonally through the dipper to the star Castor.
This is part of the Zodiac constellation Gemini the twins. The two brightest
stars are Pollux, to the left, and Castor, to the right. {Trace out Gemini}.

- That really bright star right next to Gemini is Procyon, the "Little Dog
Star" a mere 12 light years away, and belongs to the constellation Canis
Minor, the Little Dog, which is all of those two stars right there {Point out
Canis Minor}. The little dog belongs to Orion the great hunter, as does the
Big Dog who we'll talk about in a minute.
- If we get Castor in the telescope at high magnification you can see it as
a double star. (Note to tourguide -- I don't usually attempt
this, I just mention it.) In reality, each of those stars is a double,
too close to see in our telescope, and then there is another, third star that
is also a part of the system which is ALSO a double. So while we can see two
stars (at best) in our telescope, Castor is actually a SIX STAR SYSTEM, about
50 light years away.
- Down by the foot of Castor (the twin), is the open cluster M35, a pretty
darn good cluster either in binoculars or in the telescope. If we have a
clear, dark night you may be able to spot it with your eyes alone. This
cluster is about 3,000 light years away and if you look carefully in a
telescope, you can see another cluster right next to it... that one is about
16,000 light years or nearly six times as far away.
- Since they're twins Pollux gets to have a cool cluster down by his foot
too. If you look off the tip of the foot of Pollux you will see a line of
three stars pointing to the southwest, toward Orion's belt. Put the binoculars
on the first of those three stars (closest to Pollux's foot) and you will see
the Christmas tree cluster. The star you saw is the base of the tree, and the
rest of the tree is hanging upside down from the base. Photographs of that
region show a fascinating complex of gas clouds (nebulae) around those stars.
| M35 is easy to see in binoculars |
The Christmas Tree is upside down (North is up) |
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- As you go from Pollux' foot toward Pollux the star, you come across the
star z (zeta) Geminorum. This is another
Cepheid
variable with a cycle of about 10 days. You can use the two bright stars
near Pollux as your gauge of z's brightness. The
brighter one to the south is k (kappa) Geminorum,
with a magnitude of about 3.6, and the other one to the north (closer to
Pollux) is u (upsilon) Geminorum, with a magnitude of
about 4.1. The variable z takes five days to go from
the brightness of u to that of k, then another five days to go back again. This is one of
only three Cepheids you can see by eye - you already met d Cephei, the original, and the third one is in the summer
constellation of Aquila.
- If we continue on up the line from Pollux' foot toward Pollux the star,
you come across the star d Geminorum. Next to that
star there is a small triangle of stars, {point out 56, 61, & 63
Geminorum} and that's where we are moving the telescope next. When you look in
the eyepiece you'll see a faint star and something else... a little fuzzy
spot. The little puff is known as the Eskimo Nebula, also called the Clown
Face Nebula. If we have a big enough telescope you can see the Clown's (or
Eskimo's) face, and with a really good telescope we can pick out a tiny star
at the center, making a clown's nose for us. Can anyone remember what we call
a little round nebula like this? That's right, this is another planetary
nebula, like the Blue Snowball we saw in Andromeda.
| Eskimo in Telescope - can you see his face? |
What you're looking at (courtesy the Hubble
Telescope) |
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Look carefully and you may be able to see the tiny star that remains at the
center of the Eskimo's face -- a once great star that is now a white dwarf.
- I called Gemini a Zodiac constellation. What is a "Zodiac"
constellation? (I have been surprised to discover that
few, if any, kids can answer this question.)
As the earth goes around the sun, this motion means that every day we look
back at the sun in a slightly different direction, with different stars behind
it. The sun appears to move through the constellations. Theoretically there
are twelve constellations through which the sun moves, one per month, and
these are the Zodiac constellations. In reality there is a 13th
constellation through which the sun passes (technically, at least) and it gets
no credit for being in the Zodiac - Ophiuchus.

- So Gemini is one Zodiac constellation, and we've already talked about
another constellation on the path of the sun, can you guess which one? That's
right, Taurus is another Zodiac Constellation, on the sun's path just to the
west of Gemini, so the sun passes through Taurus, then Gemini, then it
continues on through the next month's constellation, the ever so faint Crab
with the unfortunate name of "Cancer". {Trace out Cancer the Crab} My real target here is the Beehive, and in some cases I don't
bother with Cancer at all -- I simply tell the group to look halfway between
the bright stars of Leo and the bright stars of Gemini -- in the center of the
dark region is a faint fuzzy spot. Most people will see it right away.
- It's so unremarkable I wouldn't even bother showing you this
constellation, except for one thing... the Beehive. If you look very
carefully at the center of the crab, you will see a hazy patch. Now look at
that hazy patch through the binoculars. Wow, eh? That's the Beehive Cluster,
about 500 light years away. It is about the same distance as the Pleiades (not
nearly as bright, is it?) and the same age as the Hyades, 400 million years
old, and some people think the Beehive & Hyades are related because
they're both moving at the same speed in the same direction. The fact that
they are about 450 light years apart is hard to explain though.
| The Beehive is so big you can see it just by looking
|
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- If you're going for the Astronomy merit badge you need four Zodiac
constellations and it just so happens you're in luck... we've got one more,
this time going west from Taurus. So this is on the sun's path before
it reaches Taurus; just to the west of the Pleiades you find the constellation
Aries the Ram. The easiest part of the constellation to spot is a set of three
bright stars forming a bent line or a very flat triangle. {Point out the
central stars in Aries.} Most star charts only show these three stars.
However, if you follow the line of the whole constellation you get a much
better sense of the ram's horns. {Trace out the full constellation.}

- The little bitty triangle buzzing around to the left of the bright central
stars of Aries used to be a constellation of its own, called the Northern Fly.
{Point out the Northern Fly.} Mercifully the fly was gassed and now those
stars are officially part of Aries. (There is a Southern Fly - since the
demise of Northern Fly the Southern Fly is just the Fly - near the Southern
Cross close to the South Pole. We can't see it.)
- Just to the north of Aries you might notice a distinct, narrow triangle of
stars, which happens to be another constellation whose name is, surprisingly
enough, Triangulum. {Trace out Triangulum}
- Aside from being a neat looking constellation, Triangulum is the home of
another galaxy, M33. This galaxy is just a little farther from us than the
Andromeda galaxy, about 2.4 million light years away, and belongs to our group
of galaxies - astronomers refer to this as the "Local Group".
M33 has a reputation for being tough to see and we need a clear, dark sky
to really be able to see it. {Point out M33's location} It is so big, faint,
and spread out, that it is actually easier to see in binoculars (if we can see
it at all) than in a telescope. On a very dark night you might even be able to
see it with your eyes alone, by looking just to one side of it (averted
vision).
- The three bright stars of Aries are a (alpha),
b (beta), and g (gamma). If
we get the telescope on g, you can see that it is
also a binary, a close pair of clear white stars. If you don't want to bother
with the telescope you can spot another double with the binoculars -- mid-way
and slightly above the line between a and b is l Arietis, a bright yellow
star with a faint yellow companion, just above it. You can spot the faint twin
with 10x50 binoculars - if you hold them rock steady. Both of these double
stars, g and l, are true
binary systems -- twin stars that were formed together and are now orbiting
one another.