Credit & Copyright: Steve Cullen
Explanation:
When did you first learn to identify this group of stars?
Although they are familiar to many people around the world,
different cultures have associated this
asterism with
different icons
and folklore.
Known in the
USA as the
Big Dipper, the stars are part of a constellation designated
by the
International Astronomical Union in 1922 as the Great Bear
(Ursa Major).
The recognized star names of these stars are
(left to right)
Alkaid,
Mizar/Alcor,
Alioth,
Megrez,
Phecda,
Merak, and
Dubhe.
Of course, stars in any given
constellation
are unlikely to be physically
related.
But surprisingly, most of the Big Dipper stars do seem to
be headed in the same direction as they
plough through
space, a property they share with other stars spread out
over an even larger area across the sky.
Their
measured common motion suggests that they all belong
to a loose, nearby
star cluster, thought to
be on average only about 75
light-years away and up to 30 light-years across.
The cluster is more properly known as the
Ursa Major
Moving Group.
The
featured
image captured the iconic stars recently above
Pyramid Mountain
in Alberta,
Canada.
Night Sky Network webinar:
APOD editor to review coolest space images of 2023
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& Michigan Tech. U.
Publikacii s klyuchevymi slovami:
Ursa Major - star cluster - Bol'shaya Medvedica - zvezdnoe skoplenie
Publikacii so slovami: Ursa Major - star cluster - Bol'shaya Medvedica - zvezdnoe skoplenie | |
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