Hey Captain Astro
Tom’s been out stargazing 12 nights in a row, so he’s too tired to write his column this week. Instead, he has asked the intrepid CAPTAIN ASTRO to answer some of the emails that have been pouring in from readers.
Hey Captain Astro,
I’ve tried to use the star to find the constellations. I can see the stars okay, but I never seem to be able to see the lines that connect the stars together. What gives?
— Timmy Johnson, age 9
Well, Timmy, you can’t see the lines from inside the city. You’ll have to go out to a dark, rural place to see them.
Hey Captain Astro,
Come on now. Really?
— Timmy
Ha, ha, old Captain Astro was just pulling your leg. Of course, the lines are just imaginary connections to help group the stars into artificial collections called constellations.
Ancient people saw the sky as a great bowl upon which were placed points of light called stars. They thought all the stars were the same distance away.
It was natural for them to see patterns in the stars, and they gave those patterns the names of the most important things around them — the heroes of their stories and the animals they depended upon for their survival.
The ancients who studied the sky more systematically, the astrologers and astronomers, simply sliced up the sky according to those even more ancient divisions. By 150 A.D., the great Alexandrian astronomer Ptolemy listed the 48 constellations of the northern sky that we still use, give or take a few, today.
It was more than 1,400 years before any new constellations were added by astronomers in the 17th and 18th centuries, and most of the new ones are visible only from the southern hemisphere.
By the beginning of the 20th century, astronomers needed a fixed definition of the parts of the sky, so the International Astronomical Union decided in 1928 to parcel up the sky into 88 constellations, including the ones visible from the southern hemisphere. But these constellations are not exactly the stick figures that the ancients invented, even though they bear most of the same names.
The modern constellations are arbitrary divisions of the sky, sort of like the way the world is divided into countries. They are used to designate the locations of stars, nebulas and galaxies so that astronomers can have an exact idea of their location. Thus, the stars that make up the stick figure of Orion are IN the patch of sky we call Orion, but they don’t define the constellation the way they used to.
The stars in a constellation like Orion, the Hunter, visible high in the southern sky right now, aren’t even close to each other, although they appear to be so from our vantage point on earth. We imagine that the stars are projected on a large black bowl we call the celestial sphere, kind of like a planetarium dome.
That makes the stars in Orion look like they are close together, but they really aren’t. In fact, Betelgeuse, at the upper left corner of Orion, is 310 light years away. (One light year is about six trillion miles. You multiply it out. Old Captain Astro is too tired.) Rigel, at the lower right corner, is about 900 light years away. Bellatrix is about 470 light years away, and so on.
Seen from practically any other angle in space, these stars wouldn’t look anything like the constellation we see from earth.
Stars that really are close to each other in space generally look much closer together from our vantage point, and we call them star clusters. They are close together because they were formed out of the same cloud of hydrogen gas.
An example is the Pleiades, a small collection of six stars in the constellation Taurus, the bull. It is straight overhead in the early evening, and looks like a small dipper of stars. It isn’t a constellation because the stars are too close together to make it a useful sky division. But the stars are actually close enough together to be gravitationally attracted to each other.
Hey Captain Astro,
But I don’t get it. They don’t look much like the animals and heroes they’re supposed to represent.
— Timmy
You’re right Timmy, for the most part. The ancients had a tremendous imagination. They saw shapes in the sky the way we sometimes see shapes in the clouds on a summer day. Also, it’s possible that the ancients didn’t really believe that the constellations really were people or animals. They may have been looking for a way to name the parts of the sky, and called those parts by the names of important people and animals in their legends.
The old heroes after whom the constellations are named are almost forgotten.
But their names remain as a legacy to our ancient forebears, who looked up to the sky in awe and wonderment.
Hey Captain Astro,
I have to write a report on Neptune for school. Please tell me everything you know about Neptune.
— Timmy
Er, ah, sorry kid, I left some lentils cooking on the stove. Gotta go. Bye.
Tom Burns is director of Ohio Wesleyan University’s Perkins Observatory in Delaware. Contact him at tlburns@owu.edu.







