Australian Sky & Telescope - April 2018

(avery) #1

44 AUSTRALIAN SKY & TELESCOPE April 2018


The great Overdog,
That heavenly beast
Withastarinoneeye,
Gives a leap in the east.

He dances upright
Allthewaytothewest
And never once drops
Onhisforefeettorest.

I’m a poor underdog,
ButtonightIwillbark
With the great Overdog
That romps through the dark.
—Robert Frost, “Canis Major”

T


he first serious poem I ever recall
being read to me and discussed
was Robert Frost’s “Stopping by
the Woods on a Snowy Evening”. I
think I was only five years old at the
time, but it certainly made a great
impression on me. A few more years
passed before I, already a budding
stargazer, first had the pleasure of
coming across one of Frost’s other
poems, “Canis Major”. Strangely, I don’t
remember ever quoting it in any of my
astronomical writings. I’m finally doing
it now, however, and for a good reason:
an exploration and celebration of this
constellation of the Big Dog that at
times I’ve found to be a bit neglected.
Surely Sirius, by far the most
brilliant star in the night sky, steals
a lot of attention away from the rest
of its constellation. But Canis Major
features four other stars
brighter than magnitude
2.5. One of those four is
occasionally even included in
the ranks of 1st-magnitude
stars — though as the least
bright 1st-magnitude star. It’s far
more often considered to be the
brightest of the 2nd-magnitude class.
I’m speaking of Adhara, which at

In the southern part of the
Canis Major constellation, at the
opposite end from Sirius, shines this
compact triangle. It’s composed of
1.5-magnitude Epsilon (ε)Canis
Majoris (Adhara), 1.8-magnitude
Delta (δ) Canis Majoris (Wezen) and
2.5-magnitude Eta (η) Canis Majoris
(Aludra).IcallittheSouthernCanis
Triangle.And,remarkably,these
stars’ brightnesses closely rival those
ofthethreestarsinOrion’sBelt:

1.7 (Alnilam), 1.7 (Alnitak) and 2.3
(Mintaka). Orion’s Belt straddles the
celestial equator and therefore sparkles
high above the northern horizon
when on the meridian for observers at
southern temperate latitudes.
The three stars of the
Southern Canis Triangle are
mighty suns. At distances
of 405 light-years (Adhara), about
1,800 light-years (Wezen), and possibly
about 3,000 light-years (Aludra), the
absolute magnitudes of these stars are
around –4, –7 and –7.5. James Kaler’s
wonderful ‘Stars’ website (https://
is.gd/kalerstars) tells us that Wezen
is cooler than the other two stars; it’s
a rare yellow supergiant that in less
than 100,000 years should become a
red supergiant somewhat like Antares.
Kaler also notes that Aludra is probably
only about 12 million years
old, and that if our eyes were
sensitive to ultraviolet light,
Adhara would shine brighter than
any other star in our sky.

„FRED SCHAAF’s first book,
Wonders of the Sky (Dover Publications),
was published about 35 years ago.

UNDER THE STARS by Fred Schaaf

The great Overdog and its pack


Sirius isn’t the only star that shines brightly in Canis Major.


magnitude 1.5 is the 22nd brightest star
in all the sky. Adhara slightly outshines
the far more famous Castor. Castor
can ascribe its greater fame largely
to being in a zodiac constellation,
Gemini. Of course, its biggest source
of renown is being one of the pair of
‘twin’ luminaries of Gemini, the Twins,
the other being Pollux. But, as I’ve
argued before, Adhara is actually part
of a starry trio, not duo, which is quite
impressive in its own right.

“If our eyes were sensitive to ultraviolet light, Adhara
would shine brighter than any other star in our sky.”

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS / RESTORATION: ADAM CUERDEN
Free download pdf