May 11th, 2017: Double Dipper

xoxoxoBruce • May 10, 2017 11:55 pm
One up and one down... or vise versa. The Big Dipper and it's reflection.
one of the most commonly recognized configurations of stars on the northern sky: the Big Dipper. This grouping of stars is one of the
few things that has likely been seen, and will be seen, by every generation. The Big Dipper is not by itself a constellation. Although
part of the constellation of the Great Bear (Ursa Major), the Big Dipper is an asterism[COLOR="Magenta"]*[/COLOR] that has been known by different names to
different societies.

[COLOR="magenta"]*[/COLOR]a prominent pattern or group of stars, typically having a popular name but smaller than a constellation.

Image

Five of the Big Dipper stars are actually near each other in space and were likely formed at nearly the same time. Connecting two
stars in the far part of the Big Dipper will lead one to Polaris, the North Star, which is part of the Little Dipper. Relative stellar motions
will cause the Big Dipper to slowly change its configuration over the next 100,000 years.


It's reassuring that it will be there for me for the next 100K years.

link
Snakeadelic • May 11, 2017 8:43 am
For a stunning shot on the opposite end of the cosmic time scale, check out today's APoD, which is the Crab Nebula imaged by 4 orbiting scopes and 1 ground-based. The light from its original star exploding reached the Earth only about 1000 years ago, making the Crab a very young astronomical event from our viewpoint.
orthodoc • May 11, 2017 4:47 pm
What a gorgeous pic, Bruce! Thanks.
xoxoxoBruce • May 11, 2017 10:00 pm
We've seen a lot of spectacular pictures of space from satellites and big telescopes. I like this one because it's something I've personally seen and can pick out of the night sky, instead of just being told trust us, it's up there somewhere.
SPUCK • May 16, 2017 3:18 am
Nice picture!

I walk my dog for about an hour every night around midnight so the Dipper 'n me see a lot of each other.

I'm trying to understand why the stars in the lake are time-smeared but the sky ones aren't.
glatt • May 16, 2017 8:33 am
Good eye!

Except I think the stars in the lake are not time smeared. It's some other kind of smearing. Maybe photoshop. If they were time smeared, you would see them forming arc of a circle pivoting around an invisible point in the upper (upper because it's a reflection) left part of the picture. In other words, the star trails in the water would be more horizontal.


*searches around*

Like this.
[ATTACH]60548[/ATTACH]
Happy Monkey • May 16, 2017 12:17 pm
I think they're water-smeared. Lights reflected in water will usually have a vertical trail, due to ripples. That water is remarkably calm, but not completely.
Gravdigr • May 16, 2017 3:20 pm
I think HapMo has the gist of it.:yesnod:
xoxoxoBruce • May 16, 2017 6:55 pm
Yes, water reflections of a point of light aren't sharp.
SPUCK • May 17, 2017 11:40 pm
Concur.