Arcturus: The Mysteries of the Red Giant Star (2024)

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Astronomy is filled with wonders, but it is also frustrating if you can’t see the sights. So, we will focus on the #1 brightest star in our northern sky. Its name is Arcturus. No star charts are needed. Discover this orange-colored giant star with is fascinating mythology.

If you love the night sky as I do, you know that there are mind-stretching realities and visual wonders capable of impressinganyone.

Unfortunately, the night sky also has a darker side, if you’ll excuse the paradox, because it’s packed with caveats and limitations. “You’ll see a meteor a minute if you get away from city lights,” we caution every August. Or, “You’ll likely enjoy vivid auroras if the Moon is absent.” Or maybe the news article will promise the Northern Lights “. . If you travel to near the Arctic Circle. Stuff likethat.

Let’s get real. You won’t hop a Trailways bus and leave the city to see a few meteors. Nor does your appointment calendar say, “Thursday: Arrive at the Arctic Circle.” And you don’t want to need to fool with a star chart.

My job is to highlight a few sky-objects or sky-happenings that you can instantly locate no matter where you live, and we’ll make sure they’re cooly enveloped in myth, mythology, science, or strangeness so that you can instantly impress friends or justyourself.

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What IsArcturus?

Arcturus is the brightest star in the northern sky, easily visible without a star chart. This brilliant orange-red star, found in the constellation Boötes (boh-OH-tee*z) the Herdsman, is around 36.7 light-years from Earth. Arcturus’ distinctive reddish hue reflects its temperature. It’s a cool star (in the thermometer rather than the hip sense), about 7,300 degreesFahrenheit.

Arcturus: The Mysteries of the Red Giant Star (1)

When winter ends, our planet starts facing away from the brilliance of the Milky Way—and the nursery filled with blue super-hot baby stars. The spring sky initially takes on a dim, forlorn appearance. We’re ready for new, bright objects to hold ourattention.

Perfect timing. So happens, a genuinely brilliant star—the best we’ll see all spring and summer—has now risen, ready for our admiration. And it has an easily pronounceable name. Arcturus. That’s rare. Two-thirds of star names came to us from the ancient desert-dwelling Arabs who cursed them with titles like Zubenelgenubi, Libra’s brighteststar.

Follow the Arc toArcturus

Around 9:30 P.M., gaze toward the sunrise position. High up in that direction shines the brilliant orange-white star of the firstmagnitude.

This isArcturus.

If it’s around midnight, just look overhead, and Arcturus is simply the only brilliant star shining, with few celestialneighbors.

Nothing more is needed for identification, but just to make things kindergarten-easy, you might recall the helpful phrase in every beginner’s astronomy book: “Follow the arc to Arcturus [and then speed on to Spica].” Meaning, follow the Big Dipper’s curving handle. If you continue the arc of that ladle, it curves precisely to the first bright star, Arcturus. (If you continue the line further, it needs to brightSpica.)

If you can commit this phrase to memory, you’ll easily be able to go out on a clear night and find the star Arcturus. This is how ancient stargazers “followed the arc toArturus.”

AboutArcturus

Arcturus: The Mysteries of the Red Giant Star (2)

Color

Arcturus has a beautiful orange-white color. The giveaway that you’re looking at Arcturus is its distinctive reddishhue.

StarType

Arcturus is a “red giant,” a star that is slowly on its way to death (though that may take billions of years). Like other red giants in the northern sky, this color indicates the star type. To be a red giant, a star must have between half our Sun’s mass up to eight times our Sun’smass.

Size

Today, Arcturus’ diameter is roughly 25 times greater than ourSun.

Temperature

It’s a cool star, about 7,300 degrees Fahrenheit. This is several thousand degrees cooler than the surface of our Sun. Young stars like nearby Vega are blue-white, which stems from theiryouthfulness.

Age

It’s far older than our Sun, believed to be an estimated 7.1 billion years old (compared to our Sun, roughly 4.5 billion years old).

Constellation

Arcturus is the brightest member of a kite-shaped constellation called Boötes the Herdsman. I’m not quite sure what a herdsman looks like, but it’s easy to see thekite.

Distance FromEarth

Part of the reason Arcturus looks so bright is that it’s pretty nearby. Arcturus is just 36.7 light-years from Earth, while its pal Vega is a mere 25 light-years. Think of what you were doing 36 years ago. That was when tonight’s Arcturus’s light left thatstar.

Any star closer than around 50 light-years is considered nearby, the average naked-eye star is 100 to 300 light-yearsaway.

3 Fun Facts AboutArcturus

Arcturus has not one but threeoddities.

  1. The first is that starting in 1898, astronomers used radiometers to measure its total energy, including infrared or heat. They found that despite having the same brightness and nearly the same distance from us as Vega, Arcturus puts out so much infrared that its heat reaching our faces as we stare at it is more than twice what we get from Vega. Not that you could “starbathe” by facing Arcturus with a tanning sun reflector. But turns out, if you hold up your palms toward Arcturus and carefully feel its warmth, you’d find it equal to the heat from a single candle located five milesaway.
  2. Here’s another strange one. Our galaxy is flat like a pancake, with almost all its stars revolving around the galactic core every 225 million years. But Arcturus doesn’t follow the flat plane of the Milky Way. Instead, this star circles the galaxy’s center at a 90-degree angle. It has just dived down toward our solar system from above instead of orbiting next to us like adjacent horses on a carousel. Because of this, Arcturus was totally invisible a mere 500,000 years ago. Brightening ever since, it’s now at very nearly its closest point to us, explaining its greatbrilliance.
  3. Arcturus gained its greatest fame for a strange reason. In 1933, when the new Chicago World’s Fair opened, the authorities focused the light from Arcturus onto a photoelectric cell, a new-fangled device back then, to throw the switch to turn on all the lights of their dazzling, famous ‘Century of Exposition’ pavilion, thus officially opening the fair. Why did they use Arcturus? That’s the cool part. Arcturus was believed to lie 40 light-years away, meaning that the light that left that star just as the previous Chicago Worlds Fair was closing in 1893 would now open the newone!

Myth andMeaning

Arcturus is a Greek word that generally means “guardian of the bear” or “bear keeper.” This herdsman is placed near Ursa Major, whose Latin name means “greater bear.” So, Arcturus drives Ursa Major across thesky.

In the Bible, stars are rarely named, but Arcturus is. (“Which maketh Arcturus, Orion and Pleiades, and the chambers of the south” – Job 9:9, KJV, and “Canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth in his season? or canst thou guide Arcturus with his sons?” – Job 38:32, KJV.)

The old red giant dates back to antiquity, and literature speaks of Polynesian sailors who used this high-up star to sail by starlight. The Ancient Romans foretold the weather withit.

Arcturus in PopCulture

Perhaps because Arcturus is so bright, such a cool color, and so easy to pronounce, it’s been explored in literature, film, and pop culture many times,including:

  • Isaac Asimov’s Foundation bookseries
  • David Lindsay’s novel, A Voyage toArcturus
  • Douglas Adams’s series, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
    “This compares to an ancient Arcturan Proverb, “How ever fast the body travels, the soul travels at the speed of an Arcturan Mega-Camel. –OOlanColluphid”
  • “Doctor Who” televisionseries
  • “Star Trek” televisionseries
  • The movie“Aliens”

So salute the orange fire of the star Arcturus the next clear evening, high in the east at 9:30 or nearly overhead at midnight! And if you want to learn about its pal, read my 10 facts about Vega, the summer star.

Arcturus: The Mysteries of the Red Giant Star (2024)
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