Constellation
of the Month - Cassiopeia, the "W"
Cassiopeia
is a "W"- shaped constellation. It's high in the sky towards the East soon
after sunset in November.
Cassiopeia is an interesting constellation for
several reasons:
1. It's Circumpolar:
It's one of a few constellations that never rise and never set – for viewers in
earth's Northern Hemisphere. They just (appear to) go in circles around the
North Star -- every day a circle, and every year a much slower circle. At 6AM it will be low in the sky to the north, and 6 months from now in the
evening, it will be about the same place.
If you lived at the North Pole, all the stars you could see
would be circumpolar. But they'd only be half the stars in the sky, because the
other half -- which you would never see -- would be circumpolar for those
penguins looking up from the South Pole.
2. It's always opposite the Big Dipper, with the North Star about midway between them. So, if you
look north from Cassiopeia, and keep going north and lower in the sky, you'll
find the Big Dipper low in the north. 3 months ago and 3 months from now, they
were and will be opposite each other east to west.
3. The band of the Milky Way goes through it. We're in the Milky Way galaxy, which is shaped like a
disk. When we see it as a fuzzy band of many, many stars, we're looking along
the plane of the disk, so we see what looks like a band of stars. When we look
anywhere except along this plane we just see a few stars that are close, and
that's what the rest of the sky (outside the band) looks like.
In ancient mythology, Cassiopeia is the Queen to King
Cepheus, our October 2013 constellation of the month.
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