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SIRIUS STAR

How to see Sirius. Most people in the Northern Hemisphere notice Sirius in the southeast
south or southwest on evenings from winter to mid-spring. February evenings are a grand
time to see it. Its also fun to spot Sirius as it ascends in the east before dawn on late
summer mornings. Whenever you see Sirius, youll recognize it easily because it is our skys
brightest star.
Although white to blue white in color, Sirius might be called a rainbow star, as it often
flickers with many colors.
The brightness, twinkling and color changes sometimes prompt first-time observers to report
Sirius as a UFO. But these changes have nothing to do with Sirius. Rather, they are what
happens when such a bright star as Sirius shines through the blanket of Earths atmosphere.
The light from Sirius, which often appears fairly low in the sky from the mid-north latitudes,
passes through a long column of air before it reaches our eyes. Changes in density and
temperature of this air affect the light and cause the flickering and shimmering we see when
we gaze at this star. This happens for other stars, too, but it is more noticeable for Sirius
because it is so bright, and because it appears low in the sky.
From the mid-northern latitudes such as most of the U.S., Sirius rises in the southeast, arcs
across the southern sky, and sets in the southwest. In December, youll find Sirius rising in
mid-evening. By mid-April, Sirius is setting in the southwest in mid-evening.
Sirius is always easy to find. Its the skys brightest star! Plus, anyone familiar with the
constellation Orion can simply draw a line through Orions Belt, to the left. This line will point
to Sirius, which is roughly 8 times as far from the Belt as the Belt is wide.

The Egyptian god Osiris

History and mythology of Sirius.Sirius is also well known as the Dog Star, because it is
the chief star in the constellation Canis Major, the Big Dog. Have you ever heard anyone

speak of the dog days of summer? Sirius is behind the sun as seen from Earth in Northern
Hemisphere summer. In late summer, it appears in the east before sunrise near the sun in
our sky. The early stargazers might have imagined that the double-whammy of Sirius and
the sun caused the hot weather, or dog days.
Sirius has been known since ancient times, and its name signified its nature as scorching
or sparkling. It was associated with the Egyptian god Osiris and other gods. Ancient
Egyptians noted that Sirius rose just before the sun each year immediately prior to the
annual flooding of the Nile River. Although the floods could bring destruction, they also
brought new soil and new life. Fittingly, Osiris, whom Sirius may have represented, was a
god of life, death, fertility and rebirth of plant life along the Nile.
In India, Sirius is sometimes known as Svana, the dog of Prince Yudhistira. The prince and his
four brothers, along with Svana, set out on a long and arduous journey to find the kingdom
of heaven. However, one by one the brothers all abandoned the search until only Yudhistira
and Svana were left. At long last they came to the gates of heaven. The gatekeeper, Lord
Indra, welcomed the prince but denied Svana entrance. Yudhistira was aghast and told Lord
Indra that he could not forsake his good and faithful servant and friend. His brothers,
Yudhistira told the Lord, had abandoned the journey to heaven to follow their hearts desires.
But Svana, who had given his heart freely, chose to follow none but Yudhistira. The prince
told the Lord that without his dog, he would forsake even heaven. This is what Lord Indra
had wanted to hear, and then he welcomed both the prince and the dog through the gates
of heaven.

This Hubble Space Telescope image shows Sirius A, the brightest star in our night sky, along with Sirius B, its faint,
tiny stellar companion. Sirius B is the faint, tiny dot at the lower left. Sir. Image credit: H. Bond (STScI) and M. Barstow
(University of Leicester)

Sirius science. Magnitude is a stars brightness expressed by a number. The smaller the
number, the brighter the star. The visual magnitude of Sirius is -1.44, lower than any other
star. It is 3.5 times brighter than Arcturus in Bootes, the next brightest star easily visible
from the northern hemisphere. There are brighter stars in terms of actual energy and light
output, but they are farther away and hence dimmer. Normally, the only objects that
outshine Sirius in our heavens are the sun, moon, Venus, Jupiter, Mars and Mercury (and
usually Sirius outshines the latter two!).
The next brightest star (Canopus) after Sirius, and the closest major star (Alpha Centauri)
are both too far south in the sky to be easily seen from mid-north latitudes.
At 8.6 light-years distance, Sirius is one of the nearest stars to us after the sun. (A light year
is nearly 6 trillion miles!) In fact it is the nearest star easily visible to the unaided eye from
most of the northern hemisphere. Classified by astronomers as an A type star, it is much
hotter than our sun, with about surface about 17,000 degrees F (the sun is about 10,000
degrees F). With slightly more than twice the mass of the sun and just less than twice its
diameter, Sirius still puts out 26 times as much energy. It is considered a normal (main
sequence) star, meaning that it produces most of its energy by converting hydrogen into
helium through nuclear fusion.
How astronomers know the mass of Sirius, the binary star
Sirius has a small, faint companion star appropriately called The Pup. That name signifies
youth, but in fact the companion to Sirius is a dead star called a white dwarf. Once a mighty
star, today The Pup is an Earth-sized ember too faint to be seen without a telescope.
The position of Sirius is RA: 06h 45m 08.9s, dec:-16 42 58.

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