Soulmate Gem
Photo: Charlotte May
Sirius has been the shiniest star in the sky for a long, long time. ... Jump to: How to spot Sirius. The star's history. Studying Sirius. Additional resources. Bibliography.
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Read More »Sirius, also known as the Dog Star or Sirius A, is the brightest star in Earth's night sky. The name means "glowing" in Greek — a fitting description, as only a few planets, the full moon and the International Space Station outshine this star. Because Sirius is so bright, it was well-known to the ancients. But the discovery of a companion star, Sirius B, in 1862 surprised astronomers. The star that you can see with the naked eye is called Sirius A, or sometimes just Sirius. Sirius B is 10,000-times dimmer than Sirius, according to NASA (opens in new tab). It's so dim, and therefore so difficult to see from Earth, that astronomers couldn't estimate its mass until 2005, thanks to data from the Hubble Space Telescope.
Aphrodite, goddess of beauty, love, pleasure, sexuality and procreation.
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Read More »This illustration displays the shape of the Canis Major constellation. The brightest star (top center) is Sirius. (Image credit: Getty Images) In 1718, English astronomer Edmond Halley discovered that stars have "proper motion" relative to one another, according to the Quarterly Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society (opens in new tab). This means that stars, including Sirius, move across our sky with a predictable angular motion with respect to more-distant stars. More than 100 years after Halley's finding, in 1844, German astronomer Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel published a scientific note in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (opens in new tab) describing how Sirius had been deviating from its predicted movement in the sky since 1755. Bessel hypothesized that an unseen companion star affected Sirius' motion. Alvan Graham Clark, a U.S. astronomer and telescope maker, confirmed Bessel's hypothesis in 1862, when the U.S. researchers spotted Sirius B through Clark's newly developed great refractor telescope.
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Read More »To this day, Sirius continues to be a favored study subject for astronomers and physicists. In April, 2018, NASA launched the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), with the aim of its primary mission being to find exoplanets orbiting bright stars. Because Sirius is a young star, it's not likely to have planets orbiting it. TESS discovered 66 new exoplanets, according to NASA Exoplanet Exploration (opens in new tab), but none have been discovered orbiting Sirius. You can read about Hubble Space Telescope's image of Sirius A and its companion Sirius B on the European Space Agency (ESA) website (opens in new tab). To learn more about the Canis Major and Canis Minor constellations, watch this video from Lowell Observatory (opens in new tab).
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