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EarthSky Tonight—October 15, See the sky’s brightest star, Sirius, before dawn

Courtesy of EarthSky
A Clear Voice for Science
www.EarthSky.org [1]

[2] [3]Andy wrote, “Early this morning, looking southeast, I saw a beautiful star, bright and multicolored. . .Can you identify it for me?”

Paula wrote, “This morning two of us got up early. We found a pulsing star straight down the sky below Orion’s Belt. It was pulsing the colors of green, yellow, blue and red like a strobe light. I will search for it every morning as it was so enchanting.”

It is enchanting, so much so that – every year, beginning in the fall – we get many, many questions about a multicolored star twinkling in the southeastern to southern sky after midnight. This star is Sirius [4] in the constellation Canis Major the Greater Dog. It has sometimes called the Dog Star. Sirius is now rising in the southeast in the hours after midnight now and can be found in the south at dawn. Notice that a line from Orion’s Belt to points to Sirius.

Sirius appears to flash different colors when it is low in the sky . . . really, all the stars are flashing different colors. That is because light is composed of all the colors of a rainbow, and the journey through our atmosphere breaks starlight into its component colors. However, you do not notice the colors of the other stars as much, because they are not as bright as Sirius, the brightest star visible from anywhere on Earth. Since our atmosphere is causing the light to break into its colors, and since Sirius is only visible low in the sky now (where you are peering at it through a thicker layer of atmosphere than when it’s overhead), the flashing colors of Sirius are very obvious when it is low in the sky.

However, when Sirius is higher in the sky – which it is close to dawn . . . or in the evening sky in late winter . . . you will find that Sirius shines with a steadier, whiter light. On these chilly October mornings, however, watch as Sirius winks at you in the wee hours before dawn!

[5]Written by Deborah Byrd [6]


Astronomy Picture of the Day from NASA/JPL [7]

CHANDRA Photo Album [8]

U.S. Naval Observator Astronomical Information cente [9]r

Universe Today [10]

StarDate Online [11]

Sky and Telescope [12]

National Geographic [13]

Space Com [14]

Simostronomy Blog [15]

Amazing Space [16]

The York County Astronomical Society [17]

Scope City [18]

James S McDonnell Planetarium [18]