Mizar

star

Jan 24, 2025 - 03:12
 0  20

Although the stars of the Big Dipper seem to belong together, they are actually widely separated. A person looking at the Big Dipper stars from a position in space different from that of Earth would see them in a different shape, or they might seem completely unrelated to each other in the sky.

Mizar, also called Zeta Ursae Majoris, first star found (by the Italian astronomer Giovanni Battista Riccioli in 1650) to be a visual binary—i.e., to consist of two optically distinguishable components revolving around each other. Later, each of the visual components was determined to be a spectroscopic binary; Mizar is actually a quadruple star. Apparent visual magnitudes of the two visual components are 2.27 and 3.95. Set in the middle of the Big Dipper’s handle, Mizar (from Arabic: “Veil” or “Cloak”) makes a visual double with the fainter Alcor (from Arabic: “Faint One”). The two are 1.2 light-years apart and may be gravitationally bound to each other. The ability to separate the dim star Alcor from Mizar 0.2° away with the unaided eye may have been regarded by the Arabs (and others) as a test of good vision.

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