Night sky goes to the dogs
'Hunting Dogs' soar high in eastern sky, almost overhead around midnight
![]() Starry Night Software The Hunting Dogs, known as Canes Venatici, as seen at around 8 p.m. local time this weekend from mid-northern latitudes. |
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Soaring high in the eastern sky and almost overhead at around midnight are the two stars marking the Hunting Dogs, known as Canes Venatici. Located about a third of the way from the end of the Big Dipper's handle and below it, these dogs were placed in the sky to assist Bootes, the Bear Driver in his daily task of pursuing the Big Bear (Ursa Major) around the pole of the heavens.
Unlike the two faithful canine companions of Orion, the Hunter (Canis Major and Canis Minor), which are separate constellations in of themselves, the two Hunting Dogs of Bootes are both considered a single constellation (hence the plural "Canes" as opposed to the singlular "Canis").
Of the two stars that mark the Hunting Dogs, the brightest is Cor Caroli, known as the "Heart of Charles."
A popular story is that the star was so-named by Edmund Halley in honor of King Charles II of England. However, upon delving deeper into this star's history, it is found that this star's original name was "Cor Caroli Regis Martyris" honoring the executed Charles I. Cor Caroli marks the position of "Chara," one of the two hunting dogs in the mythological outline of the constellation. The other dog is named "Asterion" and is marked by the other, fainter star.
A star ball and a nearby galaxy
There are two objects in Canes Venatici that are worth looking for. The first is a beautiful and bright globular cluster, thought by many to be one of the most splendid in the sky. It was first seen by Charles Messier in 1764 and was listed as number three in his famous catalogue of deep-sky objects. In a good pair of binoculars, M3 looks like a fuzzy 6th magnitude star. But with a small telescope it appears as a circular, nebulous object. Larger instruments will bring out the cluster's full glory: a beautiful ball of tiny countless star images, with streams of stars seemingly running out from all sides. Perhaps 40,000 light years away, the cluster's diameter is estimated to be 220 light years.
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There is also a much smaller satellite galaxy – NGC 5195 – that appears just off the end of one of the spiral arms of M51. When you are gazing at this entire star system, keep in mind that you are looking out into space to a distance of some 35 million light years. Amazing enough . . . but an even more amazing realm awaits your view off toward the south.
Galaxies within a diamond
Cor Caroli is the faintest of four stars that comprise a large diamond frame that can be found high in the sky and due south at around midnight local daylight time. The other stars in the diamond are Denebola (marking the tail of Leo, the Lion), Arcturus (in Bootes) and Spica (the spike of wheat in the hand of Virgo). Hans A. Rey who wrote the classic: "The Stars – A New Way to See Them," (Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston) called it the "Virgin's Diamond," though most other star guides refer to it simply as "The Great Diamond."
At first glance, The Great Diamond appears to encompass a rather dull region of the sky. The Diamond itself appears about as wide as the Big Dipper and about twice as long. In the upper right part of the Diamond is the faint fuzz of stars belonging to Coma Berenices (Berenice's Hair).
But also located within the Diamond is one of the most remarkable areas of the heavens. Sometimes called the "Realm of the Galaxies," and often referred to in older astronomy texts as "The Field of the Nebulae," it is here that lies a veritable treasurer trove of numerous star cities.
Literally thousands of galaxies have been photographed here with great observatory instruments. If you own a good reflecting telescope of at least 6-inch aperture or greater, a sweep of this region will reveal literally dozens of these galaxies appearing as a myriad of faint and fuzzy patches of light. This is the only great cloud of galaxies that is available to the average amateur. Just try to remember that each and every one of these dim blobs is a star city, which likely contains tens of billions of stars!
And keep in mind that this cluster or cloud of galaxies is the nearest of the large aggregations of galaxies relative to our own. The best estimates indicate that it is located somewhere between 40 and 70 million light-years from us.
A light-year is the distance light travels in a year, about 6 trillion miles (10 trillion kilometers).
So it is possible that as you run across these pale little patches of light in your telescope, irregularly shaped, round or elongated in appearance, that you are gazing upon galaxies whose light may have started toward the Earth around the time of
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