Constellations: Ursa Minor 'the Little Bear'
Created | Updated Jun 16, 2008
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– Douglas Adams describing his essential read The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
The Constellation Ursa Minor
Latin: | Ursa Minor ('Little Bear') |
Genitive: | Ursae Minoris |
Short form: | UMi |
Area: | 256 sq deg |
Co-ordinates2: | 15h, +75° |
Origin: | Ancient |
Ursa Minor is a circumpolar constellation containing the north celestial pole; it shares the top spot with neighbours Cepheus 'the King' and Camelopardalis 'the Giraffe'. Beneath Ursa Minor is Draco 'the Dragon', which accounts for around three quarters of its border.
When the stars of Ursa Minor are joined up in one's imagination, it looks like a smaller but fainter version of the 'Plough' (Big Dipper) asterism contained within Ursa Major 'the Great Bear', so it's relatively easy to spot.
There are no Messier objects in Ursa Minor; but there is a remarkable isolated neutron star and an extrasolar planetary system. For the deep-space enthusiast there are a few galaxies to seek out, including the elliptical Ursa Minor Dwarf galaxy, a satellite of the Milky Way.
Across the Universe
In February 2008 NASA announced that 'Across the Universe' by The Beatles was going to be 'beamed' into outer space towards the 'pole star' Polaris, as part of NASA's 50th anniversary celebrations. Appropriately it is also the 40th anniversary of the track being recorded by the Fab Four. Sir Paul McCartney wholeheartedly approved, relaying the wish for NASA to 'give his love to the aliens' and wishing the project 'all the best'. Yoko Ono, widow of John Lennon, said:
I see this as the beginning of the new age in which we will communicate with billions of planets across the Universe.
Mythology of Ursa Minor
According to the Greek myth, the great god Zeus had a dalliance with Callisto, the daughter of King Lycaon of Arcadia. She bore him a son whom she named Arcas. King Lycaon did not believe his daughter when she claimed that the child's father was Zeus, so he invited Zeus to join them for a meal. The meat Zeus was offered was the sliced flesh of the infant Arcas, who had been killed earlier on the instructions of the goddess Hera, Zeus' jealous wife.
Zeus did not relish having his son served up on a silver platter and took his revenge upon King Lycaon by killing his sons. Then he gathered up the slices of Arcas, reformed then revived him. When he was a normal baby again Zeus handed the child over to Atlas' daughter Maia3 to raise.
To keep Callisto safe from Hera, Zeus turned his lover into a bear. When Arcas grew up, he was out hunting one day when the bear rushed to embrace him. Thinking he was being attacked, Arcas determined to kill the bear, not knowing it was really his mother. Callisto raced to the Temple of Zeus to appeal on their behalf and Zeus placed them both in the heavens, Callisto as Ursa Major and Arcas as the constellation Ursa Minor.
Ida the Wet Nurse
Another myth involves the nymph Ida who suckled Zeus when he was a baby.
Native American Stories
The Navaho and Cherokee Native American people had stories to explain the workings of the heavens. Before there were people, animals couldn't find their way home at night, so they asked the Great Spirit for help. The Great Spirit listened, then placed a bright stone in the night sky which became the pole star, which would always lead them home.
Stars of Ursa Minor
The scientific star names are simple to understand (if you know your Greek alphabet). For example: the 'alpha' star means that it is the brightest star in that constellation. The next brightest is designated 'beta', etc. Some stars have proper names as well; for example, alpha Ursae Minoris is Polaris; others are known by their catalogue numbers or 'Bayer designation'. Pherkad Minor (11 Ursae Minoris) is one of the few stars that have a proper name but no assigned Greek letter.
Polaris the Pole Star
Anchoring the constellation to within one degree of the celestial pole is Polaris, a 2nd magnitude supergiant. The alpha star has two distinct companions which have been imaged by the Hubble space telescope, confirming the Polaris triple star system. Other stars are suspected, making the Polaris system a possible open cluster.
Polaris appears to remain stationary from our vantage point because it is lined up with the Earth's axis, so all the other stars seemingly revolve around it (diurnal motion). This makes Polaris our 'pole star', but it will not always be so. We know the Earth wobbles slightly on its axis4 and over a period of 25,700 years (precession) the 'pole star' will change. Pherkad Major (gamma Ursae Minoris) was the pole star from 1900 BC to 500 AD. Kochab (beta Ursae Minoris) was closer to the North celestial pole 3,000 years ago than Polaris was! Polaris will lose its title to Alrai, (gamma Cephei), in the early 31st Century.
The great bard William Shakespeare did not know about precession when he wrote Julius Caesar:
But I am constant as the northern star, of whose true-fixed and resting quality there is no fellow in the firmament.
Pole Guardians
Beta (Kochab) and gamma (Pherkad) are collectively known as the 'Guardians of the Pole'.
Neutron Star
The closest neutron star to Earth has been detected by NASA's Swift satellite. Lying between 250 and 1,000 light years away, this is only the 8th-discovered isolated neutron star. It has been given the temporary name of 'Calvera' after the villain in the film The Magnificent Seven.
The seven previously known isolated neutron stars are known collectively as 'The Magnificent Seven' within the community and so the name Calvera is a bit of an inside joke on our part.
– Co-discoverer Derek Fox of Penn State.
Star Table
Star | Designation | Name or catalogue number | Magnitude | Distance (light years) | Spectral classification and/or comments |
α UMi | Alpha UMi | Polaris | +1.97 var | 431 | Pole Star, Cepheid variable |
β UMi | Beta UMi | Kochab | +2.07 var | 126 | Orange giant |
γ UMi | Gamma UMi | Pherkad | +3 var | 500 | White giant; sometime pole star |
δ UMi | Delta UMi | Yildun | +4.2 var | 188 | White dwarf |
ε UMi | Epsilon UMi | Urodelus | +4.2 var | 342 | Triple star system |
ζ UMi | Zeta UMi | Pharkadain | +4.3 var | 356 | White dwarf |
RR UMi | RR UMi | HD 132813 | +4.6 var | 400 | Red giant |
η UMi | Eta UMi | Alasco | +4.9 var | 96 | Yellow dwarf |
θ UMi | Theta UMi | 15 Ursae Minoris | +5 var | 832 | Orange giant |
11 UMi | HD 136726 | Pherkad Minor | +5.02 | 380 | Orange giant |
λ UMi | Lambda UMi | HD 183030 | +6.3 var | 876 | Red giant |
π1 UMi | Pi1 UMi | HD 139777 | +6.5 var | 70 | Binary star system |
π2 UMi | Pi2 UMi | HD 141652 | +6.9 var | 384 | Binary star system |
— | 1RXS J141256.0+792204 | Calvera | — | 250-1,000 | Isolated neutron star |
HD 150706 | HIP 80902 | SAO 8557 | +7 | 88.7 | Has a planet (see Extrasolar Planets below) |
New General Catalogue (NGC)
The NGC catalogue was compiled by John Louis Emil Dreyer (the director of the Armagh Observatory from 1882 to 1916). Spiral galaxy NGC 3172 is the closest NGC object to the North celestial pole, therefore it was given the name Polarissima Borealis. A supernova (death of a giant star) was detected in the spiral galaxy NGC 6324 in 2002. Some stars5 in our own galaxy are big enough to go supernova, but they're so far away it would take thousands of years for the fallout to affect our solar system.
NGC Table
Catalogue | Type | Magnitude | Name or Remarks |
NGC 3172 | Spiral galaxy | +13.6 | Polarissima Borealis |
NGC 6324 | Spiral galaxy | +13.7 | Supernova 2002ej |
NGC 6331 | Spiral galaxy | +15.4 | Triple system galaxy cluster |
Meteor Showers
The debris which creates a meteor shower comes from the tail of a comet, as the Earth crosses where the comet passed previously on its own orbit. Imagine a trail of breadcrumbs, or sawdust like that used in hashing. The Earth crosses this debris trail at the same time every year, giving us the display on roughly the same date. They are usually named after the constellation from which they appear to hail, or a nearby star. The meteor shower associated with this constellation is called the Ursids. They are classed as 'moderate activity', appearing between 17 – 25 December, with the maxim being around 22 December. Meteors can be seen on any night of the year providing conditions are perfect for viewing, but checking an astronomy calendar for expected meteor shower maxims greatly increases your chances of catching a spectacular display.
Extrasolar Planets in Ursa Minor
Over 2,000 years ago the Greek philosophers Aristotle and Epicurus argued about whether there were other Earth-like planets orbiting distant suns. There has been one extrasolar planetary system found in the constellation Ursa Minor up to 2007; it was discovered in 2002. HD 150706 is an 8th magnitude yellow main sequence (dwarf); not much smaller than our own Sun, it's a mere 88.7 light years distant. The planet, a gas giant exactly the same size as Jupiter, has an eccentric orbit varying from 0.5AU to 1.13AU, giving a mean distance of 0.82AU. This planet resides in the system's habitable zone, but because it is a gas giant it isn't a candidate for the possibility of extraterrestrial life. However, should the planet have a rocky moon with enough gravity to retain an atmosphere, then that would be a distinct possibility.
Figures given in the table below are the length of the planet's orbital period around its parent star, which we know of as a year. The size of the extrasolar planet is compared to the mass of Jupiter, our solar system's largest planet, known by astronomers as the 'Jovian scale'.
Extrasolar Planets Table
Star name or catalogue number | Planet catalogue number | Planet size (Jovian scale) | Orbital period (Earth days) | Year of discovery | Comments |
HD 150706 | HD 150706 b | 1.0 | 260 | 2002 | Gas giant; eccentric orbit; habitable zone |
Ursa Minor in Modern Culture
Polaris is the name of the submarine-launched nuclear weapon.
'Hawkman' is a superhero character who hails from the fictional planet Thanagar which orbits Polaris in the DC Comic franchise.
'Little Bear' characters feature in a number of children's books, including a series of Little Bear books by Danish American author Else Holmelund Minarik and illustrated by Maurice Sendak. Little Bear was also a character in Jane Hissey's Old Bear and Friends books.