Step outside and take a look at the early evening sky at this time of year and the constellation of Cygnus, the Swan, is hard to miss. This prominent cross-shaped constellation hangs high overhead, looking like a swan with outstretched wings and a long neck stretching along the Milky Way towards the southern horizon. The bright-blue star Deneb marks the Swan’s tail high in the sky – the upper-left corner of the famous northern ‘Summer Triangle’ – while binoculars show that Albireo, on the tip of its beak, is a beautiful double star.
Cygnus is packed with beautiful and fascinating objects, so it’s easy to overlook 61 Cygni, an apparently insignificant star tucked behind the Swan’s right or eastern wing. But it’s worth a look, not only because binoculars will show it as an attractive double star – a pair of yellow-orange stars separated by roughly the same diameter of Saturn in Earth’s skies – but also because of its pivotal role in the history of astronomy. Out of all the stars in the sky, 61 Cygni was the first one to have its distance precisely measured, proving conclusively that the stars are blazing objects like our own Sun seen over vast distances.
Ancient and medieval astronomers mostly believed in an Earth-centred model of the universe – a system with Earth sitting at the centre of the cosmos, orbited by the Moon, Sun and planets, with the stars as either tiny lights affixed to an outer, all-encompassing sphere, or holes in that sphere permitting light to shine through from beyond. In general the universe was assumed to be compact, with the stars not much further beyond Saturn, then the most distant and slowest moving planet.
Denne historien er fra Issue 111-utgaven av All About Space.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra Issue 111-utgaven av All About Space.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
MYSTERIES OF THE UNI WHERE ARE ALL THE SPIRAL GALAXIES?
There are far fewer spiral galaxies than elliptical ones in the Supergalactic Plane, and scientists are keen to discover why
ZOMBIE STARS
+10 OTHER TERRIFYING SPACE OBJECTS
HOW TO BEAT LIGHT POLLUTION
Thought it was impossible to observe the wonders of the night sky from towns and cities? Think again. Follow our tips and tricks on successfully observing through sky glow
15 STUNNING STAR CLUSTERS
These beautiful stellar groupings are spattered across the cosmos
Eileen Collins "It was a difficult mission...we were the first to see Mir"
Having served as both the first female pilot and first female commander of NASA's Space Shuttle, Collins boosted the involvement of women in space exploration to a whole new level
MARS LEAKS FASTER WHEN IT'S CLOSER TO THE SUN
The Red Planet has lost enough water to space to form a global ocean hundreds of kilometres deep
FUTURE TECH KANKOH-MARU
This ambitious reusable spacecraft will be capable of taking 50 people to and from orbit
THE FINAL FRONTIER
Beyond the reach of the Sun is a fascinating region of the cosmos that were only just beginning to explore
A long-lost moon could explain Mars' weird shape and extreme terrain
A long-lost moon could explain why Mars is so different from the other rocky planets in the Solar System. Today Mars has two tiny moons.
A sprinkling of cosmic dust may have helped kick-start life on Earth
Cosmic dust may have helped kick-start life on Earth. New findings challenge a widely held assumption that this wasn't a plausible explanation.