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How to use Orion to find Canis Major and Canis Minor

The dog constellations, Canis Major and Canis Minor, seem to run along faithfully behind Orion. Here's how to find them by star-hopping from Orion's belt, writes Abigail Beall

This is the Belt of Orion with its three blue stars across the top of the frame (L to R: Alnitak, Alnilam, and Mintaka), with the iconic Horsehead Nebula (aka B33) below Alnitak, with the dark Horsehead set against the bright nebula IC 434, aka Orion???s Dagger. The pinkish nebula above Alnitak is NGC 2024, the Flame Nebula. The small blue reflection nebula left of the Horsehead is NGC 2023, with smaller IC 435 to the left of it. The field is filled with the large open cluster Collinder 70. The multiple star at bottom left of centre is Sigma Orionis. Many other smaller bits of reflection nebulas populate the field in and around the Belt. This is a blend of 8 x 5-minute exposures at ISO 800 unfiltered with 6 x 10-minute exposures at ISO 1600 shot through an Optolong L-Enhance dual-band nebula enhancement filter (it lets through only Oxygen III blue-green and Hydrogen-alpha red to really enhance the nebulosity). The filtered shot is blended in with the unfiltered shot to retain the best of both worlds: the rich reds captured by the filtered images without losing the range of colours in the other nebulas such as the salmon pinks of the Flame and the blue reflection nebulas and stars. All exposures with the Canon EOS Ra mirrorless camera through the SharpStar HNT150 Hyperbolic Newtonian Astrograph at f/2.8, from home on a very clear moonless night January 27, 2020. All stacked, aligned and blended in Photoshop 2020. (Photo by: Alan Dyer/VW PICS/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

IN NOVEMBER – at least in the part of the northern hemisphere I call home – the nights begin to get darker, the leaves turn all sorts of shades of orange and my dogs’ paws seem to get muddier on every walk. But the one thing that really signals to me that winter is on its way is when Orion appears in the early evening sky.

Orion the hunter is an iconic part of the night sky. Stargazers anywhere in the world can find the constellation using the three stars in the asterism Orion’s belt (pictured). But Orion can also be used to navigate to other parts of the sky. This week, in honour of my two dogs, Peanut and Jack, we will be using Orion to find two constellations named after dogs, Canis Major and Canis Minor. I like to imagine them running along faithfully behind Orion.

From the northern hemisphere, Orion appears with the red giant Betelgeuse above and left of the belt, and the blue star Rigel below to the right. The dog constellations are to the left of Orion from this orientation. In the southern hemisphere, Orion is the other way up and the dogs are to its right.

Let’s start with Canis Major. This contains the brightest star in the night sky, Sirius. To find Sirius – which is actually a binary star system, not a single star – draw a line along Orion’s belt. In the northern hemisphere, this line goes from right to left, and it is the opposite way in the south. Keep going until you come across a star that appears to twinkle brightly, and you have found Sirius.

All stars seem to twinkle because of the turbulence in Earth’s atmosphere affecting the path of light reaching our eyes. Sirius is the clearest example of this effect. This is partly because it is so bright, but also because it appears low on the horizon in the northern hemisphere, so there is more of the atmosphere for its light to travel through.

Twinkly Sirius makes up the neck of the dog in Canis Major. To find the rest, look below Sirius in the northern hemisphere. You will find a triangle of three stars, which make up the dog’s tail and the top of its back legs.

While Canis Major is quite clearly shaped like a dog, the constellation of Canis Minor requires a lot more imagination. The pattern is made up of two bright stars. To find Canis Minor, you need to use Betelgeuse, Rigel and Sirius. Imagine these stars make up three of the four corners of a parallelogram. Where you imagine the fourth would be, look around that part of the sky for a bright star. That’s Procyon, and once you have it, you have found Canis Minor.

Like Sirius, Procyon is a binary star, comprised of a main sequence star orbited by a white dwarf. Procyon is the eighth brightest star in the night sky because it is quite close to us at only 11.5 light years away, although it isn’t as bright as Sirius, which is “only” 8.6 light years away.

What you need

Clear, dark skies

Binoculars (optional)

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Topics: Astronomy