by neufer » Fri Jan 21, 2011 7:11 pm
rstevenson wrote:casusbellus wrote:
Is it possible these 3 stars have moved a little bit in 35 years? I mean visibly? Unless I'm imagining, these three seemed to form a near perfect straight line when I was young. Now it seems there's a slight dip in the middle, or subtly crooked. Is this possible?
In a posting on
another forum, Scott Creighton says, "The 3 stars of Orion's belt, however, exhibit very little proper motion and so what we see of these 3 stars today is pretty much what our ancestors would have seen thousands of years ago."
Thank goodness his pants won't fall down soon
Job 38:31
Canst thou bind the sweete influences of Pleiades? or loose the bands of Orion?
Canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth in his season, or canst thou guide Arcturus with his sonnes?
[Finnegans Wake 621.8] Send Arctur guiddus!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orion_%28constellation%29 wrote:
<<Orion is presently located on the celestial equator, but it will not always be so located due to the effects of precession of the Earth's axis. Orion lies well south of the ecliptic, and it only happens to lie on the celestial equator because the point on the ecliptic that corresponds to the June solstice is close to the border of Gemini and Taurus, to the north of Orion. Precession will eventually carry Orion further south, and by 14,000 AD Orion will be far enough south that it will become invisible from the latitude of Great Britain.
Further in the future, Orion's stars will gradually move away from the constellation due to proper motion. However, Orion's brightest stars all lie at a large distance from the Earth on an astronomical scale—much farther away than Sirius, for example. Orion will still be recognizable long after most of the other constellations—composed of relatively nearby stars—have distorted into new configurations, with the exception of a few of its stars eventually exploding as supernovae. For example, Betelgeuse, the "right shoulder", is so large and old that it may explode and disappear within a few thousand years.>>
......................................................................................................................................
<<The Yokut Native American tribe of the California Central Valley saw the three bright stars as the foot prints of the god of the flea people. According to legend, when his five wives became itchy and ran away, three times the god of the flea people jumped into the sky to look for them. When his footprints are seen (stars are visible in the winter months) the flea people grow afraid and go into hiding (i.e. dormant). This helped explain to the tribal people why they couldn't count on those stars for guides in the summer months, and why there were no fleas about.>>
Q: Where do the insects go in the wintertime?
Mr. Answer-man: Search me?
Q:
PLEASE , Mr. Answer-man
[quote="rstevenson"][quote="casusbellus"]
Is it possible these 3 stars have moved a little bit in 35 years? I mean [i]visibly[/i]? Unless I'm imagining, these three seemed to form a near perfect straight line when I was young. Now it seems there's a slight dip in the middle, or subtly crooked. Is this possible?[/quote]
In a posting on [url=http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread489367/pg1]another forum[/url], Scott Creighton says, "The 3 stars of Orion's belt, however, exhibit very little proper motion and so what we see of these 3 stars today is pretty much what our ancestors would have seen thousands of years ago."[/quote]
[c][size=150][color=#FF0000]Thank goodness his pants won't fall down soon[/color][/size] :!: :oops:
Job 38:31 [b][color=#0000FF]Canst thou bind the sweete influences of Pleiades? or loose the bands of Orion?[/color][/b]
Canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth in his season, or canst thou guide Arcturus with his sonnes?
[Finnegans Wake 621.8] Send Arctur guiddus![/c]
[quote=" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orion_%28constellation%29"]
<<Orion is presently located on the celestial equator, but it will not always be so located due to the effects of precession of the Earth's axis. Orion lies well south of the ecliptic, and it only happens to lie on the celestial equator because the point on the ecliptic that corresponds to the June solstice is close to the border of Gemini and Taurus, to the north of Orion. Precession will eventually carry Orion further south, and by 14,000 AD Orion will be far enough south that it will become invisible from the latitude of Great Britain.
Further in the future, Orion's stars will gradually move away from the constellation due to proper motion. However, Orion's brightest stars all lie at a large distance from the Earth on an astronomical scale—much farther away than Sirius, for example. Orion will still be recognizable long after most of the other constellations—composed of relatively nearby stars—have distorted into new configurations, with the exception of a few of its stars eventually exploding as supernovae. For example, Betelgeuse, the "right shoulder", is so large and old that it may explode and disappear within a few thousand years.>>
[c]......................................................................................................................................[/c]
<<The Yokut Native American tribe of the California Central Valley saw the three bright stars as the foot prints of the god of the flea people. According to legend, when his five wives became itchy and ran away, three times the god of the flea people jumped into the sky to look for them. When his footprints are seen (stars are visible in the winter months) the flea people grow afraid and go into hiding (i.e. dormant). This helped explain to the tribal people why they couldn't count on those stars for guides in the summer months, and why there were no fleas about.>>
[c]Q: Where do the insects go in the wintertime?
Mr. Answer-man: Search me?
Q: [b][color=#FF0000]PLEASE[/color][/b] , Mr. Answer-man :!: :oops:[/c][/quote]