Particulars:
General:
A quite large constellation of the northern hemisphere, located between DECL=55
degrees and DECL=28 degrees, RA=7h 30m and RA=4h 40m. There is no star gamma
Aur. The reason for this is that the star, which would be listed as
gamma Aur is shared with the constellation
Taurus (its lying exactly
on the boundary) and is listed as beta Tau.
As the Milky Way runs through this constellation it is quite a pleasure to view
this part of the sky.
Stars and other objects
The yellow giant alpha Aur, called Capella, is the 6th
brightest star in the sky (0.08 mag). It is also a spectroscopic binary
consisting of a G5III and a G0III. They revolve each other every 104 days.
Menkalinen, beta Aur, is also a spectroscopic binary.
Within just four days the stars complete their revolution much faster than those
of alpha Aur. Since they are eclipsing each other the brightness of
beta Aur seems to vary.
The eclipsing binary epsilon Aur has an extradinary long period; every
27.1 years the brightness varies from 3.0 mag down to 3.8 mag as the brighter
component is then eclipsed by the darker companion. This eclipse lasts a full
year (the last eclipse took place in 1983). Caculations show that the dark
component of epsilon Aur has about 10 -12 solar masses. Because of its
small size it is a good candidate for a black hole; unfortunately this
conflicts with the observed lost of brightness during the eclipse. According to
studies of Wilson and Cameron the solution is a ring of obsuring
material which surrounds the black hole. (There is still doubt that the
companion is a black hole; a star which a 10 times smaller brightness would fit
the model, too.)
Another eclipsing binary is zeta Aur; a K4 bright giant and a B8 main
sequence star revolve each other every 2 2/3 years.
The double omega Aur can be viewed with small telescopes; it consists of
a 5th mag and a 8th mag companion.
Telescopes with an aperture of at least 100mm and a high magnification are
required to split the tight double theta Aur. An A0psi star of 2.62 mag
is accompanied by a star of 7th mag.
The planetary nebula NGC(*) 2149 (the asterix indicates that this object
can be found in the NGC supplementary catalogs of J.L.E. Dreyer) appears as a
small oval ring of 10th mag.
The diffuse nebula I 405 is also called Flaming Star.
I 410 consists of a cluster with an nebulosity attached.
There a several open clusters in this constellations.
About 60 members belong to M36. Its a
good object for the use of binoculars. A beautiful group of stars is
M38 showing an oval shape. The
richest of these three Messier objects is
M37. It contains about 150 stars with
magnitudes of 12.5 and brighter and about 500 in total. Detailed information
about all three Messier objects can be found in the Messier database.
The meteor shower of the Aurigids is
generally observable between January, 31st, and February, 23rd. This shower is
known for its bright fireballs.
From August, 25th, till September 6th, the shower of the
Alpha Aurigids is active.
Although the annual maximum is about 9 meteors, outbursts of up to 30 were
observed in 1935 and 1986.
The Delta Aurigids may be
observed between September 22nd and Ovctober 23rd. The maximum of this shower
occurs around October 6th to October 15th.
Please refer to Gary Kronk's database about meteor showers for details about
all four showers.
Mythological Background:
Auriga may represent the sea god Poseidon, dring his chariot drawn by sea horses.