Pole star


A pole star or polar star is a star, preferably bright, nearly aligned with the axis of a rotating astronomical body.
Currently, Earth's pole stars are Polaris, a magnitude-2 star aligned approximately with its northern axis, and a pre-eminent star in celestial navigation, and Polaris Australis, a much dimmer star. From around 1700 BC until just after 300 AD, Kochab and Pherkad were twin northern pole stars, though neither was as close to the pole as Polaris is now.

History

In classical antiquity, Beta Ursae Minoris was closer to the celestial north pole than Alpha Ursae Minoris.
While there was no naked-eye star close to the pole, the midpoint between Alpha and Beta Ursae Minoris was reasonably close to the pole, and it appears that the entire constellation of Ursa Minor, in antiquity known as :wikt:Cynosura|Cynosura was used as indicating the northern direction for the purposes of navigation by the Phoenicians. The ancient name of Ursa Minor, anglicized as :wikt:cynosure|cynosure, has since itself become a term for "guiding principle" after the constellation's use in navigation.
Alpha Ursae Minoris was described as ἀειφανής "always visible" by Stobaeus in the 5th century, when it was still removed from the celestial pole by about 8°. It was known as scip-steorra in 10th-century Anglo-Saxon England, reflecting its use in navigation. In the Hindu Puranas, it is personified under the name Dhruva.
In the medieval period, Polaris was also known as stella maris "star of the sea", as in e.g. Bartholomeus Anglicus, in the translation of John Trevisa :
Polaris was associated with Marian veneration from an early time, Our Lady, Star of the Sea being a title of the Blessed Virgin.
This tradition goes back to a misreading of Saint Jerome's translation of Eusebius' Onomasticon, De nominibus hebraicis. Jerome gave stilla maris "drop of the sea" as a Hebrew etymology of the name Maria. This stilla maris was later misread as stella maris; the misreading is also found in the manuscript tradition of Isidore's Etymologiae ; it probably arises in the Carolingian era; a late 9th-century manuscript of Jerome's text still has stilla, not stella, but Paschasius Radbertus, also writing in the 9th century, makes an explicit reference to the "Star of the Sea" metaphor, saying that Mary is the "Star of the Sea" to be followed on the way to Christ, "lest we capsize amid the storm-tossed waves of the sea."
The name stella polaris was coined in the Renaissance, even though at that time it was well recognized that it was several degrees away from the celestial pole; Gemma Frisius in the year 1547 determined this distance as 3°8'.
An explicit identification of Mary as stella maris with the North Star becomes evident in the title Cynosura seu Mariana Stella Polaris, a collection of Marian poetry published by Nicolaus Lucensis in 1655.

Precession of the equinoxes

As of October 2012, Polaris had the declination +89°19′8″. Therefore, it always appears due north in the sky to a precision better than one degree, and the angle it makes with respect to the true horizon is equal to the latitude of the observer to better than one degree.
The celestial pole will be nearest Polaris in 2100 and will thereafter become more distant.
Due to the precession of the equinoxes, the role of North Star has passed from one star to another in the remote past. In 3000 BC, the faint star Thuban in the constellation Draco was the North Star, aligning within 0.1° distance from the celestial pole, the closest of any of the visible pole stars. However, at magnitude 3.67 it is only one-fifth as bright as Polaris, and today it is invisible in light-polluted urban skies.
During the 1st millennium BC, Beta Ursae Minoris was the bright star closest to the celestial pole, but it was never close enough to be taken as marking the pole, and the Greek navigator Pytheas in ca. 320 BC described the celestial pole as devoid of stars. In the Roman era, the celestial pole was about equally distant between Polaris and Kochab.
The precession of the equinoxes takes about 25,770 years to complete a cycle. Polaris' mean position will reach a maximum declination of +89°32'23", which translates to 1657" from the celestial north pole, in February 2102. Its maximum apparent declination will be +89°32'50.62", which is 1629" from the celestial north pole, on 24 March 2100.
Precession will next point the north celestial pole at stars in the northern constellation Cepheus. The pole will drift to space equidistant between Polaris and Gamma Cephei by 3000 AD, with Errai reaching its closest alignment with the northern celestial pole around 4200 AD. Iota Cephei and Beta Cephei will stand on either side of the northern celestial pole some time around 5200 AD, before moving to closer alignment with the brighter star Alpha Cephei around 7500 AD.
Precession will then point the north celestial pole at stars in the northern constellation Cygnus. Like Beta Ursae Minoris during the 1st millennium BC, the bright star closest to the celestial pole in the 10th millennium AD, first-magnitude Deneb, will be a distant 7° from the pole, never close enough to be taken as marking the pole, while third-magnitude Delta Cygni will be a more helpful pole star, at a distance of 3° from celestial north, around 11,500 AD. Precession will then point the north celestial pole nearer the constellation Lyra, where the second brightest star in the northern celestial hemisphere, Vega, will be a pole star around 13,700 AD, though at a distance of 5° from celestial north.
Precession will eventually point the north celestial pole nearer the stars in the constellation Hercules, pointing towards Tau Herculis around 18,400 AD.
The celestial pole will then return to the stars in constellation Draco before returning to the current constellation, Ursa Minor. When Polaris becomes the North Star again around 27,800 AD, due to its proper motion it then will be farther away from the pole than it is now, while in 23,600 BC it was closer to the pole.
Over the course of Earth's 26,000-year axial precession cycle, a series of bright naked eye stars in the northern hemisphere will hold the transitory title of North Star. While other stars might line up with the north celestial pole during the 26,000 year cycle, they do not necessarily meet the naked eye limit needed to serve as a useful indicator of north to an Earth-based observer, resulting in periods of time during the cycle when there is no clearly defined North Star. There will also be periods during the cycle when bright stars give only an approximate guide to "north", as they may be greater than 5° of angular diameter removed from direct alignment with the north celestial pole.
The 26,000 year cycle of North Stars, starting with the current star, with stars that will be "near-north" indicators when no North Star exists during the cycle, including each star's average brightness and closest alignment to the north celestial pole during the cycle:
BayerTraditionalVConstellationAlignmentnotes
Alpha Ursae MinorisPolaris1.98Ursa Minorwithin 0.5°current North Star
Gamma CepheiErrai3.21Cepheuswithin 3°binary star system
Iota Cephei3.51Cepheuswithin 5°shares timing with Beta Cephei
Beta CepheiAlfirk3.51Cepheuswithin 5°shares timing with Iota Cephei
Alpha CepheiAlderamin2.51Cepheuswithin 3°
Alpha CygniDeneb1.25Cygnuswithin 7°a near-north star
Delta CygniFawaris2.87Cygnuswithin 3°
Alpha LyraeVega0.026Lyrawithin 5°brightest North Star
Iota Herculis3.75Herculeswithin 4°
Tau Herculis3.89Herculeswithin 1°
Iota DraconisEdasich3.29Dracowithin 5°
Alpha DraconisThuban3.65Dracowithin 0.2°closest to celestial pole when North Star
Kappa Draconis3.82Dracowithin 6°a near-north star, shares timing with Kochab
Beta Ursae MinorisKochab2.08Ursa Minorwithin 7°a near-north star, shares timing with κ Draconis

Southern pole star (South Star)

Currently, there is no South Star as useful as Polaris. Sigma Octantis is the closest naked-eye star to the south Celestial pole, but at apparent magnitude 5.45 it is barely visible on a clear night, making it unusable for navigational purposes.
It is a yellow giant 275 light years from Earth. Its angular separation from the pole is about 1°. The Southern Cross constellation functions as an approximate southern pole constellation, by pointing to where a southern pole star would be.
At the equator, it is possible to see both Polaris and the Southern Cross. The Celestial south pole is moving toward the Southern Cross, which has pointed to the south pole for the last 2000 years or so. As a consequence, the constellation is no longer visible from subtropical northern latitudes, as it was in the time of the ancient Greeks.
Around 200 BC, the star Beta Hydri was the nearest bright star to the Celestial south pole. Around 2800 BC, Achernar was only 8 degrees from the south pole.
In the next 7500 years, the south Celestial pole will pass close to the stars Gamma Chamaeleontis, I Carinae, Omega Carinae, Upsilon Carinae, Iota Carinae and Delta Velorum. From the eightieth to the ninetieth centuries, the south Celestial pole will travel through the False Cross. Around 14,000 AD Canopus will have a declination of –82°, meaning it will rise and set daily for latitudes between 8°S and 8°N, and will not rise to viewers north of this latter 8th parallel north.
Notable angular apexes of Sirius's and our solar system's related and therefore somewhat complex proper motions are predicted: 88.4° S declination in the year 66,270; and 87.7° S declination in the year 93,830 AD.

Other planets

Pole stars of other planets are defined analogously: they are stars that most closely coincide with the projection of the planet's axis of rotation onto the Celestial sphere. Different planets have different pole stars because their axes are oriented differently.