Something strange is going on with the North Star
By Rafi Letzter - Staff Writer 13 hours ago
It keeps breaking astronomer's models of how stars are supposed to act.
A long-exposure image shows stars appearing to whirl around Polaris, the north star, which appears fixed in the sky.
(Image: © Shutterstock)
Something's up with the North Star.
People have watched the North Star for centuries. The bright star, also known as Polaris, is almost directly above Earth's North Pole and serves as a landmark in the sky for travelers without a compass. It's also Earth's closest cepheid, a type of star that pulses regularly in diameter and brightness. And Polaris is part of a binary system; it's got a dimmer sister, known as Polaris B, that we can watch circling it from Earth.
"However, as we learn more, it is becoming clear that we understand less" about Polaris, wrote the authors of a new paper on the famous star.
The problem with Polaris is that no one can agree on how big or distant it is.
More:
https://www.livescience.com/north-star-cepheid-mystery.html?utm_source=notification