The Pleiades is an open star cluster in the constellation Taurus and, at this time of the year, makes its entrance in the north eastern skies of the northern hemisphere round about midnight. Popularly called the Seven Sisters, it is among the nearest star clusters to Earth and is the cluster most obvious to the naked eye in the night sky.
These stars are so clearly seen in the night sky that even those who do not dabble in astronomy can easily spot them - at least 6 or 7 bright stars, gathered in a region only a bit larger than 1 degree, are clearly seen with the naked eye. See the little cluster of stars near the bottom right hand side of the picture below?
The Pleiades have been used for testing eyesight from antiquity onward. In good observing conditions, an observer with average sight can see 6 stars. What about people with excellent eyesight? Maestlin, the teacher of the astronomer Kepler, saw 14 stars; he had drawn 11 stars on charts of the Pleiades before the telescope was invented! The well-known English observer Denning also saw 14 stars in the cluster. Madame Airy (the wife of a well-known nineteenth-century English Astronomer Royal) could see 12, while the English amateur astronomer William Dawes, who was in his time known to have extraordinary eyesight, saw 13 stars in the cluster. How many can you make out in my picture below?
In Greek mythology, the Pleiades were the seven daughters of the titan Atlas and the sea-nymph Pleione - Maia (the eldest), Electra, Taygete, Alcyone, Celaeno, Asterope and Merope (the youngest). However, because most people can only see six of the Seven Sisters, this has inspired legends of the “Lost Pleiad.” The most commonly told is that Electra - she’s shocked to see her home city Troy burning and hides her face. Another story says Merope wasn’t made as bright as the others because she married a mortal - the other sisters married immortals. Yet another story says she couldn’t fit in with the other sisters anymore and left for Hades. In another story, a thunderbolt hit Celaeno and she disappeared.
All photographs on this page © Sabri Zain 2012.
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