Skip to content

Big Dipper

  • by

The Big Dipper is an asterism formed by seven bright stars in the constellation Ursa Major, the Great Bear. It is one of the most recognizable star patterns in the night sky. The asterism is well-known in many cultures and goes by many other names, including the Plough, the Great Wagon, Saptarishi, and the Saucepan.

The seven stars that form the Big Dipper are: Alkaid (Eta Ursae Majoris), Mizar (Zeta Ursae Majoris), Alioth (Epsilon Ursae Majoris), Megrez (Delta Ursae Majoris), Phecda (Gamma Ursae Majoris), Dubhe (Alpha Ursae Majoris), and Merak (Beta Ursae Majoris).

In northern latitudes, the Big Dipper is visible throughout the year. It is one of the first star patterns we learn to identify, along with Orion’s Belt, Cassiopeia’s W, and the Northern Cross in Cygnus.

big dipper

Big Dipper (Ursa Major constellation) over Old Faithful geyser, Yellowstone National Park, image: Wikimedia Commons/ Astroval1 (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Constellation

The Big Dipper is the most visible part of Ursa Major, and its name is often used synonymously with the Great Bear. However, the Big Dipper itself is not a constellation. It is an asterism, a distinctive pattern formed by two or more stars. Its host constellation, Ursa Major, is the third largest constellation in the sky (after Hydra and Virgo) and covers a much larger area.

The stars of the Big Dipper outline the Great Bear’s hindquarters and tail. The stars marking the celestial Bear’s head, torso, legs, and feet are not as bright or as easy to see from light-polluted areas.

Location

The Big Dipper and Ursa Major lie in the second quadrant of the northern hemisphere (NQ2). The entire constellation is visible from locations at latitudes between +90° and -30°. It is best seen in the evenings in April, when it makes its way across the sky during the night.

The Big Dipper is circumpolar in most of the northern hemisphere. This means that it never falls below the horizon and is visible throughout the year. As a result of the Earth’s rotation, the asterism appears to rotate slowly counterclockwise around the north celestial pole.

Where is the Big Dipper?

For most observers, the Big Dipper always appears in the northern half of the sky. Depending on the time of year, it may be in the northeast, northwest or north in the evening. It appears higher above the horizon from far northern latitudes than it does from locations in northern equatorial latitudes.

For northern observers, the asterism appears in the northeastern sky with the handle dangling from the bowl in the winter evenings. In the spring months, it is high in the northeast around 10 pm and travels across the sky during the night.

where in the sky is the big dipper,how to find the big dipper,big dipper location

The location of the Big Dipper in different seasons, image: Stellarium

In the summer, the Big Dipper is found above the northwestern horizon with the handle pointing upwards and the bowl closer to the horizon in the evening. In the autumn months, it lies low above the horizon in the northern sky.

Due to its location in the far northern sky, the Big Dipper is mostly invisible to observers in the southern hemisphere. It may be glimpsed from locations near the equator in the spring months, when it appears upside down above the northern horizon in the evening.

The Big Dipper as it appears from locations near the equator in the spring months, image: Stellarium

Constellations near the Big Dipper

The Big Dipper can be used to find several neighbouring constellations, as well as a few that lie further away.

The arc of the Big Dipper’s handle points to Arcturus, the bear keeper, the brightest star in the constellation Boötes, the Herdsman. Boötes is recognizable for the asterism known as the Kite. Arcturus, the brightest star in the northern celestial hemisphere, sits at the base of the Kite.

Following the line of the Big Dipper’s handle further leads to Spica, the brightest star in the constellation Virgo. Spica appears at the base of a crooked Y asterism that extends in the direction of Denebola in the constellation Leo. The Y of Virgo can be used to find the Virgo Cluster of galaxies.

big dipper neighbouring constellations

Constellations near the Big Dipper, image: Stellarium

The region of the sky between the Big Dipper’s handle and the Y of Virgo is occupied by two fainter constellations. Coma Berenices, home to the bright, large Coma Star Cluster, lies in the area between Arcturus and Denebola. The main constellation figure of Canes Venatici, the Hunting Dogs, is roughly parallel to the line connecting Alkaid and Mizar in the handle of the Big Dipper. Cor Caroli, the brightest star in Canes Venatici, is found below Alkaid and the fainter Sun-like star Chara lies below Mizar.

The tail of Draco lies between the Big and Little Dippers. The rest of the celestial Dragon winds around the Little Dipper’s bowl in the direction of the Northern Cross in Cygnus.

The faint Lynx can be made out in good conditions between the head and front legs of the Bear, the heads of the celestial Twins (Pollux and Castor), and the hexagon of Auriga.

A line extended from Megrez through Phecda in the Big Dipper’s bowl leads to Regulus, the brightest star in Leo and the 21st brightest star in the sky. Leo is recognizable for the backwards question mark pattern known as the Sickle. The asterism forms the celestial Lion’s head and mane, and Regulus appears at its base. The Lion’s tail is marked by Denebola. The line from Megrez though Phecda extended past Regulus leads to Alphard, the brightest star in Hydra.

The small, faint constellation Leo Minor lies between the constellation figure of Leo and the feet of the Great Bear. The Bear’s feet are marked by three pairs of stars between the Big Dipper and Leo. The asterism formed by these stars is known as Three Leaps of the Gazelle.

The line of the Great Bear’s back (from Megrez to Dubhe) points toward Capella, the luminary of Auriga and the 6th brightest star in the sky. Castor in Gemini is found on the line drawn from Megrez through Merak and extended by about five times the distance as that between the two stars.

Big Dipper and the North Star

The stars of the Big Dipper can be used to find Polaris, the North Star. The two outer stars of the Big Dipper ’s bowl, Merak and Dubhe, are known as Pointer Stars. A line extended from Merak through Dubhe points in the direction of Polaris.

Polaris lies in the constellation Ursa Minor, the Little Bear. It is the nearest visible star to the north celestial pole, located less than a degree from it. The Big Dipper rotates around the north celestial pole and always points the way to the North Star.

Polaris is easily recognizable on a clear night because it is the brightest star in the Little Dipper asterism. It marks the end of the Little Dipper’s handle or the tip of the Little Bear’s tail.

big dipper and polaris,how to find polaris,how to find the north star,pointer stars

The Big Dipper and the North Star (Polaris), image: Stellarium

Big Dipper and Little Dipper

The Little Dipper lies in the same area of the sky as the Big Dipper. It is formed by the seven brightest stars in Ursa Minor constellation. However, its four middle stars are relatively faint and hard to see from urban areas. For this reason, the star pattern does not stand out in the sky and the bright stars of the Big Dipper are commonly used to find it.

Polaris lies along the imaginary line extended from the outer stars of the Big Dipper bowl (Merak and Dubhe). Kochab and Pherkad, the outer stars of the Little Dipper’s bowl, are quite bright and roughly parallel to the imaginary line connecting Mizar and Alioth in the Big Dipper’s handle. These stars are known as the Guardians of the Pole because they always circle around the North Star. The rest of the Little Dipper can be made out between Polaris and Kochab and Pherkad on a clear night.

big dipper,little dipper,north star,how to find the little dipper

The Big and Little Dippers, image: Stellarium

Big Dipper stars

The seven stars that make up the Big Dipper are:

  • Alkaid (Eta Ursae Majoris)
  • Mizar (Zeta Ursae Majoris)
  • Alioth (Epsilon Ursae Majoris)
  • Megrez (Delta Ursae Majoris)
  • Phecda (Gamma Ursae Majoris)
  • Dubhe (Alpha Ursae Majoris)
  • Merak (Beta Ursae Majoris)

Alkaid, Mizar and Alioth form the Big Dipper’s handle or the Great Bear’s tail, while Megrez, Phecda, Dubhe and Merak outline the Dipper’s bowl or the Bear’s hindquarters.

stars of the big dipper

Big Dipper stars, image: Luigi Chiesa

Five of the seven Dipper stars belong to the Ursa Major Moving Group, also known as Collinder 285. The Ursa Major Moving Group (or Ursa Major association) is a group of stars that share a proper motion and common velocities in space. This indicates that they have the same origin and were formed in the same molecular cloud at about the same time. The white (class A) stars Mizar, Alioth, Megrez, Phecda and Merak are members of the group. The blue (B-type) main sequence star Alkaid and the orange giant Dubhe are not.

The stars of the Ursa Major association were formed about 300 million years ago. The core of the group lies about 80 light years from Earth. Many bright stars outside of Ursa Major are also likely members, including Menkalinan in Auriga, Alphecca in Corona Borealis, Adhafera in Leo, and Skat in Aquarius.

Alkaid

Alkaid, Eta Ursae Majoris (η Uma), is the star marking the end of the Big Dipper’s handle and the tip of the Great Bear’s tail. It is one of the hottest stars visible to the unaided eye. It is a very young star, with an estimated age of only 10 million years.

Alkaid is the third brightest star in Ursa Major and the 38th brightest star in the sky. It is a hot blue main sequence star of the spectral type B3V. It has an apparent magnitude of 1.86 and is about 103.9 light years distant from Earth.

Alkaid is 3.4 times larger, 6.1 times more massive and 594 times more luminous than the Sun. It has a surface temperature of about 15,540 K.

The name Alkaid means “the leader.” Eta Ursae Majoris was also traditionally known as Benetnasch.

Mizar

Mizar, Zeta Ursae Majoris (ζ UMa) is the middle star of the Big Dipper’s handle. It has an apparent magnitude of 2.23 and is 82.9 light years distant. It was the first double star to be photographed, in 1857.

Mizar is the fourth brightest star in Ursa Major and the 69th brightest star in the sky. It is the primary component of a multiple star system that consists of two spectroscopic binary stars. It forms a visual double star with the fainter Alcor, with which it may be physically associated. The two stars are sometimes known as the Horse and Rider.

Alcor itself has a fainter companion, so if it is indeed gravitationally bound to Mizar, this would make Zeta Ursae Majoris a six-star system. Both Mizar and Alcor are members of the Ursa Major Moving Group.

Mizar, the primary component in the Zeta UMa system, is a white main sequence star of the spectral type A2Vp. It has a mass 2.2224 times that of the Sun and a radius 2.4 times solar. With a surface temperature of about 9,000 K, it shines with 33.3 solar luminosities. The star is believed to be about 370 million years old.

Alioth

Alioth, Epsilon Ursae Majoris (ε UMa), is the star in Ursa Major’s tail that is the closest to the bear’s body. It has a visual magnitude of 1.77 and is about 82.6 light years distant. It has the stellar classification of A1III-IVp kB9, indicating a white star that is coming to the end of its main sequence lifetime.

Alioth has a mass of 2.91 solar masses and is 4.14 times larger than the Sun. It shines with 102 solar luminosities with an effective temperature of about 9,020 K. The star’s estimated age is 300 million years.

Alioth is a peculiar star, one that shows variations in its spectral lines over a period of 5.1 days. It is classified as an Alpha2 Canum Venaticorum variable. It is the brightest of the seven stars that form the Big Dipper asterism.

Megrez

Megrez, Delta Ursae Majoris (δ UMa), is the dimmest of the seven stars of the Big Dipper. It is the inner star of the Dipper’s bowl that is the closest to the tail. It has an apparent magnitude of 3.312 and lies at a distance of 80.5 light years.

Megrez is only the 11th brightest star in Ursa Major. It is outshone by other Big Dipper stars, as well as by Psi Ursae Majoris, Tania Australis (Mu UMa), Theta Ursae Majoris, and Talitha (Iota UMa) in the Great Bear’s legs and feet.

Megrez is a white main sequence star of the spectral type A3 V. It has a mass of 1.63 solar masses and a radius of 1.4 solar radii. With a surface temperature of about 9,480 K, it is 14 times more luminous than the Sun. The star is a fast rotator, with a projected rotational velocity of 233 km/s. Like its Big Dipper neighbours, it is believed to be about 300 million years old.

Phecda

Phecda, Gamma Ursae Majoris (γ UMa), has the stellar classification A0Ve, indicating another white main sequence dwarf. The star has a mass 2.94 times that of the Sun and a radius 3.04 times solar. It is 65.255 times more luminous than the Sun with an effective temperature of 9,355 K. It was traditionally also known as Phad.

Phecda has an astrometric binary companion, an orange dwarf of the spectral type K2 V that perturbs it and causes it to wobble around the common centre of mass. The two stars have an orbital period of 20.5 years. The companion has a mass of 0.79 solar masses and is considerably cooler than the primary, with a surface temperature of 4,780 K. It shines with only 0.397 solar luminosities.

Phecda has an apparent magnitude of 2.438 and lies at a distance of 83.2 light years from Earth. It is the sixth brightest star in Ursa Major.

Dubhe

Dubhe, Alpha Ursae Majoris (α UMa), has a visual magnitude of 1.79 and is about 123 light years distant from Earth. It is the second brightest star in Ursa Major, after Alioth.

Dubhe is an orange giant with the stellar classification of K0III. It is a spectroscopic binary star, with a white main sequence companion of the spectral type F0V. More recent sources classify Dubhe as a yellow giant of the spectral class G9III and the companion as an A7.5 class star. The two stars are 23 astronomical units apart and have an orbital period of 44.45 years.

Dubhe is 3.44 times more massive than the Sun and 165.1 times more luminous. It is a slow spinner, with a projected rotational velocity of 2.6 km/s. The companion is less massive, with about 1.6 solar masses. It has a visual magnitude of 4.86.

Merak

Merak, Beta Ursae Majoris (β UMa), is a white subgiant star of the spectral type A1IVps. It has an apparent magnitude of 2.37 and is 79.7 light years distant. It is classified as a suspected variable. The star has a mass of 2.7 solar masses and a radius 3.021 times that of the Sun. With a surface temperature of 9,377 K, it is 63.015 times more luminous than the Sun. The star’s estimated age is about 500 million years.

Big Dipper star names

The names of the Big Dipper stars come from the Arabic and mostly refer to the stars’ positions in Ursa Major. Dubhe is derived from the Arabic żahr ad-dubb al-akbar, meaning “the back of the Greater Bear.” The name Merak comes from al-maraqq (the loins). Alioth is derived from the phrase alyat al-hamal (“the sheep’s fat tail”). Phecda comes from fakhth al-dubb, “thigh of the bear,” and Megrez from al-maghriz, “the base (of the bear’s tail).”

The name Mizar means “covering” and comes from a mistaken reading of “loins.” It was drawn from the name of Mizar’s Big Dipper neighbour Merak.

The name Alkaid does not refer to the Great Bear. It is derived from the phrase qā’id bināt naʿsh, meaning “the leader of the daughters of the bier.” In ancient Arabic astronomy, the stars of the Big Dipper’s handle represented mourning maidens in a funeral procession, while the stars of the Big Dipper’s bowl represented the bier (coffin). The constellation’s slow circular movement around the pole was associated with the movement of a funeral procession. The stars of the handle represented the daughters of Al Na’ash, a man who met his end at the hands of Al Jadi, represented by the North Star (Polaris), the brightest star in the Little Dipper.

Big Dipper facts

The brightest star in the Big Dipper asterism is Alioth, Epsilon Ursae Majoris. Alioth is the brightest star in Ursa Major and the 32nd brightest star in the sky. Dubhe (Alpha Ursae Majoris), the second brightest star, is only slightly fainter than Alioth. It is the 34th brightest star in the sky and one of the Pointer Stars (along with Merak), the stars used to find Polaris and the north celestial pole. Both Alioth and Dubhe are navigational stars. Their brightness and recognizability make them easy to use in the field of celestial navigation.

Even though it is the constellation’s brightest star, Alioth has the Bayer designation Epsilon Ursae Majoris. The German uranographer Johann Bayer, who introduced the system of stellar designations that is still used today in his star atlas Uranometria (1603), assigned Greek letters to stars by order of magnitude, not by brightness. With Ursa Major, he assigned the letters going from west to east. This is why Dubhe, the westernmost of the constellation’s brightest stars, has the designation Alpha. Merak, the other Pointer Star, is Beta, and Alioth in the Dipper’s handle is Epsilon.

Five of the seven Big Dipper stars are part of the same family – the Ursa Major association – and they travel together through space. For this reason, the middle part of the asterism will not look significantly different even tens of thousands of years from now.

However, Alkaid and Dubhe do not belong to the Ursa Major association and have a different motion through space from the other Dipper stars. About 50,000 years from now, their motion will change the shape of the asterism. The handle will face the opposite way and the outer end of the bowl will appear slightly different.

The Big Dipper and Polaris are featured on the flag of Alaska. The Big Dipper’s host constellation, Ursa Major, represents a bear, an animal native to Alaska. The design of the flag was selected in a 1927 contest.

big dipper,little dipper

The Big and Little Dippers, image: CG

Deep sky objects near the Big Dipper

The Big Dipper lies in a region of the sky that hosts several bright deep sky objects. The Dipper stars can be used to find them. These objects lie in Ursa Major and in the neighbouring Canes Venatici.

The famous Whirlpool Galaxy (Messier 51) and the Sunflower Galaxy (Messier 63) can be found along the imaginary line connecting Alkaid in the Big Dipper’s handle and Cor Caroli in Canes Venatici. The Pinwheel Galaxy (Messier 101) appears above the Dipper’s handle and forms a triangle with Alkaid and Mizar.

deep sky objects near the big dipper

Big Dipper map, image: Roberto Mura

The galaxy pair Messier 81 and Messier 82 (Bode’s Galaxy and the Cigar Galaxy) can be found by extending a line from Phecda through Dubhe by about the same distance as that between the two stars. A line drawn in the opposite direction, toward Cor Caroli, leads to the spiral galaxy Messier 106.

Merak is the nearest bright star to the Owl Nebula (Messier 97) and the barred spiral galaxy Messier 108, and Phecda is less than a degree from the galaxy Messier 109.

Mythology

The Big Dipper is associated with many different myths and folk tales in cultures across the world. In Hindu astronomy, the asterism is called Saptarishi, or the Seven Great Sages. In eastern Asia, it is known as the Northern Dipper (Beidou in China, Hokuto Shichisei in Korea). The Chinese also know the seven stars as the Government, or Tseih Sing. In Malaysia, the asterism is called Buruj Biduk, or The Ladle, and in Mongolia, it is known as the Seven Gods.

In an old Arabic story, the stars that form the bowl represent a coffin and the three stars marking the handle are mourners following it. The name of the star Alkaid (or Benetnasch) refers to that story.

The association of Ursa Major with a bear has its origins in prehistoric times. Many civilizations have seen the celestial pattern as a bear. The best-known legend comes from Greek mythology. It links the constellation with the nymph Callisto, who was pursued by Zeus and transformed into a bear by his jealous wife Hera. In the myth, Callisto had a son, Arcas, by Zeus. When Arcas grew up, he became a hunter and the king of Arcadia. During a hunt, he came across the bear and, not recognizing his mother, he aimed an arrow to kill it. However, Zeus intervened and turned the mother and son into the two bear constellations, Ursa Major and Ursa Minor.

In the United Kingdom and Ireland, the Big Dipper asterism is known as the Plough, and sometimes as the Butcher’s Cleaver in northern parts of England. The old English name for the asterism is Charles’ Wain (wagon), which is derived from the Scandinavian Karlavagnen, Karlsvognen, or Karlsvogna. Charles or Karl was a common name in Germanic languages and the name of the asterism meant “the men’s wagon,” as opposed to the Little Dipper, which was “the women’s wagon.” An even older name for the stars of the Big Dipper was Odin’s Wain, or Odin’s Wagon, referring to Scandinavian mythology.

In Slavic languages and in Romanian, the Big and Little Dippers are known as the Great and Small Wagons. In German, the Big Dipper is known as Großer Wagen, the Great Cart. In Dutch, the asterism is popularly called Steelpannetje, the Saucepan, and in Finland it is called Otava (“salmon net”). The Italian name for the Big Dipper is Grande Carro (Great Wagon).

The Romans knew the seven stars as the “seven plough oxen,” or Septentrio, with only two of the seven stars representing oxen and the others forming a wagon pulled by the oxen.

The asterism was mentioned in Homer’s Iliad as “the Bear, which men also call the Wain.”

Some Native American groups saw the Dipper’s bowl as a bear and the three stars of the handle either as three cubs or three hunters following the bear. The second interpretation is linked to a folk tale that explains why leaves turn red in autumn: the hunters are chasing a wounded bear and, since the asterism is low in the sky that time of year, the bear’s blood is falling on the leaves, making them turn red.

In more recent history, black people in the United States knew the constellation as the Drinking Gourd and used it to find their way north, to freedom. The folk song, “Follow the Drinking Gourd,” gave them directions to follow the Big Dipper to get to north. In Africa, the seven stars were sometimes seen as a drinking gourd, which is believed to be the origin of the name Big Dipper. The name is most commonly used for the asterism in the United States and Canada.