Before the city has fully stretched awake, before the glass towers flash their first silver glints of sun, Dubai's desert is already alive in hushed ways: the hush of cool air skimming across dunes, the hush of light mending the horizon from violet to gold, the hush of tracks-fox, beetle, bird-stitched into the sand like secret handwriting. A morning desert safari with a camel ride is less an activity than a change of pace. It takes you out of the tempo of Dubai's freeways and into a rhythm as old as the Arabian sands themselves.
The day starts early. Morning desert safari Dubai relaxed desert ride A 4x4 slips you away from the city, past low-slung neighborhoods and into emptier stretches where the sky grows larger with every kilometer. The desert at dawn is kind. Temperatures are forgiving, and the air carries a crispness you don't associate with a place everyone calls hot.
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When the driver pulls onto the sand, the terrain softens under the tires and the dunes roll outward like a sea frozen mid-wave. Dune bashing-if it's included in your safari-introduces the landscape in bold strokes: a bright, swerving dance across slopes and ridges, sometimes lifting your stomach and then setting it down gently with a laugh. From the crest of one tall dune, you see the sun appear as a thin blade on the horizon, slicing cleanly into the morning.
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It's the sort of view that quiets conversation.
Then comes the part that feels like a hinge, opening the modern moment into something old: the camels. They kneel, long lashes fanning in slow blinks, their shadows long and spindly in the fresh light. Mounting a camel is a small ceremony of trust and posture-lean back as it rises, let your hips relax into the sway. Once you settle, the gait becomes a lullaby, a rolling, four-beat motion that encourages you to breathe with the animal rather than fight it. The world looks different from a camel's back. The dunes are not obstacles but gentle currents; the desert's emptiness is not lack, but space-space to notice the lacework of wind on sand, the shimmer of heat far off, the silhouette of a lone ghaf tree holding its ground.
There's history under the saddle. Camels were the lifeline of Bedouin tribes: transport, milk, wool, companionship. The phrase “ships of the desert” is no metaphor; from up here the comparison feels exact. The camel's pace invites contemplation. You hear how silent the desert can be, a thick-bellied quiet that amplifies small sounds-the soft pop of hoof on sand, the clink of a bridle ring, the faint call of a bird you can't quite place. Guides often share stories as you ride: how to read dune patterns to predict wind, how falcons once scouted for prey, how tribes navigated by stars and memory. If your operator practices responsible tourism, you'll also hear about conservation areas where flora and fauna are protected, and why morning slots are ideal to minimize stress on animals and avoid midday heat.
After the ride, there's often a pause at a simple camp. Arabic coffee-bitter and fragrant with cardamom-pours in tiny cups. Dates, sticky and caramel-sweet, pair with the coffee's edge. Some experiences add a light breakfast: flatbreads, eggs, fruit; others offer the chance to try sandboarding down small slopes near camp. You may see a falconer demonstrate the bird's precision, its eyes like burnished coins in the sun. And throughout, the light shifts and softens, sketching shadows that sharpen and fade across the dunes. Photographers learn quickly: morning is forgiving-colors are true, contrasts gentle, faces not yet flushed from heat.
Practicalities matter in the desert, even in romance. Wearing light layers is wise-mornings can start cool and turn warm quickly. Closed-toe shoes keep sand from burning your feet later in the day, and a scarf or hat will be your friend when the breeze lifts. Sunscreen is not optional. If you're sensitive to motion, let your operator know; they can keep the dune drive smooth or skip it in favor of a quieter route. Bring water, though good operators provide it, and carry what you carry out. The desert remembers everything we leave behind.
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Ethics matter too. Choose an operator that treats animals and land with care. Camels should look healthy, with padded saddles and breaks between rides. The best guides talk about the desert as a home, not a playground. They'll keep a respectful distance from wildlife if you're lucky enough to spot any-an oryx's white flash against the sand or the quick dart of a sand gazelle-and they'll avoid carving fresh scars across fragile areas just for a thrill. Responsible safaris are not only better for the desert; they're better for people. They replace spectacle with experience, and experience is what lingers.
As the morning opens up, you begin to notice how the desert teaches scale. From a distance, a dune is a smooth, single curve; up close, its face is ribbed with ripples fine as comb work. A footprint can hold a tiny universe-small pebbles, a smudge of pale weed, the loop of an insect track. Even the sky feels closer. When a breeze arrives, it comes with purpose, combing the silver grasses that clutch at the dune bases, drawing a quick veil of sand across the surface and erasing your camel's steps as if you were never there. This impermanence doesn't diminish the experience; it deepens it. The desert's beauty is not in what lasts, but in the grace with which it vanishes.
By the time you're heading back, the day has brightened into clarity.
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The city reappears on the horizon, its high lines like notes on a staff, familiar and almost surprising. You bring with you the quiet sway of the camel, a new understanding of why people attach poetry to this landscape, and the comfort of having spent time in a place that asks nothing and offers plenty.
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A morning desert safari in Dubai, camel ride included, is not merely a tick on an itinerary.
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It is a recalibration. Morning desert safari Dubai . It loosens the grip of hurry and hands you, for a few unscripted hours, the simplest gifts: light, space, rhythm, and the gentle companionship of a creature bred to ferry humans across the world's widest silences.
If you're lucky, you'll find a stray grain of sand in your shoe later that day, a small reminder that the desert lingers. And if you listen closely, you might still feel the soft, steady cadence of the camel in your bones-a metronome set to the tempo of morning.
About Kawasaki
Look up Kawasaki or 川崎 in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Kawasaki (Japanese: 川崎, romanized: Kawasaki, lit. 'river peninsula') may refer to:
Places
[edit]
Kawasaki, Kanagawa, a Japanese city
Kawasaki-ku, Kawasaki, a ward in Kawasaki, Kanagawa
Kawasaki City Todoroki Arena
Kawasaki Stadium, a multi-sport stadium
Kawasaki, Fukuoka, a Japanese town
Kawasaki, Iwate, a Japanese village
Kawasaki, Miyagi, a Japanese town
Tokyo-Yokohama-Kawasaki, Japanese conurbation
Transportation
[edit]
Kawasaki Route (Japanese: 川崎線, romanized: Kawasaki-sen), a toll road of the Shuto expressway system in Greater Tokyo
Kawasaki line, several lines
Kawasaki station, several stations
Businesses
[edit]
Kawasaki Heavy Industries (KHI), a Japanese manufacturer of aerospace equipment, ATVs, engines, industrial plants, motorcycles, jet skis, ships, tractors, trains and so on
Kawasaki Heavy Industries Motorcycle & Engine, a division of Kawasaki Heavy Industries
Kawasaki motorcycles
Kawasaki Motors Racing, the European subsidiary of Kawasaki Heavy Industries
Kawasaki Shipbuilding Corporation, the shipbuilding subsidiary of Kawasaki Heavy Industries
Kawasaki Heavy Industries Rolling Stock Company, the railroad division of Kawasaki Heavy Industries
Kawasaki Aerospace Company, the aerospace division of Kawasaki Heavy Industries
Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha or K Line, a Japanese transport company
Kawasaki Steel Corporation, predecessor of JFE Holdings
People
[edit]
Kawasaki (surname), a Japanese surname
Other uses
[edit]
Battle of Kawasaki, at Kawasaki, Mutsu, Japan; in 1057 in the Zenkunen War between the Abe clan and Minamoto clan
Kawasaki disease (Kawasaki's), a vascular disease found primarily in young children
Kawasaki Racecourse, a horseracing dirt track, in Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan
Shaking rat Kawasaki, the Kawasaki lineage of laboratory rat animals
Kawasaki-type oiler (Japanese: 川崎型油槽船, romanized: Kawasaki-gata Yusōsen), an oil tanker and refueller ship class
See also
[edit]
Search for "kawasaki" on Wikipedia.
Kawasaki Frontale, a football (soccer) club in Kawasaki, Kanagawa
Verdy Kawasaki, former name of current Tokyo Verdy, a football (soccer) club
All pages with titles containing Kawasaki or Kawasakis
All pages with titles beginning with Kawasaki
Kawa (disambiguation)
Saki (disambiguation)
Topics referred to by the same term
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Kawasaki.
If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.
About Polaris
Northern pole-star; brightest star in Ursa Minor
This article is about the Earth's current north star. For such stars in general, see pole star. For other uses, see Polaris (disambiguation) and North Star (disambiguation).
"Stella Polaris" redirects here. For the military operation, see Operation Stella Polaris.
α UMi A: 1 Ursae Minoris, BD+88°8, FK5 907, GC 2243, HD 8890, HIP 11767, HR 424, SAO 308
α UMi B: NSV 631, BD+88°7, GC 2226, SAO 305
Database references
SIMBAD
α UMi A
α UMi B
Polaris is a star in the northern circumpolar constellation of Ursa Minor. It is designated α Ursae Minoris (Latinized to Alpha Ursae Minoris) and is commonly called the North Star. With an apparent magnitude that fluctuates around 1.98,[3] it is the brightest star in the constellation and is readily visible to the naked eye at night.[16] The position of the star lies less than 1° away from the north celestial pole, making it the current northern pole star. The stable position of the star in the Northern Sky makes it useful for navigation.[17]
Although appearing to the naked eye as a single point of light, Polaris is a triple star system, composed of the primary, a yellow supergiant designated Polaris Aa, in orbit with a smaller companion, Polaris Ab; the pair is almost certainly[14] in a wider orbit with Polaris B. The outer companion B was discovered in August 1779 by William Herschel, with the inner Aa/Ab pair only confirmed in the early 20th century.
As the closest Cepheid variable, Polaris Aa's distance is a foundational part of the cosmic distance ladder. The revised Hipparcos stellar parallax gives a distance to Polaris A of about 432 light-years (ly) (133 parsecs (pc)), while the successor mission Gaia gives a distance of 446.5 ly (136.9 pc) for Polaris B[9][a].
Stellar system
[edit]
Polaris components as seen by the Hubble Space Telescope
Polaris Aa is an evolved yellow supergiant of spectral type F7Ib with 5.4 solar masses (M☉). It is the first classical Cepheid to have a mass determined from its orbit. The two smaller companions are Polaris B, a 1.39 M☉ F3 main-sequence star orbiting at a distance of 2,400 astronomical units (AU),[18] and Polaris Ab (or P), a very close F6 main-sequence star with a mass of 1.26 M☉.[3] In January 2006, NASA released images, from the Hubble telescope, that showed the three members of the Polaris ternary system.[19][20]
Polaris B can be resolved with a modest telescope. William Herschel discovered the star in August 1779 using a reflecting telescope of his own, one of the best telescopes of the time.[21]
The variable radial velocity of Polaris A was reported by W. W. Campbell in 1899, which suggested this star is a binary system.[22] Since Polaris A is a known cepheid variable, J. H. Moore in 1927 demonstrated that the changes in velocity along the line of sight were due to a combination of the four-day pulsation period combined with a much longer orbital period and a large eccentricity of around 0.6.[23] Moore published preliminary orbital elements of the system in 1929, giving an orbital period of about 29.7 years with an eccentricity of 0.63. This period was confirmed by proper motion studies performed by B. P. Gerasimovič in 1939.[24]
As part of her doctoral thesis, in 1955 E. Roemer used radial velocity data to derive an orbital period of 30.46 y for the Polaris A system, with an eccentricity of 0.64.[25] K. W. Kamper in 1996 produced refined elements with a period of 29.59±0.02 years and an eccentricity of 0.608±0.005.[26] In 2019, a study by R. I. Anderson gave a period of 29.32±0.11 years with an eccentricity of 0.620±0.008.[10]
There were once thought to be two more widely separated components—Polaris C and Polaris D—but these have been shown not to be physically associated with the Polaris system.[18][27]
Observation
[edit]
Variability
[edit]
A light curve for Polaris, plotted from TESS data[28]
Polaris Aa, the supergiant primary component, is a low-amplitude population I classical Cepheid variable, although it was once thought to be a type II Cepheid due to its high galactic latitude. Cepheids constitute an important standard candle for determining distance, so Polaris, as the closest such star,[10] is heavily studied. The variability of Polaris had been suspected since 1852; this variation was confirmed by Ejnar Hertzsprung in 1911.[29]
The range of brightness of Polaris is given as 1.86–2.13,[4] but the amplitude has changed since discovery. Prior to 1963, the amplitude was over 0.1 magnitude and was very gradually decreasing. After 1966, it very rapidly decreased until it was less than 0.05 magnitude; since then, it has erratically varied near that range. It has been reported that the amplitude is now increasing again, a reversal not seen in any other Cepheid.[6]
The period, roughly 4 days, has also changed over time. It has steadily increased by around 4.5 seconds per year except for a hiatus in 1963–1965. This was originally thought to be due to secular redward evolution across the Cepheid instability strip, but it may be due to interference between the primary and the first-overtone pulsation modes.[20][30][31] Authors disagree on whether Polaris is a fundamental or first-overtone pulsator and on whether it is crossing the instability strip for the first time or not.[11][31][32]
The temperature of Polaris varies by only a small amount during its pulsations, but the amplitude of this variation is variable and unpredictable. The erratic changes of temperature and the amplitude of temperature changes during each cycle, from less than 50 K to at least 170 K, may be related to the orbit with Polaris Ab.[12]
A 4-day time lapse of Polaris illustrating its Cepheid type variability.
Research reported in Science suggests that Polaris is 2.5 times brighter today than when Ptolemy observed it, changing from third to second magnitude.[33] Astronomer Edward Guinan considers this to be a remarkable change and is on record as saying that "if they are real, these changes are 100 times larger than [those] predicted by current theories of stellar evolution".
Torres 2023 published a broad historical compilation of radial velocity and photometric data. He concludes that the change in the Cepheid period has reversed and is now decreasing since roughly 2010. Torres notes that TESS data is of limited utility: as a survey telescope, TESS is optimized for dimmer stars than Polaris, so Polaris significantly over-saturates TESS's cameras. Determining an accurate total brightness for Polaris from TESS is extremely difficult, although it remains suitable for timing the period.[34]
Furthermore, apparent irregularities in Polaris Aa's behavior may coincide with the periastron passage of Ab, although imprecision in the data prevents a definitive conclusion.[34] At the Gaia distance, the Aa-Ab closest approach is 6.2 AU; the radius of the primary supergiant is 46 R☉, meaning that the periastron separation is about 29 times its radius. This implies tidal forcing upon Aa's upper atmosphere by Ab. Such binary tidal forcing is known from heartbeat stars, where eccentric periastron approaches cause rich multimode pulsation akin to an electrocardiogram.
Szabados 1992 suggests that, among Cepheids, "phase slips" similar to what happened to Polaris in the mid 1960s are associated with binary systems.[35]
In 2024, researchers led by Nancy Evans at the Harvard & Smithsonian published a study with fresh data on the inner binary using the interferometric CHARA Array. They improved the solution of the orbit: combining CHARA data with previous Hubble data, and in tandem with the Gaia distance of 446±1 light-years, they confirmed the Cepheid radius estimate of 46 R☉ and re-determined its mass at 5.13±0.28M☉. The corresponding Polaris Ab mass is 1.316±0.028M☉. Polaris remains overluminous compared to the best Cepheid evolution models, something also seen in V1334 Cygni. Polaris's rapid period change and pulsation amplitude variations are still peculiar compared to other Cepheids, but may be related to the first-overtone pulsations.[9]
Evans et al also tentatively succeeded in imaging features on the surface of Polaris Aa: large bright and dark patches appear in close-up images, changing over time. Follow up imaging campaigns are required to confirm this detection.[9] Polaris's age is difficult to model; current best estimates find the Cepheid to be much younger than the two main sequence components, seemingly enough to exclude a common origin, which would be quite unlikely for a triple star system.[14][15]
Torres 2023 and Evans et al 2024 both suggest that recent literature cautiously agree that Polaris is a first overtone pulsator.[34][9]
Role as pole star
[edit]
Main article: Pole star
Polaris azimuths vis clock face analogy.[36]A typical Northern Hemisphere star trail with Polaris in the center.Polaris lying halfway between the asterisms Cassiopeia and the Big Dipper.
Because Polaris lies nearly in a direct line with the Earth's rotational axis above the North Pole, it stands almost motionless in the sky, and all the stars of the northern sky appear to rotate around it. It thus provides a nearly fixed point from which to draw measurements for celestial navigation and for astrometry. The elevation of the star above the horizon gives the approximate latitude of the observer.[16]
In 2018 Polaris was 0.66° (39.6 arcminutes) away from the pole of rotation (1.4 times the Moon disc) and so revolves around the pole in a small circle 1.3° in diameter. It will be closest to the pole (about 0.45 degree, or 27 arcminutes) soon after the year 2100.[37] Because it is so close to the celestial north pole, its right ascension is changing rapidly due to the precession of Earth's axis, going from 2.5h in AD 2000 to 6h in AD 2100. Twice in each sidereal day Polaris's azimuth is true north; the rest of the time it is displaced eastward or westward, and the bearing must be corrected using tables or a rule of thumb. The best approximation[36] is made using the leading edge of the "Big Dipper" asterism in the constellation Ursa Major. The leading edge (defined by the stars Dubhe and Merak) is referenced to a clock face, and the true azimuth of Polaris worked out for different latitudes.
The apparent motion of Polaris towards and, in the future, away from the celestial pole, is due to the precession of the equinoxes.[38] The celestial pole will move away from α UMi after the 21st century, passing close by Gamma Cephei by about the 41st century, moving towards Deneb by about the 91st century.[citation needed]
The celestial pole was close to Thuban around 2750 BCE,[38] and during classical antiquity it was slightly closer to Kochab (β UMi) than to Polaris, although still about 10° from either star.[39] It was about the same angular distance from β UMi as to α UMi by the end of late antiquity. The Greek navigator Pytheas in ca. 320 BC described the celestial pole as devoid of stars. However, as one of the brighter stars close to the celestial pole, Polaris was used for navigation at least from late antiquity, and described as ἀεί φανής (aei phanēs) "always visible" by Stobaeus (5th century), also termed Λύχνος (Lychnos) akin to a burner or lamp and would reasonably be described as stella polaris from about the High Middle Ages and onwards, both in Greek and Latin. On his first trans-Atlantic voyage in 1492, Christopher Columbus had to correct for the "circle described by the pole star about the pole".[40] In Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar, written around 1599, Caesar describes himself as being "as constant as the northern star", although in Caesar's time there was no constant northern star. Despite its relative brightness, it is not, as is popularly believed, the brightest star in the sky.[41]
Polaris was referenced in the classic Nathaniel Bowditch maritime navigation book American Practical Navigator (1802), where it is listed as one of the navigational stars.[42]
Names
[edit]
This artist's concept shows: supergiant Polaris Aa, dwarf Polaris Ab, and the distant dwarf companion Polaris B.
The modern name Polaris[43] is shortened from the Neo-Latin stella polaris ("polar star"), coined in the Renaissance when the star had approached the celestial pole to within a few degrees.[44][45]
Gemma Frisius, writing in 1547, referred to it as stella illa quae polaris dicitur ("that star which is called 'polar'"), placing it 3° 8' from the celestial pole.[44][45]
In 2016, the International Astronomical Union organized a Working Group on Star Names (WGSN)[46] to catalog and standardize proper names for stars. The WGSN's first bulletin of July 2016 included a table of the first two batches of names approved by the WGSN; which included Polaris for the star α Ursae Minoris Aa.[47]
In antiquity, Polaris was not yet the closest naked-eye star to the celestial pole, and the entire constellation of Ursa Minor was used for navigation rather than any single star. Polaris moved close enough to the pole to be the closest naked-eye star, even though still at a distance of several degrees, in the early medieval period, and numerous names referring to this characteristic as polar star have been in use since the medieval period. In Old English, it was known as scip-steorra ("ship-star").[citation needed]
In the "Old English rune poem", the T-rune is apparently associated with "a circumpolar constellation", or the planet Mars.[48]
In the Hindu Puranas, it became personified under the name Dhruva ("immovable, fixed").[49]
In the later medieval period, it became associated with the Marian title of Stella Maris "Star of the Sea" (so in Bartholomaeus Anglicus, c. 1270s),[50] due to an earlier transcription error.[51]
An older English name, attested since the 14th century, is lodestar "guiding star", cognate with the Old Norse leiðarstjarna, Middle High German leitsterne.[52]
The ancient name of the constellation Ursa Minor, Cynosura (from the Greek κυνόσουρα "the dog's tail"),[53] became associated with the pole star in particular by the early modern period. An explicit identification of Mary as stella maris with the polar star (Stella Polaris), as well as the use of Cynosura as a name of the star, is evident in the title Cynosura seu Mariana Stella Polaris (i.e. "Cynosure, or the Marian Polar Star"), a collection of Marian poetry published by Nicolaus Lucensis (Niccolo Barsotti de Lucca) in 1655. [citation needed]
Ursa Minor as depicted in the 964 Persian work Book of Fixed Stars, Polaris named al-Judayy "الجدي" in the lower right.
Its name in traditional pre-Islamic Arab astronomy was al-Judayy الجدي ("the kid", in the sense of a juvenile goat ["le Chevreau"] in Description des Etoiles fixes),[54] and that name was used in medieval Islamic astronomy as well.[55][56] In those times, it was not yet as close to the north celestial pole as it is now, and used to rotate around the pole.[citation needed]
It was invoked as a symbol of steadfastness in poetry, as "steadfast star" by Spenser. Shakespeare's sonnet 116 is an example of the symbolism of the north star as a guiding principle: "[Love] is the star to every wandering bark / Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken."[57]
In Julius Caesar, Shakespeare has Caesar explain his refusal to grant a pardon: "I am as constant as the northern star/Of whose true-fixed and resting quality/There is no fellow in the firmament./The skies are painted with unnumbered sparks,/They are all fire and every one doth shine,/But there's but one in all doth hold his place;/So in the world" (III, i, 65–71). Of course, Polaris will not "constantly" remain as the north star due to precession, but this is only noticeable over centuries.[citation needed]
In Inuit astronomy, Polaris is known as Nuutuittuq (syllabics: ᓅᑐᐃᑦᑐᖅ).[58]
In traditional Lakota star knowledge, Polaris is named "Wičháȟpi Owáŋžila". This translates to "The Star that Sits Still". This name comes from a Lakota story in which he married Tȟapȟúŋ Šá Wíŋ, "Red Cheeked Woman". However, she fell from the heavens, and in his grief Wičháȟpi Owáŋžila stared down from "waŋkátu" (the above land) forever.[59]
The Plains Cree call the star in Nehiyawewin: acâhkos êkâ kâ-âhcît "the star that does not move" (syllabics: ᐊᒑᐦᑯᐢ ᐁᑳ ᑳ ᐋᐦᒌᐟ).[60]
In Mi'kmawi'simk the star is named Tatapn.[61]
In the ancient Finnish worldview, the North Star has also been called taivaannapa and naulatähti ("the nailstar") because it seems to be attached to the firmament or even to act as a fastener for the sky when other stars orbit it. Since the starry sky seemed to rotate around it, the firmament is thought of as a wheel, with the star as the pivot on its axis. The names derived from it were sky pin and world pin.[citation needed]
Distance
[edit]
Since Leavitt's discovery of the Cepheid variable period-luminosity relationship, and corresponding utility as a standard candle, the distance to Polaris has been highly sought-after by astronomers. It is the closest Cepheid to Earth, and thus key to calibrating the Cepheid standard candle; Cepheids form the base of the cosmic distance ladder by which to probe the cosmological nature of the universe.[62]
Distance measurement techniques depend on whether or not components A and B are a physical pair, that is, gravitationally bound. If they are, then their estimated distance can be presumed to be equal.[b] Gravitational binding of this pair is well supported by observations, and the presumption of common distance is widely adopted in historical and recent estimates.[64][65][66][26][67][62][14][9]
For most of the 20th century, available observation technologies remained inadequate to precisely measure absolute parallax.[68][62] Instead, the main technique was to use theoretical models of stellar evolution for both main sequence and giant stars, combined with spectroscopic and photometric data to estimate distances. Such modeling relies on theoretical assumptions and guesses, and contains much systematic error and statistical uncertainties in population data. Even by 2013, these techniques were still struggling to achieve even 10% precision in either main sequence[69] or Cepheid[14] modeling.
Further progress was thus limited until the advent of Hipparcos, the first instrument able to engage in all-sky absolute parallax astrometry.[68] Its first data release was in 1997.
Selected distance estimates to Polaris
Published
Component
Distance
Source
Notes
ly
pc
1966
B
(359)[c]
(110)[c]
Fernie[64]
Photometry and modeling of B[c]
1977
B
(399)[d]
(122)[d]
Turner[65]
Photometry and modeling of B[d]
1978
A
356*
109*
Gauthier and Fernie[66]
Modeling extinction and Cepheid evolution of A
1996
B
359*
110*
Kamper[26]
Photometry and modeling of B, reproducing prior estimates
1997
A
431±29
132±9
Hipparcos[70]
All-sky/absolute[68] parallax observations, of the primary variable[e]
2004-2013
A, B
307±13
94±4
Turner/Turner et al
Cepheid evolution modeling[30], cluster kinematics and ZAMS fitting[30][67], photometry and modeling of B[67], spectral line ratios of A calibrated on yellow supergiants[62]
329±10
101±3
323±7
99±2
2007[f]
A
432±6
133±2
Hipparcos[2][69]
All-sky/absolute parallax observations, revised analysis, of the primary variable[f]
2008
B
357*
109.5*
Usenko & Klochkova[7]
Photometry and modeling of B
2014
A
>385
>118
Neilson[71]
Cepheid evolution modeling, independent of any distance prior
2018
B
521±20
160±6
Hubble, Bond et al.[14]
Relative[68] parallax of the wide component referencing photometrically-calibrated background stars
2018
B
445.3±1.7
136.6±0.5
Gaia DR2[72]
All-sky/absolute[68] parallax observations, of the wide component[g]
2020
B
446.5±1.1
136.9±0.3
Gaia DR3[5][9]
All-sky/absolute parallax observations, of the wide component[h]
^ * This estimate didn't state its uncertainty
After the arrival of the Hipparcos data, the distance to Polaris and consequent analysis of its Cepheid variation was controversial. The Hipparcos distance for Polaris was broadly but not universally adopted.[20] Immediately, the Hipparcos data for the nearest few hundred Cepheids appeared to clarify Cepheid models and to clear up then-tension in higher rungs of the distance ladder.[70] However alternatives remained; particularly by Turner et al, who published several papers between 2004 and 2013.[62]
Stellar parallax is the basis for the parsec, which is the distance from the Sun to an astronomical object which has a parallax angle of one arcsecond. (1 AU and 1 pc are not to scale, 1 pc = about 206265 AU)
In 2018, Bond et al[14] used the Hubble Space Telescope to provide an alternate direct measurement of Polaris's parallax; they summarize the back-and-forth:
However, Turner et al. (2013, hereafter TKUG13)[62] argue that the parallax of Polaris is considerably larger, 10.10 ± 0.20 mas (d = 99±2 pc). The evidence cited by TKUG13 for this “short” distance includes (1) a photometric parallax for Polaris B based on measured photometry, spectral classification, and main-sequence fitting; (2) a claim that there is a sparse cluster of A-, F-, and G-type stars within 3° of Polaris, with proper motions and radial velocities similar to that of the Cepheid, for which the Hipparcos parallaxes combined with main-sequence fitting give a distance of 99 pc; and (3) a determination of the absolute visual magnitude of Polaris based on line ratios in high-resolution spectra, calibrated against supergiants with well-established luminosities. [...]
[...]
In a critique of the TKUG13 paper, van Leeuwen (2013, hereafter L13)[69] defended the Hipparcos parallax by presenting details of the solution, concluding that “the Hipparcos data cannot in any way support” the large parallax advocated by TKUG13. Using Hipparcos data, L13 also questioned the reality of the sparse cluster proposed by TKUG13, presenting evidence against it both from the color versus absolute-magnitude diagram for stars within 3° of Polaris, and their non-clustered distribution of proper motions. Lastly, L13 examined the absolute magnitudes of nearly 400 stars of spectral type F3 V in the Hipparcos catalog with parallax errors of less than 10%, and showed that the absolute magnitude of Polaris B would fall well within the observed MV distribution for F3 V stars, based on either the Hipparcos parallax of A or the larger parallax proposed by TKUG13. Thus, he concluded that the photometric parallax of B does not give a useful discriminant.
— [14]
Bond et al go on to find a trigonometric parallax (independent of Hipparcos) that implies a distance further-still than the "long" Hipparcos distance, well outside the plausible range of the "short" distance estimates.
The next major step in high precision parallax measurements comes from Gaia, a space astrometry mission launched in 2013 and intended to measure stellar parallax to within 25 microarcseconds (μas).[74] Although it was originally planned to limit Gaia's observations to stars fainter than magnitude 5.7, tests carried out during the commissioning phase indicated that Gaia could autonomously identify stars as bright as magnitude 3. When Gaia entered regular scientific operations in July 2014, it was configured to routinely process stars in the magnitude range 3 – 20.[75] Beyond that limit, special procedures are used to download raw scanning data for the remaining 230 stars brighter than magnitude 3; methods to reduce and analyse these data are being developed; and it is expected that there will be "complete sky coverage at the bright end" with standard errors of "a few dozen μas".[76]
Gaia DR2 does not include a parallax for Polaris A, but a distance inferred from Polaris B is 136.6±0.5 pc (445.5±1.7 ly),[72] somewhat further than most previous estimates and (in principle) considerably more accurate. There are known to be considerable systematic uncertainties in DR2.[77]
Gaia DR3 significantly improved both the statistical and systematic uncertainties, although the latter remain numerous and on the order of 10–60 μas[63]; the new estimate is 136.9±0.3 pc (446.5±1.1 ly) using the baseline parallax zeropoint correction.[5][9][h]
Gaia DR4 (expected December 2026) will further improve the statistical and systematic uncertainties in general, and the data pipelines for variable and multiple stars in particular.[78] Multistar orbital solutions will become available, greatly aiding the study of Cepheids and Polaris, and in particular, may enable solving the outer AB orbit.[9]
In popular culture
[edit]
Polaris is depicted in the flag and coat of arms of the Canadian Inuit territory of Nunavut,[79] the flag of the U.S. states of Alaska and Minnesota,[80] and the flag of the U.S. city of Duluth, Minnesota.[81][82]
Vexillology
[edit]
Flag of Nunavut
Flag of Alaska
Flag of Minnesota
Flag of Duluth, Minnesota
Flag of Maine
Flag of Maine (1901–1909)
Flag of the Pan-American Exposition (1901)[83]
Sledge flag used by Francis Leopold McClintock in the Arctic (1852–1854)[84]
Heraldry
[edit]
Coat of arms of Nunavut
Seal of Minnesota
Seal of Maine
Coat of arms of Utsjoki[citation needed]
Ships
[edit]
The Chinese spy ship Beijixing is named after Polaris.
USS Polaris is named after Polaris
Gallery
[edit]
Polaris is the brightest star in the constellation of Ursa Minor (upper right).
Big Dipper and Ursa Minor in relation to Polaris
A view of Polaris in a small telescope. Polaris B is separated by 18 arc seconds from the primary star, Polaris A.
Polaris, its surrounding integrated flux nebula, and NGC188[dubious – discuss]
See also
[edit]
Stars portal
Astronomy portal
Extraterrestrial sky (for the pole stars of other celestial bodies)
List of nearest supergiants
Polar alignment
Sigma Octantis
Polaris Flare
Regiment of the North Pole
Notes
[edit]
^If A and B are a physical pair, then they share the same parallax; see #Distance
^Their minimum spatial separation is the angular separation: 0.09 mrad (18.2 arcseconds), i.e. 0.009% of their distance from Earth; it could be higher (2x-5x) depending on the orbital eccentricity and orientation of the apsides to Earth's sightline. In any case, distance estimate uncertainties have far exceeded 0.2%, with only Gaia approaching the latter precision, when neglecting systematic uncertainties.[63] Future Gaia data may enable solving this outer orbit, constraining the apsides and thus precisely determining the distance between the components.
^ abcThe paper only estimates an absolute magnitude of roughly 3.3 with an apparent magnitude of 8.51. That implies a distance modulus of 5.21, implying a distance around 110 pc. A notional magnitude error of ±0.3 would correspond to roughly ±16 pc error.
^ abcThe paper only estimates an absolute magnitude of roughly 3.16. Taken with the quoted apparent magnitude 8.6, that implies a distance modulus of 5.44, implying a distance around 122 pc. A notional magnitude error of ±0.1 would correspond to roughly ±6 pc error. Extinction was concluded to be negligible.
^Parallax 7.56±0.48 mas
^ abParallax 7.54±0.11 mas; observations from 1989 to 1993, first analysis published 1997, revised analysis published 2007.
^Statistical distance calculated using a weak distance prior
^ abThe raw parallax is 7.2869±0.0178 mas; applying a basic systematic[63] correction[73] gives 7.3045±0.0178 mas
References
[edit]
^
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Polaris.
Preceded by
Kochab & Pherkad
Pole star
500–3000
Succeeded by
Gamma Cephei
v
t
e
Pole star
Earth
Current
Northern
Polaris
Southern
Polaris Australis
Past and future
Northern
Vega
ι Herculis
τ Herculis
Thuban
Kochab
Errai
ι Cephei
Alfirk
Alderamin
Deneb
Fawaris
Southern
β Hydri
γ Chamaeleontis
I Carinae
ω Carinae
υ Carinae
Aspidiske
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Canopus
Sirius
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Northern
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Southern
α Pictoris
Venus
Northern
η1 Doradus
Southern
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Mars
Northern
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Southern
Sadr
Deneb
Jupiter
Northern
Aldhibah
Southern
δ Doradus
Saturn
Northern
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Southern
δ Octantis
Uranus
Northern
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Southern
15 Orionis
Neptune
Northern
Sadr
Fawaris
Southern
Regor
Other bodies
Moon
Northern
o Draconis
Southern
δ Doradus
Past and future
ω Draconis
36 Draconis
See also
Polarissima Borealis
Polarissima Australis
v
t
e
Constellation of Ursa Minor
List of stars in Ursa Minor
Ursa Minor in Chinese astronomy
Stars
Bayer
α (Polaris)
β (Kochab)
γ (Pherkad)
δ (Yildun)
ε
ζ
η
θ
λ
π1
π2
Flamsteed
3
4
5
6
8 (Baekdu)
9
10
11
12
14
17
19
20
24
Variable
R
S
T
U
V
W
Z
RR
RU
RW
SS
UY
VX
HR
5184
5596
HD
150706
Other
Calvera
H1504+65
LP 40-365
WD 1337+705
WISE 1506+7027
Exoplanets
β Ursae Minoris b
8 Ursae Minoris b (Halla)
11 Ursae Minoris b
TOI-4138 b
Nebulae
Polaris Flare
Galaxies
NGC
3172
5034
5144
5314
5671
5939
6217
6251
6331
Other
3C 303.1
3C 309.1
Ursa Minor Dwarf
Galaxy clusters
Abell 2256
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About Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy & Quad Biking Dubai - Al Marsa Street - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
A must visit place if you've a time in Dubai. We had a great time during our trip. We bought a package for desert safari 140AED per person (exclude Motor bike) including Buffet Dinner at Net Tour Camp. Amazing experience while driving at Desert. Worth a visit!
Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy & Quad Biking Dubai - Al Marsa Street - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Cascades Tower - Al Marsa St - Marsa Dubai - Dubai Marina - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy & Quad Biking Dubai - Al Marsa Street - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Cascades Tower - Al Marsa St - Marsa Dubai - Dubai Marina - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy & Quad Biking Dubai - Al Marsa Street - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Cascades Tower - Al Marsa St - Marsa Dubai - Dubai Marina - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy & Quad Biking Dubai - Al Marsa Street - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Cascades Tower - Al Marsa St - Marsa Dubai - Dubai Marina - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy & Quad Biking Dubai - Al Marsa Street - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Cascades Tower - Al Marsa St - Marsa Dubai - Dubai Marina - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy & Quad Biking Dubai - Al Marsa Street - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Cascades Tower - Al Marsa St - Marsa Dubai - Dubai Marina - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy & Quad Biking Dubai - Al Marsa Street - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Cascades Tower - Al Marsa St - Marsa Dubai - Dubai Marina - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy & Quad Biking Dubai - Al Marsa Street - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Cascades Tower - Al Marsa St - Marsa Dubai - Dubai Marina - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy & Quad Biking Dubai - Al Marsa Street - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Cascades Tower - Al Marsa St - Marsa Dubai - Dubai Marina - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Desert Safari Dubai - Dune Buggy & Quad Biking Dubai - Al Marsa Street - Dubai - United Arab Emirates, Cascades Tower - Al Marsa St - Marsa Dubai - Dubai Marina - Dubai - United Arab Emirates