Brightest Stars

Meet Hamal, an ancient equinox star

Star chart of constellation Aries with Hamal labeled, and the Pleiades, Hyades and ecliptic.
Most people see the constellation Aries the Ram as 3 stars in a compact grouping. The stars are Hamal (brightest), Sheratan and Mesarthim. Chart via Chelynne Campion/ EarthSky.

Start watching for Hamal in November

Hamal – also known as Alpha Arietis – shines as the brightest star in the constellation Aries the Ram. This star and two others – Sheratan and Mesarthim – make up the Head of the Ram. Aries is small. But the compact pattern of these three stars makes Aries relatively easy to find.

As seen from mid-northern latitudes, Hamal lights up the eastern sky on November evenings, will shine high in the southern sky by January evenings, and will sit low in the west by March evenings. This star is easily visible from Earth’s Southern Hemisphere, too. Try Stellarium to find Hamal’s height in your sky from your exact location on the globe.

As seen from the whole Earth, Hamal disappears from the night sky around April. It returns to the eastern sky before sunrise by about June, to begin another cycle of visibility.

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Aries finder charts

Star chart: constellation Aries, Pleiades cluster, and Jupiter along a green ecliptic line.
In 2023, bright Jupiter will lie in the dim constellation of Aries the Ram. So once you find Jupiter – and it’s easy to see right now in the evening sky – look for the 3 stars of Aries. Nearby you will find the open star cluster the Pleiades as well. Chart via EarthSky.
Star chart: Bright Jupiter on ecliptic line near constellation Aries, also showing Pleiades.
Bright Jupiter shines in the southeast in the constellation Aries after sunset in December 2023. Chart via EarthSky.
Sky chart of the constellation Aries with stars in black on white.
Constellation chart of Aries the Ram. Nowadays the sun passes in front of the constellation Aries from about April 19 to May 13. Image via IAU/ Wikimedia (CC BY 4.0).

Hamal was an equinox star

It’s fun to spot Hamal and its brother stars in the night sky. As an ancient equinox star, Hamal also has a profound significance in the history of astronomy.

In our modern era, if you could see the stars in daytime, you’d see the sun and Hamal in conjunction – lined up with one another, due north and south in right ascension – on or near April 24.

But, long ago, they were in conjunction exactly at the March equinox.

Nowadays, April 24 – the date of Hamal’s conjunction with the sun – is a little more than a month after the March equinox, which always takes place around March 20. This is the Northern Hemisphere’s spring equinox, and it’s a time of renewal throughout the northern half of Earth. So of course this time of year had significance to our ancestors, who were very much aware of their connection to the land and sky.

Complicated diagram showing sun on line of ecliptic crossing chart of Aries.
As the Earth orbits the sun, the sun appears to move across our sky, passing stars on the celestial sphere, including Hamal. In the past, the sun was in conjunction with Hamal at the March equinox. But no more. In our time, the sun is in front of the stars of Aries from April 18 until May 13. Image via John Goss.

Precession of the equinoxes

If you could backtrack some 2,500 years, you’d find the annual conjunction of the sun and Hamal happening on the March equinox. In fact, if you could backtrack 2,200 years, we’d also find the March equinox sun in conjunction with another star in Aries, Sheratan.

So you see that the location of the sun at the March equinox sun drifts in front of the stars. It moves westward in front of the backdrop constellations by about one degree (two sun diameters) every 72 years. This drifting is due to a well-known motion of Earth called precession, or sometimes the precession of the equinoxes.

The March equinox sun shone in front of the constellation Aries from about 2,000 to 100 BCE. At present, the sun shines in front of the constellation Pisces on the March equinox.

A line from Earth's axis. Its far end moves around a circle on the stellar background.
The 26,000-year cycle of precession. It’s caused by a wobble of Earth. Over this cycle, Earth’s northern axis can be imagined to trace out a circle on the celestial sphere. Therefore, precession causes Earth’s northern axis to point to different stars. Thus the identity of Earth’s pole star, or North Star, shifts over the cycle of 26,000 years. Image via Tfr000/ Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0).

First point of Aries

Even though the sun is no longer in front of Aries at the time of the March equinox, many people pay homage to the Ram and still refer to the March equinox point as the First Point of Aries.

This point on the celestial sphere – now in Pisces, due to precession – is one of the two points on the celestial sphere at which the celestial equator crosses the ecliptic. The other point – not as well known – is called the First Point of Libra (although it is now in Virgo), located exactly 180 degrees from it.

The First Point of Aries is considered to be the celestial “prime meridian” from which right ascension (like longitude in earthly coordinate systems) is calculated.

Colorful map of all constellations with wavy line across labeled Ecliptic.
View larger. | The First Point of Aries is the point on the celestial equator at both the left and right extremes of this sky chart. The ecliptic (orange dotted sine curve) also passes through it. The First Point of Aries defines the ecliptic coordinate of 0 degrees longitude (or right ascension) and 0 degrees latitude (or declination). And note that the First Point of Aries is no longer in Aries. Now, due to precession, it’s in Pisces. Chart via Cmglee/ Timwi/ CC0/ NASA/ Wikimedia Commons (public domain).

Bottom line: The star Hamal is the brightest star in Aries the Ram. Thousands of years ago, the sun was in conjunction – or aligned north and south – with this star at the time of the March equinox.

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Posted 
November 19, 2023
 in 
Brightest Stars

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