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Megrez — Star in Ursa Major

Delta UMa

Magnitude 3.3m Star Ursa Major (UMa) Visible
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About Megrez

Description

Megrez, Delta Ursae Majoris, is an A-type main-sequence star about 80 light-years away and the faintest of the seven stars of the Big Dipper. It marks the junction where the Dipper's "handle" meets its "bowl." Megrez is about 1.6 times the Sun's mass, twice the radius, and 14 times the luminosity. It is also a suspected debris-disk star, with mid-infrared excess suggesting a surrounding ring of dust.

Observing Tips

Megrez's relative faintness (magnitude 3.31) is a classic sky-quality check — if you can see Megrez clearly with the naked eye, you have a reasonably dark site. From light-polluted suburban skies, the Big Dipper looks "incomplete" because Megrez disappears first. Use a pair of binoculars to confirm its white color and position at the corner of the Dipper's bowl, at the base of the handle. Circumpolar from all of the northern hemisphere.

History

The name Megrez comes from the Arabic "al-maghriz," meaning "the root of the tail" — referring to the tail-root of the great bear. All seven Dipper stars carry Arabic-derived names. Megrez's relatively modest brightness puzzled pre-modern astronomers; some ancient records refer to it being "fainter than expected," possibly due to observer uncertainty about the star's real appearance.

Fun Facts

Megrez is part of the Ursa Major Moving Group, a loose cluster of stars that share a common origin and are drifting through the galaxy together — including most of the other Big Dipper stars (all except Dubhe and Alkaid). The group is about 300 million years old. Megrez is one of the youngest prominent stars in the northern sky; on cosmic timescales it will remain a normal hydrogen-fusing dwarf for another billion years.

Observe

1Physical Properties

Magnitude 3.31
Range 3.30 - 3.31
Period 11.4 hours
Variable Type Variable (Unclassified)
Spectral Type A2Vn
Star Color White (B-V 0.08)
Distance 80 ly

2Position & Identifiers

RA 12h 15m 25.6s
Dec +57° 01' 57.0"
Constellation Ursa Major (UMa)
HR 4660
HIP 59774
HD 106591
SAO 28315
Bayer Delta
Flamsteed 69 UMa

3How easy to spot?

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Equipment Bortle 3 Bortle 4 Bortle 5
Naked eye Easy Easy Medium+
50mm finder Easy Easy Easy
150mm scope Easy Easy Easy
Easy Medium Hard Very hard Impossible

Bortle 3 = rural · 4 = outer suburbs · 5 = suburbs

4Visibility

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Best season Feb – Apr (peak: Mar)

5Survey Image

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Explore

7

Size Comparison

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Compare Stars

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Spectral Classification

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Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram

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Stellar Lifecycle

12

Blackbody Spectrum

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Stellar Absorption Spectrum

Simulated absorption spectrum based on spectral type. Hover over lines to identify elements.

14

Stellar Fusion

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15Stellar Notes

"Dipper Stars"; Ursa cluster; Sirius group; UMa stream.
MEGREZ; Kaffa in Becvar.
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Light Travel Time Machine

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Relativistic Travel

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