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Tania Borealis — Star in Ursa Major

HIP 50372; Lambda Ursae Majoris; 33 Ursae Majoris

Magnitude 3.5m Star Ursa Major (UMa) Visible
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About Tania Borealis

Description

Tania Borealis, Lambda Ursae Majoris, is a white main-sequence star of spectral type A1V located 137 light-years away. It is the northern member of the Second Leap of the Gazelle — a naked-eye pair with Tania Australis (Mu UMa). Tania Borealis has a mass of about 2.1 Suns, and a faint K-dwarf companion is suspected from speckle-interferometry observations. The star shines at magnitude 3.45.

Observing Tips

Tania Borealis and Tania Australis form a striking naked-eye pair just south of the Big Dipper's bowl, almost due west of Alkaid. The two stars, separated by only 1.5 degrees, make an unmistakable bright dyad. Binoculars show them sharing the same field; Tania Borealis appears pale white-blue next to yellower Tania Australis. Circumpolar from northern latitudes.

History

The name derives from the Arabic "al-qafzah al-thāniyah," meaning "the second leap" (of the gazelle). Borealis and Australis are Latin additions meaning "northern" and "southern." The three Leaps of the Gazelle — First (Talitha/Alkaphrah), Second (Tania Borealis/Australis), and Third (Alula Borealis/Australis) — were sequential pre-Islamic asterisms marking the bear's footprints.

Fun Facts

Together the three Leaps of the Gazelle form one of the most elegant asterisms in the sky — six stars in three symmetric pairs, each marking a step of the fleeing gazelle. The asterism is much older than the Greek Great Bear story and retains cultural currency in Arabic astronomy.

Observe

1Physical Properties

Magnitude 3.45
Spectral Type A1V
Star Color White (B-V 0.03)
Distance 137 ly

2Position & Identifiers

RA 10h 17m 05.8s
Dec +42° 54' 52.0"
Constellation Ursa Major (UMa)
HR 4033
HIP 50372
HD 89021
SAO 43268
Bayer Lambda
Flamsteed 33 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 Jan – Mar (peak: Feb)

5Survey Image

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Size Comparison

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Spectral Classification

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Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram

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Stellar Lifecycle

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Blackbody Spectrum

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Stellar Absorption Spectrum

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Stellar Fusion

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15Stellar Notes

Hyades group.
Tania Borealis. With HR 4069, Al Kafzah al Thaniyah.
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Light Travel Time Machine

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Relativistic Travel

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