The Constellation Boötes |
Arcturus is historically famous for a number of reasons. For example it was used to turn on the lights at the 1933 Worlds' Fair in Chicago. They put a telescope on Arcturus, focused the light down to a photocell which then turned on the lights. The reason they did this is that Arcturus is 40 light-years away from us, and the last time the World's Fair had been in Chicago was in 1893, 40 years prior, so the light they were using to start the World's Fair had left the star at the time of the last World's Fair in Chicago. Cool, huh?
The stars of our galaxy are formed into a rotating disk and are all moving together around the disk. Some stars -- called "halo" stars -- form a dome over the disk, Arcturus is one of those stars, orbiting above and below the galactic center. It is cutting through the disk now, actually a little bit back against the general flow. Someone on a planet orbiting Arcturus would see the entire night sky changing constantly.
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Updated 11 November 2011