The Scorpion’s Head
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It’s hard to see a pattern in most of the constellations. Their stars are too faint or too spread out, or the pattern is just too obscure. Perhaps the most prominent exception is Scorpius. It takes little imagination to see the curving body of a scorpion in its stars.
The scorpion skitters low across the south on summer nights. Its brightest star is Antares. The scorpion’s body and tail curl to the lower left. The head is to the upper right. It’s marked by a line of three stars. They’re about the same brightness, and they’re fairly evenly spaced.
From top to bottom, the stars are Beta, Delta, and Pi Scorpii. Delta is a bit brighter than the others.
All three stars are extraordinary. Each of them actually consists of more than one star. All of the member stars are quite young – no more than a few percent the age of the Sun. And most of them are big and heavy, with some of them fated to end their lives as supernovas – titanic explosions that will outshine billions of normal stars.
Delta Scorpii consists of two stars. At least one of them will become a supernova. Pi Scorpii is a triple system. It also features at least one future supernova.
Beta is the busiest of the systems – at least six stars, all orbiting each other in a complex gravitational ballet. Two of those stars are likely to become supernovas – briefly highlighting the head of the scorpion.
Script by Damond Benningfield