The planet Jupiter will slide past one of the brighter stars of Gemini the next few mornings. At their closest, they’ll be separated by just a fraction of a degree.
The star is Wasat – from an Arabic phrase that means “the middle.” But the middle of what has been lost over the centuries.
The star also is known as Delta Geminorum – its Bayer designation. The system was devised in the early 17th century by German astronomer Johann Bayer. He named all of the stars in the constellations that were visible from the northern hemisphere. Each star was given a Greek letter followed by the constellation name. If he ran out of letters, he switched to the Latin alphabet.
In most constellations, Bayer named the stars in the order of their brightness. The brightest was alpha, the next-brightest was beta, and so on. Sometimes, he ranked the stars on their location or some other system. And he named the stars based on how they looked to the naked eye, so the rankings were completely subjective. So even though delta is the fourth letter in the Greek alphabet, Delta Geminorum is only the eighth-brightest star in Gemini.
Jupiter and Wasat are well up in the east at dawn. Jupiter looks like a brilliant star, far to the upper right of even-brighter Venus. Wasat will stand below Jupiter tomorrow. Jupiter will drop past it over the following couple of days, so they’ll be at their closest on Saturday and Sunday.
Script by Damond Benningfield