Star Hopping the Constellations
Star hopping is a way to find things in the sky.
We play dot-to-dot with the stars.
Use a star map to help you find your way.
Start with a star you know.
Follow the path on the map.
Hop from star to star until you make the constellation in the sky.
Move to your next constellation.
It sounds easy.
Lots of lights, a lit-up sky, clouds, the bright moon can make it hard to see all but
the brightest stars.
It is easy to get upset when you cannot find something.
Take a deep breath and try again.
Star Hopping Constellation Index
Click on a constellation name to go to the constellation’s star hopping section for diagrams, directions and images.
Star Hopping: Ursa Major and Boötes
the Big Bear and the Bear Driver
Read “My Mother is a What?” in Night Sky Stories: Myths of the Northern Sky.
The Big Dipper
Go outside after dark.
Face north.
(To find north, point your left shoulder to the spot where the sun went down. That
is west. The front of your body will be facing north. This is not true north, but the
constellations are big enough to find this way.)
Give your eyes a few minutes to get used to the dark.
Look at all the stars!!
Look for a huge cooking pot with a long, bent handle. See Diagram 1.
Many people call the pot the Big Dipper. It has lots of other names.
The Big Dipper Through the Seasons
Use Diagram 2 to help you find the Big Dipper through the year.
Ursa Major – The Big Bear
Many people think the Big Dipper is the whole constellation, Ursa Major. It is not! The Big Dipper is only part of Ursa Major, the Big Bear.
In the Greek myth, Ursa Major (ER-sa MA-jor) is Callisto, Arcas’s mother, turned into a bear by Hera, queen of the Greek gods. In the Roman story, Ursa Major is Callisto put in the sky by Jupiter to save her from his angry wife, Juno.
Star Hopping: Ursa Major – the Big Bear
We will start star hopping with Ursa Major, the Big Bear, or the Great Bear.
Each letter in Diagram 3 stands for a star. Follow the alphabet to hop from star to star.
In this diagram, the size of the star dots does not show how bright the star is.
You may be able to star hop Ursa Major by using just the diagram. Remember, la lot of the stars are not very bright so it will be hard to see them. It is hard to find them in the city.
Can you find the big bear in the image ?
Credit: E. Slawik/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani
Star Hopping: Boötes – the Bear Driver
Take the Arc to Arcturus
Use Diagram 4 to follow the arc to Arcturus (Arc-TUR-us). You might not need to use the directions below.
Can you find Boötes in the picture?
Star Hopping: Ursa Minor – the Little Bear
Ursa Minor (ER-sa MY-nor) stands for Arcas, Callisto’s son, in Roman mythology. Arcas is the
little bear to Callisto’s big bear. Read "The Two Bears" in the book, Night Sky
Stories: Myths of the Northern Skies.
On with the star hopping!
Can you find Ursa Major in the picture below?
Credit: E. Slawik/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani
Credit: E. Slawik/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani
Credit: E. Slawik/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani
Credit: Terri McManus
Can you find Draco in the image ?
Credit: E. Slawik/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani
Star Hopping: Draco – the Dragon
Read Draco’s story, A Dragon’s Tale, in the book, Night Sky Stories: Myths of the Northern Skies.
Are you ready to star hop Draco (DRAY-co), the Dragon?
Draco lives between the two bears.
Find Big Bear – Ursa Major.
Find Little Bear – Ursa Minor.
(Remember to use the Pointer Stars to find Polaris.)
Star Hopping: Cassiopeia– the Queen
Read “Cass Tells All” in Night Sky Stories: Myths of the Northern Sky.
Are you ready for more star hopping?
Let us find the constellation, Cassiopeia
(Ka-see-e-oh-PEE-uh).
The W could look like a W, E, 3, or an M. It does not matter if it looks like
a W, an E, a 3, or an M. People still call it the “W.”
Queen Cassiopeia
Queen Cassiopeia sits in a basket.
Some people say she sits on a chair.
Others say she sits on her throne.
Sometimes she is upside down.
Hold on tight Cassiopeia!
Credit: E. Slawik/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani
Credit: Terri McManus
Can you find Cassiopeia in the picture below?
Credit: E. Slawik/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani
Credit: Terri McManus
Credit: Terri McManus
Star Hopping: Cepheus- the King
We will hop over to Cepheus (SEE-fee-us) next.
Cepheus is between the “Big W in the Sky” and Draco, the Dragon.
Look between them to find Cepheus. See Diagram 8.
Cepheus looks like a house in the sky.
He is also a pentagon, a five-sided shape.
King Cepheus sits on his throne.
He is wearing a pointy hat.
King Cepheus
Cepheus changes as it goes around Polaris. See Diagram 10.
The house is upright. The house falls onto its side.
Then it is upside down. Then it falls onto its other side.
Then it is back to an upright house.
The star Delta Cephei is a variable star.
That means it changes how bright it is. Its pattern is always the same – 5.4 days
to go from dimmest to brightest and 5.4 days to go back to dimmest. It is so
predictable that it is used to tell how far away other stars and galaxies are.
Can you find Cepheus in the picture below?
Credit: E. Slawik/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani
Star Hopping: Andromeda – the Princess
Ursa Major, Ursa Minor, Draco, Cassiopeia, and Cepheus are circumpolar constellations. They go around Polaris. They never go below the horizon, where the sky meets the land. You can see them all year.
The constellations Andromeda (an – DROM – e-da), Perseus and Cetus are NOT circumpolar. You cannot see them every night of the year. You see them best in Autumn. They are here because they are part of the Cassiopeia-Cepheus Story.
Let's star hop to find Andromeda.
Credit: E. Slawik/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani
Credit: Terri McManus
Credit: Terri McManus
Star Hopping:The Andromeda Galaxy
Can you find Andromeda and the Andromeda Galaxy in the picture below?

Credit: E. Slawik/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani
Star Hopping: Perseus – the Hero
Remember - Ursa Major, Ursa Minor, Draco, Cassiopeia, and Cepheus are circumpolar constellations. They go around Polaris. They never go below the horizon (where the sky meets the land). You can see them all year.
Perseus (PUR-see-us) is also NOT circumpolar. You might see two to four of the stars of Perseus when Cassiopeia is low in the northeast. The rest of Perseus is below the horizon. Autumn is also the best time of year to see Perseus.
Are you ready to star hop Perseus?
Find Cassiopeia.
The shortest part of the “W” points to Perseus. Diagram 12
Perseus also has a variable star. It is not the same kind of variable star as the
one in Cepheus. Algol dims because another star goes in front of it. Algol gets
dimmer every 2.87 days. It stays dim for two hours. Then Algol gets brighter. It is
like Algol is winking!
Credit: Terri McManus
Credit: E. Slawik/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani
Can you find Perseus in the picture below?
Credit: E. Slawik/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani
Credit: Terri McManus
Star Hopping: Cetus – the Sea Monster
Poseidon, the god of the sea, sent Cetus, the Sea Monster, to destroy King Cepheus’s and Queen Cassiopeia’s kingdom.
Look for Cetus in December.
You will need a dark place.
Most of the stars are not very bright. They may be hard to find. Light pollution will not help!
Look at Diagram 12. Cetus looks like a man with no arms, but not a sea monster!
Play dot-to-dot with his legs to make the sea monster’s body.
Now you have a sea monster with a pentagon for his head, a very long neck, and a small body.
To Find Cetus:
Start at the top of Perseus’s head.
Go down the long side of this body.
Follow the curve just like you did to find Arcturus.
You will come to a cluster of stars that looks like a “Little, Little Dipper!”
It is called The Pleiades. They are a group of sisters.
How many stars can you see? Try your averted vision.
Back to finding Cetus:
Start at Perseus’s long leg. Follow the curve past the Pleiades.
You come to Cetus’s pentagon head.
One star is brighter than the rest, Menkar.
What color is it? Do you see a faint red?
Menkar is a kind of star called a red giant.
Red giants are big, big, big stars.
They are not the hottest stars. They are cooler stars.
Red giants are very old stars.
There is a star about halfway down Cetus’s neck you might or might not see.
It is Mira, the Wonderful.
Mira is always there. Sometimes it is not bright enough to see.
Mira is a variable star like Delta Cephi in the constellation Cepheus.
It gets brighter, then dimmer, the brighter, then dimmer.
Mira takes about 332 days to go from brightest to dimmest.
If you saw it at its brightest, you would have to wait about another 664 days to see it at its brightest again!
Mira was the first variable star ever seen.
Mira is also a red giant like Menkar.
It gets bigger, then smaller, then bigger, then smaller, then bigger, then . . .
It is brightest when it is biggest.
Mira is another kind of variable star.
It changes its brightness by getting larger then smaller. Mira was the first variable star ever seen.