[image: 69f342d2c4a1bc19eae8b6f1dfad579b4c396048r1-523-272v2_hq.jpg]
*Brontes, Steropes and Arges: * The First Cyclopes

Of all the mythological races, the Cyclopes were among the most readily
identifiable, though, ironically, the most misunderstood.    Afflicted with
particularly hideous countenances, in which a single eye protruded from
disfigured foreheads, the Cyclopes were generally less monstrous in
character than they were in appearance.   We divide the Cyclopes into two
generations, the first of which concerns us today. The first generation was
sired by the original couple: Gaia, the Earth mother, and Ouranos, the Sky
Father.     This generation consisted of three brothers:  Brontes, the
"Thunder," Steropes, "Lightning Flash," and Arges "Sky brightness."
They developed the craft of metallurgy, and through their prodigious skill
fashioned Zeus' thunderbolts, Posideon's trident, Hades' helmet of
enveloping darkness, and a vast assortment of less noteworthy, but still
brilliantly fashioned, devices. As was true with their siblings, such as
the Titans and Hecatonchires, their father detested them, as he feared that
they would all conspire to achieve his overthrow.    Ouranos therefore
imprisoned them deep within Gaia, where they couldn't cause any trouble.
 All of Ouranos' children were liberated after Cronos, with the aid of
Gaia, castrated his father with a scythe and caused him to ascend from Gaia
to form the sky.      As Cronos also feared the powerful Cyclopes, their
freedom was short-lived.    Cronos consigned them to Tartarus, the punitive
region with the Underworld.     Zeus, Cronos'  son,  eventually freed the
Cyclopes,  as he required their assistance to defeat the Titans.  For their
part, the Cyclopes were delighted to assist their liberator in destroying
the Titan who had relegated them to Hell's deepest pit.     After the
Titans fell and the gods exerted dominion over the Universe, Zeus permitted
the Cyclopes to reside on Olympus, where they served dutifully as both
Zeus' craftsmen and teachers to Hephaestus, god of fires, forges and
furnaces. For his part, Zeus was equally delighted to have the Cyclopes on
his side. It was said that Zeus' thunderbolts were as hot as the fiercest
flame, swifter than the fastest winds and deadlier than an entire army.
The Cyclopes accumulated a store of these bolts, which the winged horse
Pegasus fetched for Zeus whenever the occasion arose.   On one such
occasion, Apollo's son, the divinely gifted healer Asciepius (the
constellation Ophiuchus), resurrected Orion after Scorpius killed him with
a lethal sting.   At Hades behest, Zeus struck Asciepus down with a
thunderbolt. Enraged by Zeus' actions, but unable to avenge his son's death
on Zeus, himself, Apollo slew all three Cyclopes brothers for they had
crafted the weapon that killed his son.   Still indebted to the Cyclopes
for their dutiful service, and aware that they had already experienced
Tartarus's terrors in life, Zeus allowed them  to remain on Earth as
phantoms dwelling within Mt Aetna.  The smoke constantly billowing out of
Mount Aetna is said to still issue from their forges. Though the Cyclopes,
now forever tethered to Earth, are not amongst the night sky's characters,
they do lurk in the background. Every so often one might notice the spasms
of heat lightning on the horizon: evidence of their continued presence and
ceaseless labours.

THE SOUTHWORTH PLANETARIUM
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Founded January 1970
Julian Date: 2459103.16
2020-2021:  VIII

THE DAILY ASTRONOMER
Thursday, September 10, 2020
Remote Planetarium 86:   Stellar Streams

Let us begin today by looking at traditional depiction of the Milky Way
Galaxy:

[image: 2UYJxzeDtUxMYAFkdwo28Z.jpg]

A perfectly symmetrical, elegantly designed barred spiral galaxy as seen
"face-on," at least in our imagination.    Our Sun, incidentally, resides
along the "Orion Spur" a minor arm approximately 23,000 light years from
the galactic nucleus.  From this vantagepoint, it's a mere spark within the
Milky Way's vast sheaths of light.        Our continued cosmic exploration
has brought us here: to regard the galaxy as a whole entity.   A series of
spiral arms curling around a central bar containing a supermassive black
hole.     Within and around those arms, literally billions of stars along
with equal or even a greater number of planets.    Add to all this the vast
gas dust stores concentrated along the galactic disk.     A churning,
rotating amalgam of stars, planets, stellar remnants, and nebulae all
composing our home galaxy.      However, that portrait is insufficient.
Let us now look at the galaxy again, this time with features we haven't yet
discussed:

[image: Sig07-008.jpg]

Stellar streams.
Not only are stars confined to the spiral arms.  They also comprise many of
the elongated stellar streams that wrap around the galaxy.   Today we focus
on these little known features of our galaxy.        What are they?  How
did they form?  How long will they persist?

As their name suggests, they are literally streams of stars that can
stretch up to more than one million light years from end to end.  These
ends curl around the Milky Way Galaxy as we can observe in the above
image.    Although they almost always consist of stars, one of the most
massive examples, "The Magellanic Stream" is composed primarily of hydrogen
gas stripped away from the Large and Small Magellanic Cloud,  satellite
galaxies to the Milky Way.   This gas extends for more than one million
light years.  So, too, does the largest stellar stream, one named "The
Sagittarius Stream."      This stream consists of stars stripped away from
the *Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy.   *Approximately 10,000 light
years in diameter, the Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy is 400 million
times more massive than the Sun.


*[image: The+Sagittarius+Dwarf+Spheroidal+(dSph).jpg]*
*Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy*

A satellite galaxy to the Milky Way, the Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal
Galaxy is due to be slowly absorbed by our home galaxy over the next one
billion years.   Galactic tidal forces will continue to wick stars away
from the dwarf galaxy as it passes above, below and through the galactic
plane.

Other  examples of stellar streams include:


   - *The Helmi Stream   *      10-100 million solar masses.   The remnants
   of a defunct dwarf galaxy, this stream consists of many loops wrapping
   around the Milky Way Galaxy.  It is named for Amina Hemli (1970 - ), the
   Argentine astronomer who discovered it in 1999.
   - *The Palomar 5 Stream*     The stars within this stream originate in
   the Palomar 5 Globular Cluster.  This stream extends for only about 30,000
   light years and its combined mass is merely 5000 times that of the Sun.
   - *Fimbulthal Stream*     Named for an primordial river in Norse
   mythology, this stream consists of about 300 stars stripped away from
   Omicron Centauri, the largest globular cluster in the Milky Way.   With an
   estimated mass slightly greater than 300 solar masses, this stream was only
   discovered in 2019 in the GAIA DR 2 data.  Launched by the European Space
   Agency, GAIA's aim is to track the motions of more than one billion stars
   within the Milky Way Galaxy.

[image: Gaia_spacecraft.jpg]
*Gaia probe*

The presence of such stellar streams remind us that the Milky Way Galaxy is
hardly stagnant.    At this moment, the galaxy is cannibalizing nearby
dwarf galaxies and drawing stars out of others.        In so doing, the
Milky Way is gradually but inexorably increasing its stellar population.
Eventually, as we'll learn next week, the Milky Way will eventually merge
with the Andromeda Galaxy to create a mega galaxy consisting of more than
one trillion stars.     For now, however, the Milky Way is nibbling away at
satellite galaxies: a process that will continue for billions of years.


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