When you wish upon a star, is it already dead?


Have you ever looked up on a clear night and wished upon a star? Cynics have been known to say that the star you wished on was probably already dead … but is that true? Image via ESO/ Luis Calçada/ Herbert Zodet.

By Laura Nicole Driessen, University of Sydney

When you wish upon a star, is it already dead?

When you wish upon a star, Jiminy Cricket told us, your dreams come true. But according to an idea doing the rounds on social media, that may not be the case:

According to astronomy, when you wish upon a star you’re a million years too late. The star is dead, just like your dreams.

Is that really true? Did Jiminy Cricket lie to us?

As an astronomer, I’m happy to say that the stars we can see in the night sky are a lot closer and live a lot longer than you would think. It’s pretty unlikely you’ve accidentally wished upon a star that’s already dead.

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Stars are closer than you think

When someone hits you with the depressing factoid that the stars we wish on are already dead, they usually start by saying something about how the stars are “millions of light-years away.” This means the light from the star has been travelling for millions of years to reach your eyes, so by now the star is millions of years older and – supposedly – most likely dead.

But the stars you’re wishing on probably aren’t that far away. All the stars we can see with our eyes are inside our galaxy, the Milky Way. The Milky Way is approximately 100,000 light-years across, and our solar system is about 26,000 light-years from the center of the galaxy.

So if we could see the stars at the very far edge of the galaxy, they’d still only be about 74,000 light-years away. That’s nowhere near a million light-years away, let alone “millions of light-years.”

Large, fuzzy white spiral structure with several curving arms and bright center, seen face-on, with labels.
Artist’s concept of the Milky Way as seen from above. The location of our sun is labeled below center, about halfway out to the edge of the galaxy. Image via NASA/ JPL-Caltech/ R. Hurt (SSC/ Caltech).

Visible stars are even closer

In practice, the stars we can see aren’t even that far away. On a dark night, with no moon and with good vision, the faintest star we can see with our eyes has a brightness of around magnitude 6.5.

Brighter stars have lower magnitudes, and dimmer stars have higher ones. The brightest star in the Southern Cross has a magnitude of 0.8, while the faintest star in the Southern Cross has a magnitude of 3.6.

The visible brightness limit of magnitude 6.5 means we can only see stars out to around 10,000 light-years from Earth. So if you happen to wish on one of the more distant stars, the light has travelled 10,000 years to hit your eye.

And if we assume wishes travel at the speed of light, it’ll take another 10,000 years to reach the star. So even the most distant visible star is only 20,000 years older by the time your wish reaches it.

So the question is: do stars live longer than 20,000 years?

Space image filled with stars. A lien of brownish haze passes through horizontally. 4 larger stars form and upright cross on the right, and two point to the cross on the left.
Image of the Southern Cross (the 4 bright stars on the right) and the ‘pointer stars’ (the 2 bright stars on the left). The brightest star in the Southern Cross, Alpha Crucis or ACrux (the bottom of the cross), is 321 light-years away. The faintest star, Delta Crucis (right), is 228 light-years away. The pointer stars are Alpha Centauri (leftmost bright star, around 4 light-years away) and Beta Centauri (around 390 light-years away). Image via ESO/ S. Brunier

Stars live longer than you think

The Yale Bright Star Catalog contains 9,096 stars that are brighter than magnitude 7, placing them roughly in the limit of what our eyes can see. And 40% of the stars in the catalog are so-called giant stars, which come in three varieties: normal giants, bright giants and super giants.

The more massive the star, the shorter its life. So these giant stars are here for a good time, not a long time.

But in astronomy, a “good time” is still at least a few hundred thousand years, much longer than your wish needs to arrive at a star closer than 10,000 light-years away.

The rest of the visible stars are what are called main sequence (or mid-life) stars and sub-giant stars. These stick around a lot longer, up to a few billion years. So when it comes to wishes, age is just a (really big) number.

Brilliant white filled circle with purple halo and 4 radiating spikes. Small white dot along bottom left spike.
Sirius A, the brightest star in the night sky and second closest star to the sun, and its fainter companion Sirius B. This image was taken using the Hubble Space Telescope. Image via Hubblesite.

When you wish upon a star, choose one of these

If you’re still feeling a bit nervous about wishing upon a dead star, there are a few safe bets.

Alpha Centauri is the closest star to Earth and the 4th brightest star in the sky. Even better, it’s actually three stars, and they’re only about 4 light-years away. They’ll definitely last longer than the eight years needed for their light to reach you and your wish to reach them.

The brightest star in the sky, Sirius, is a main sequence star only 8.6 light-years away. Epsilon Eridani is approximately 10 light-years away. It’s similar to our sun and a little under a billion years old. Since Sirius and Epsilon Eridani are in their mid-life, they still have millions – maybe even billions – of years left to burn.

The safest star to send your wishes to? The sun! The sun is only 8 light-minutes away, and it’ll be a main-sequence star for around five billion years yet.

So when you wish upon a star, that star is less than 10,000 light-years away and will probably live for at least hundreds of thousands of years … and maybe millions or even billions of years (just like your dreams).

Laura Nicole Driessen, Postdoctoral Researcher in Radio Astronomy, University of Sydney

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Bottom line: Some cynics say that when you wish upon a star, that star is already dead. But don’t listen to them! The stars you can see, and your dreams, are perfectly safe.





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