Pole Star Clock: Watch 26,000 Years of Precession
North Star Clock
This North star clock shows precession in motion: the slow 26,000-year wobble of Earth’s axis that swings the celestial pole in a great circle through the stars. Press play and watch the pole drift past one pole star after another, brightening each in turn as it nears. Thuban ruled the pole when the ancient Egyptians built the pyramids; Polaris holds it now. It will be the closest to the pole around 2100 CE, and Vega will take over roughly 12,000 years from now. Between these stars lie many centuries with no pole star at all.
Pole-Star Wanderer
The sky turns around a single point, the celestial pole, but that point is not fixed. Over roughly 25,772 years, it traces a slow circle through the stars, and whichever star it passes near becomes, for a while, the pole star that travelers and early man navigated by.
Press play to begin the turn. One full circle takes about four minutes. You will note that when the pole drifts through empty sky, the wait is dark. As it nears each era’s pole star, that star brightens to gold, and its name rises softly. Five stars hold the title across the full circle: Vega, Thuban, Polaris, Errai, Alderamin, and between them stretch long centuries with no pole star at all. The years count beneath, counting through zero without pausing.
The pole is nearest Polaris now, around 2100 CE. It struck Thuban almost exactly in 2780 BCE, when Egypt was raising the pyramids. It will not return to anything as bright as Vega for another twelve thousand years.
Press the star names under “stand at” to set the pole down at that era and witness it directly.