The image shows two cylindrical objects (likely craft items or educational tools) with constellations drawn on them, and a chart of 16 constellations with their names and star patterns.
Let’s analyze the task:
Left Side:
-
Top cylinder: Labeled
"Cassiopeia" with a drawing of a seated woman with stars marked on her body. The constellation pattern matches the "W" shape of Cassiopeia.
-
Bottom cylinder: Labeled
"Ursa Major (the big bear)" with a bear outline and dots connected to form the Big Dipper (part of Ursa Major). The seven stars of the Big Dipper are clearly shown.
Right Side:
A grid of 16 constellations with dot patterns representing their star formations. Each has a name and nickname:
- Ursa Major – the Great Bear
- Scorpius – the Scorpion
- Orion – the Hunter
- Taurus – the Bull
- Pegasus – the Flying Horse
- Ursa Minor – the Little Bear
- Cassiopeia – the Queen
- Pisces – the Fishes
- Leo – the Lion
- Sagittarius – the Archer
- Gemini – the Twins
- Bootes – the Herdsman
- Cygnus – the Swan
- Perseus
- Canis Major – the Big Dog
- Hercules
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Task Interpretation:
It appears this is an educational activity where you match the constellation patterns on the cylinders to the correct constellation in the chart.
Let’s solve it step by step:
#### Step 1: Identify the constellation on the bottom cylinder —
Ursa Major
- The pattern shows 7 stars forming a large ladle (Big Dipper), which is part of Ursa Major.
- In the chart,
Ursa Major (the Great Bear) is the first one in the top-left corner.
- Its pattern matches the Big Dipper: four stars forming a quadrilateral (the bowl) and three stars forming a handle.
✔ So, the bottom cylinder matches
Ursa Major.
#### Step 2: Identify the constellation on the top cylinder —
Cassiopeia
- It shows a woman figure with stars placed along her body, forming a "W" shape.
- This is characteristic of
Cassiopeia, which is shaped like a "W" or "M" depending on orientation.
- In the chart,
Cassiopeia (the Queen) is in the second row, third column.
- Its dot pattern clearly shows five stars in a "W" formation.
✔ So, the top cylinder matches
Cassiopeia.
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Final Answer:
- The bottom cylinder (
Ursa Major) corresponds to
Ursa Major, the Great Bear in the chart.
- The top cylinder (
Cassiopeia) corresponds to
Cassiopeia, the Queen in the chart.
These are correctly labeled and matched based on the star patterns.
Educational Purpose:
This activity helps children learn to recognize constellations by matching visual representations (drawings and star patterns) to real astronomical patterns, reinforcing knowledge of mythology and astronomy.
✔ Solution:
The two cylinders show
Ursa Major and
Cassiopeia, which correspond to the constellations labeled as such in the chart. The matching is correct.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of printable constellation cards.