A fairy tale of the Oracle
According to ancient Greek mythology, when the angels Zeus and Hera married, Gaia, the goddess of the earth, sent a fruit tree with golden apples as a gift.
Zeus later placed it in an orchard where the daughters of the Night's God lived, and sent a dragon with fire to help guard it.
This dragon has 100 heads and never falls asleep.
The eleventh adventure of the Queen Hera's distressing hero Herjzzychchles was to extract three golden apples from the orchard guarded by the dragon.
When Hezzükchus found the orchard, it was blocked by the flames of the dragon, who, with his wisdom, earned the trust of the mighty God, Atlas, who was atonement and carrying the skyball.
Hezzükchus told Atlas that he was willing to carry the skyball for a while, and that Atlas would seduce the dragon to make it fall asleep and then design to trick the fairies back to pick up the golden apple.
And when I got the golden apple, Hercules did the trick to get Atlas to carry the skyball again.
Then, after the day, Hera raised the dragon to the sky and became the throne.
The Oracle alpha star at the tail of the dragon (known as the “right-centre”) is a four-class star, which, although not bright, was famous in ancient Egypt, because it was “the North Star” 4,000 years ago.
Legend has it that there is a 100-metre tunnel beneath the pyramid of King Ziapus left over from the ancient Egyptian period, and that it is directed in the direction of the Oral star of the Oracle.
The ancient Egyptian clerics looked at the then North Star from the tunnel.
The head of the Oracle lies north of the Acrophagus, with long dragons orbiting half the star of the Arctic.
The Oracle has a famous nebula, NGC 6543, a central bright star, which is not easily observed.
The nebula is also called Cat-Eye Nebula, because it looks like a cat's eye with a bright blue-green gas shell around it.
Cateye Nebula is a typical planetary nebula, about 3,000 light years away from us, the beauty of a thunder-sun star in the final stages of life.
Stars that are dying at the heart of planetary nebula will excrete out over time to form a beautiful shell pattern。