Philips Atlas of the Universe

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
GEMINI
AURIGA

PERSEUS

LYNX

LYNX

URSA MINOR

URSA MAJOR
LEO MINOR

URSA MAJOR

VENATICICANES

BERENICESCOMA

LEO

VIRGO

SERPENSCAPUT
LIBRA

CAMELOPARDALIS

DRACO

LYRA

HERCULES

BOREALISCORONA

SERPENSCAPUT

BOÖTES BOÖTES

LACERTA CYGNUS

CEPHEUS

CASSIOPEIA

TRIANGULUM ANDROMEDA

PISCES PEGASUS

ARIES

TAURUS

TAURUS

ERIDANUS

MAJORCANIS

MONOCEROS

CANIS MINOR

CANCER

HYDRA

HYDRA

SEXTANS

ANTLIA PYXIS

CRATER

CORVUS

CENTAURUS VELA

PUPPIS

COLUMBA

LEPUS

ORION

SOUTH NORTH

E W E
30 oN

40 oN

50 oN

60 oN

60 oN

50 oN

40 oN

30 oN

Capella
Polaris

Algol

Deneb

Vega

Arcturus

Spica

Castor
Pollux
Regulus

Procyon

Adhara

Sirius

Betelgeuse Aldebaran

Rigel

Pleiades

ECLIPTIC

ECLIPTIC

GEMINI

AURIGA AURIGA

PERSEUS
PERSEUS LYNX

MINORURSA

MAJORURSA
MINORLEO

VENATICICANES

BERENICESCOMA

LEO

VIRGO

CAMELOPARDALIS

DRACO

LYRA

HERCULES
BOREALISCORONA

BOÖTES
CYGNUS

LACERTA
CEPHEUS

CASSIOPEIA
ANDROMEDA

TRIANGULUM

PISCES

PISCES

PEGASUS

ARIES
TAURUS

PISCES

CETUS
CANIS MAJOR ERIDANUS

MONOCEROS

CANCER MINORCANIS

HYDRA

SEXTANS

LEO

ANTLIA

PYXIS
CRATER
VELA

PUPPIS

CARINA DORADO

HOROLOGIUM

CAELUM

PICTOR

COLUMBA FORNAX

LEPUS

ORION

SOUTH NORTH

E W E
30 oN

40 oN

50 oN

60 oN

60 oN

50 oN

40 oN

30 oN

Capella
Capella

Polaris

Algol

Deneb

Vega
Arcturus

Castor
Pollux

Regulus

Procyon

Adhara

Sirius

Betelgeuse

Aldebaran

Mira

Canopus

Rigel

Pleiades

ECLIPTIC

Seasonal Charts: North


T


he charts given on this page are suitable for observers
who live in the northern hemisphere, between latitudes
50 degrees and 30 degrees north. The horizon is given by
the latitude marks near the bottom of the charts. Thus, for
an observer who lives at 30 degrees north, the northern
horizon in the first map will pass just above Deneb, which
will be visible.
A star rises earlier, on average, by two hours a month;
thus the chart for 2000 hours on 1 January will be valid for
1800 hours on 1 February and 2200 hours on 1 December.
The limiting visibility of a star for an observer at
any latitude can be worked out from its declination. To
an observer in the northern hemisphere, a star is at its
lowest point in the sky when it is due north; a star which
is ‘below’ the pole by the amount of one’s latitude will
touch the horizon when at its lowest point. If it is closer to
the pole than that it will be circumpolar. From latitude
51 degrees north, for example, a star is circumpolar if its
declination is 90 51 or 31 degrees north, or greater.
Thus Capella, dec. 45 degrees 57 minutes, is circumpolar

ATLAS OF THE UNIVERSE


20 ° 40 ° 60 ° 80 °

SOUTH NORTH

E W E
30 oN

40 oN

50 oN

60 oN

60 oN

50 oN

40 oN

30 oN

ECLIPTIC ECLIPTIC
GEMINI

AURIGA PERSEUS

LYNX

URSA MINOR

URSA MAJOR

LEO MINOR

URSA MAJOR

VENATICICANES

COMA BERENICES

LEO LEO
VIRGO

LIBRA

SAGITTARIUS SCORPIUS LUPUS

SCUTUM
AQUILA

OPHIUCHUS

NORMA CRUX

CAMELOPARDALIS

DRACO
LYRA

HERCULES

HERCULES

BOREALISCORONA

SERPENSCAPUT

SERPENSCAUDA

BOÖTES

CYGNUS

LACERTA

CEPHEUS

CASSIOPEIA

ANDROMEDA

TRIANGULUM

PEGASUS

DELPHINUS

SAGITTA

VULPECULA

AQUILA

TAURUS

CANISMINOR

CANCER

CANCER

HYDRA HYDRA

SEXTANS

ANTLIA

CORVUS CRATER

VELA

CENTAURUS
ORION

Capella

Polaris

Algol

Deneb

Altair

Vega

Arcturus

Antares

Spica
PolluxCastor

Regulus

Procyon

 Latitudesof the major
cites of the northern
hemisphere. For the
observer, all the stars of the
northern sky are visible in
the course of a year, but he
or she can see only a limited
distance south of the
equator. At a latitude of x°N,
the most southerly point that
can be seen in the sky is 90
x°S. Thus, for example, to
an observer at latitude 50°N,
only the sky north of 90  50
(or 40°S) is ever visible.

Chart 1


Chart 2


Chart 3


Morning
1 October at 5.30
15 October at 4.30
30 October at 3.30

Evening
1 January at 11.30
15 January at 10.30
30 January at 9.30

Morning
15 November at 6.30
1 December at 5.30
15 December at 4.30

Evening
1 March at 11.30
15 March at 10.30
30 March at 9.30

Morning
15 January at 6.30
1 February at 5.30
14 February at 4.30

Evening
1 May at 11.30
15 May at 10.30
30 May at 9.30

F Atl of Univ Phil'03stp 3/4/03 5:44 pm Page 214

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