Astronomy

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C R

VIRGO

COMA
BERENICES

CORVUS

LIBRA

H Y

CAPUTSERPENS

CAUDASERPENS

SCUTUM
OPHIUCHUS

SCORPIUS

LUPUS

CENTAURUS

CASSIOPEIA

C AMELOPARDALIS

URSA

MINOR

CEPHEUS

LACERTA

BOÖTES CANES VENATICI

BOREALISCORONA

CYGNUS

RSAU

AJ

OR

SAGITTAVULPECULA

DRACO

HERCULES

AQUILA

LY R A

Polaris
NCP

M51

M82

M81

Mizar

Arcturus M64

NGP

Denebola

M66

M57

Deneb

M27

M13

Vega

Spica
M104

M16

Antares

M4

M83

M5

NGC 5128

Path of the Sun (ecliptic) Jupiter

38 ASTRONOMY • MAY 2018

STAR


DOME


Sirius
0.0
1.0
2.0

E


N


S


NE


SE


3.0
4.0
5.0

STAR
MAGNITUDES

STAR COLORS
A star’s color depends
on its surface temperature.



  • The hottest stars shine blue

  • Slightly cooler stars appear white

  • Intermediate stars (like the Sun) glow yellow

  • Lower-temperature stars appear orange

  • The coolest stars glow red

  • Fainter stars can’t excite our eyes’ color
    receptors, so they appear white unless you
    use optical aid to gather more light


How to use this map: This map portrays the
sky as seen near 35° north latitude. Located
inside the border are the cardinal directions
and their intermediate points. To find
stars, hold the map overhead and
orient it so one of the labels matches
the direction you’re facing. The
stars above the map’s horizon
now match what’s in the sky.

The all-sky map shows
how the sky looks at:
midnight May 1
11 P.M. May 15
10 P.M. May 31
Planets are shown
at midmonth
Free download pdf