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k e c h i b
CANIS
MAJOR
LEPUS
ERIDANUS
FORNAX
HOROLOGIUM
CAELUM
COLUMBA
PUPPIS
ARIES
ORION
CANIS MINOR
HYDRA
TAURUS
CANCER
CAMELOPARDALIS
URSA
MINOR
CASSIOPEIA
PERSEUS
URSA MAJOR
LEO MINOR
EPHEUSC
TRIANGULUM
LYNX
AURIGA
GEMINI
LEO
MONOCEROS
DRACO
M42
Rigel
M41
M35
Aldebaran
Betelgeuse Hyades
Procyon
M1
M33
M37
M36
M38
Pleiades
M47 Sirius
M44
Capella
Pollux
Algol
Polaris
M81 M82 NCP
NGC 869
NGC
884
Mira
Castor
Adhara
38 ASTRONOMY • JANUARY 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:
9 P.M. January 1
8 P.M. January 15
7 P.M. January 31
Planets are shown
at midmonth