Astronomy

(Tina Meador) #1
ECLIP

TIC^

Polaris

Denebola

M51

Mizar

M31

Vega

M57 M13

Deneb

Enif
Altair

Arcturus
M11
Spica

Antares
M6

M16
M17

M7

LIBRA

LUPUS

OPHIUCHUS

SAGITTARIUS

SCORPIUS

CAPRICORNUS SCUTUM

HERCULES

CYGNUS

BOÖTES COMABERENICES

SERPENS VIRGO
CAUDA
AQUILA SERPENSCAPUT

AQUARIUS

URSA

MINOR

CASSIOPEIA

LEO

URSAMAJOR
CEPHEUS

DRACO

PERSEUS

PEGASUS LACERTA

LY R A

`

ECLI
PTIC

Polaris

Vega

M13

Enif

Deneb

Altair

M33

M31

M35

869

884

Aldebaran

Mira

Fomalhaut

Algol

Capella

M15

URSA

MINOR

CASSIOPEIA

PERSEUS

URSA
MAJOR

LY R A

SAGITTA

DRACO

HERCULES

AQUILA
DELPHINUS
AQUARIUS

CAPRICORNUS

CYGNUS

PISCIS
AUSTRINUS

PISCES

PEGASUS

ORION

TAURUS

ERIDANUS

AURIGA

PHOENIX

CETUS

CEPHEUS

GRUS

ARIES

S


E


N


W


S


E


N


W


July 12
Pluto is at
opposition


July 27
Mars is at
opposition


Aug. 12
Perseid
meteor
shower peaks


Aug. 17
Venus is at
greatest
eastern
elongation


Aug. 26
Mercury is
at greatest
western
elongation


Sept. 7
Neptune is at
opposition


Oct. 21
Orionid
meteor
shower peaks


Oct. 23
Uranus is at
opposition


Nov. 17
Leonid
meteor
shower peaks


Dec. 14
Geminid
meteor
shower peaks


Dec. 15
Mercury is
at greatest
western
elongation


SUMMER
The sky
High in the sky, the three bright stars known
as the Summer Triangle are easy to spot.
These luminaries — Vega in Lyra, Deneb in
Cygnus, and Altair in Aquila — lie near the
starry path of the Milky Way. Following the
Milky Way south from Aquila, you’ll find the
center of our galaxy in the constellation
Sagittarius the Archer. Here lie countless star
clusters and glowing gas clouds. Just west of
Sagittarius lies Scorpius the Scorpion, which
contains the red supergiant star Antares as
well as M6 and M7, two brilliant clusters that
look marvelous at low power.
Deep-sky highlights
The Hercules Cluster (M13) contains nearly
a million stars and is the finest globular
cluster in the northern sky.
The Ring Nebula (M57) looks like a puff of
smoke through a medium-sized telescope.
The Omega Nebula (M17) looks like the
Greek letter of its name (Ω) through a
telescope at low power. This object also is
called the Swan Nebula.
The Wild Duck Cluster (M11) is a glorious
open star cluster. On a moonless night, a
small scope will show you some 50 stars.

AUTUMN
The sky
The Big Dipper swings low this season, and
from parts of the southern United States,
it even sets. With the coming of cooler
nights, Pegasus the Winged Horse rides
high in the sky as the rich summer Milky
Way descends in the west. Fomalhaut, a
solitary bright star, lies low in the south. The
magnificent Andromeda Galaxy reaches its
peak nearly overhead on autumn evenings,
as does the famous Double Cluster. Both
of these objects appear as fuzzy patches to
the naked eye under a dark sky.
Deep-sky highlights
The Andromeda Galaxy (M31) is the bright est
naked-eye object outside our galaxy visible in
the northern sky.
The Double Cluster (NGC 869 and NGC 884)
in Perseus consists of twin open star clusters.
It’s a great sight through binoculars.
M15 in Pegasus is a globular cluster
con taining hundreds of thousands of stars,
many of which can be glimpsed through a
medium-sized telescope.
Albireo (Beta [β] Cygni), the most beautiful
double star in the sky, is made up of suns
colored sapphire and gold.

Open cluster
Globular cluster
Diffuse nebula
Planetary nebula
Galaxy
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