Yahoo Αναζήτηση Διαδυκτίου

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  1. Location: Greenwich, UK. Latitude: 51° 28’ 47” N. Longitude: 0° 00’ 00” E. Timezone: Europe/London. Cygnus is circumpolar and transits at 18:32 UTC (altitude: 81.4°) The rise and set times provided here are just directional indications and they refer to a point approximately placed at the center of the constellation.

  2. An online interactive planetarium application to explore the night sky and find constellations, planets, asteroids and other celestial objects visible from any location.

  3. Facts, location and map. Cygnus is the 16th largest constellation in the night sky, occupying an area of 804 square degrees. It lies in the fourth quadrant of the northern hemisphere (NQ4) and can be seen at latitudes between +90° and -40°. The neighboring constellations are Cepheus, Draco, Lacerta, Lyra, Pegasus, and Vulpecula.

  4. For those in the Northern Hemisphere, during June and July, Cygnus can be seen at around 10 pm in the northeastern sky. It will be directly above the head by 2 am and will stay there until dawn. In December and January, the constellation will be visible from 6 pm and will gradually disappear before the clock strikes 10 pm.

  5. Sky map showing the night sky tonight from any location. What planets are visible tonight? Where is Mars, Saturn or Venus? What is the bright star in the sky?

  6. Tonight Timeline. This observing guide helps you plan your Solar System observations. It's divided into three sections, detailing visible objects for post-sunset, nighttime and pre-sunrise viewing. Only objects reaching at least 15° altitude and set/rise at least 15 minutes after/before the Sun are listed. Max magnitude:

  7. Northern Cross: Cygnus looks like a cross, where the crossbeam is the swan’s wings. Cygnus, its long neck stretched out, flies south for the winter along one of the brightest regions of the Milky Way.