In the Sky This Month

Scorpius and Sagittarius highlight July nights, scooting low across the south. Antares highlights the scorpion’s hook-shaped body, with teapot-shaped Sagittarius to its left. Under dark skies, the Milky Way rises from the teapot’s spout like steam. Meanwhile, the Big Dipper stands high in the north and northwest during the evening, with its handle to the upper left and bowl to the lower right.

The full Moon of July is known as the Hay Moon, Thunder Moon, or Apollo Moon.

Perigee July 13
Apogee July 25

Moon phases are Central Time.

Moon Phases

July 7 2:29 pm
Last Quarter Last Quarter
July 14 4:43 am
New Moon New Moon
July 21 6:05 am
First Quarter First Quarter
July 29 9:36 am
Full Moon Full Moon

Early Summer

Summer is months away, but the season’s best-known star pattern is already peeking into view in the pre-dawn sky. The Summer Triangle, which is marked by the stars Vega, Deneb, and Altair, stands well up in the east at first light.

Leo

March comes in like a lion as Leo springs across the sky. It crouches low in the east at nightfall and leaps high overhead later on. Its brightest star, Regulus, is at the bottom of the hook-shaped pattern of stars that outlines Leo’s head and mane.

First-Quarter Moon

The Moon is at first quarter at 1:57 p.m. CST today as it aligns at a right angle to the line between Earth and the Sun. Sunlight illuminates half of the lunar hemisphere that faces our way.

Moon and Aldebaran

Aldebaran, the bright orange star that marks the eye of Taurus, the bull, stands to the upper left of the Moon this evening, and to the lower right of the Moon tomorrow night.

Leap Day

Today is Leap Day, which is added to (almost) every fourth February to keep the calendar in sync with the seasons. It was first added by Julius Caesar. Pope Gregory XIII ordered that one Leap Day be dropped every 400 years to fine-tune the calendar.

Pleiades

The Pleiades star cluster shines throughout the evening. It looks like a tiny dipper-shaped pattern of stars and stands high overhead at nightfall. It represents the shoulder of Taurus, the bull.

Moon and Venus

The planet Venus is in great view. It’s the “evening star,” so it is the brightest object in the night sky other than the Moon. It is close to the right of the Moon tonight. It shines so brightly in part because it is blanketed by brilliant clouds.

NGC 246

NGC 246, the Skull Nebula, is about 1,600 light-years away. At nightfall it’s just above the horizon, to the lower left of the line formed by the Moon and Venus, the “evening star.” The nebula contains gas and dust expelled by a dying star.

Rivals

Orion is part of a big stellar story. Two of his hunting dogs, Canis Major and Canis Minor, follow him across the sky, pursuing Lepus, the rabbit, below Orion’s feet. The hunter was killed by the scorpion, which is halfway around the sky from Orion.

Eridanus

Eridanus, the river, meanders through the evening sky at this time of year. The constellation winds across a large section of the southwestern sky. Ancient Egyptians considered this star pattern a heavenly version of the Nile.

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