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

Capella

Capella, the brightest star of Auriga, the charioteer, stands high overhead this evening and wheels across the northwest later on. It looks yellow with a hint of orange. It is one of the half-dozen brightest star systems in the night sky.

Moon and Pollux

Pollux, the brightest star of Gemini, perches quite near the Moon this evening. Its “twin,” the star Castor, is a good bit farther from the Moon. Pollux has expanded to about nine times the diameter of the Sun — a beach ball to the Sun’s golf ball.

Venus and Mars

Venus and Mars will huddle close together the next few mornings, quite low in the east-southeast during the waxing twilight.

Snake’s Head

Hydra, the water snake, spans more than 100 degrees — almost a third of the way around the sky — so it takes a long time to climb into view. Tonight, for example, its head is in the east-southeast at nightfall, but its tail won’t rise until about midnight.

Moon and Taurus

The Moon slides along one of the horns of Taurus tonight. At nightfall, the bull’s eye, the star Aldebaran, is to the lower right of the Moon. The tip of the horn, El Nath, is closer to the left or lower left of the Moon.

Moon and Pleiades

The Pleiades star cluster, which forms the shoulder of the celestial bull, is close to the Moon tonight. Its brightest stars form a tiny dipper. It may be hard to pick out through the moonlight, but binoculars will help.

Class G

Kappa Ceti, a star that is the same class as the Sun, is in Cetus, the whale or sea monster. The star is about 30 light-years away. It’s almost exactly the same size and mass as the Sun, although slightly fainter. Like the Sun, it belongs to class “G.”

Moon and Jupiter

Jupiter, the largest planet in the solar system, looks like a brilliant star near the Moon tonight. After the Moon, Jupiter is by far the brightest object in the sky for most of the night.

Fewer New Stars

One of the busiest stellar nurseries in the galaxy stands about half way up the southern sky at nightfall now. The Orion Nebula has given birth to thousands of stars, with many more taking shape even now.

Cassiopeia

Cassiopeia, the queen, is written large across the northern sky this evening. It looks like a big letter M or W. It’s high in the northwest at nightfall and drops low across the north later on.

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