Cetus spreads across the southeastern quadrant of the sky at nightfall. Diphda, its brightest star, is near its lower right corner, roughly a third of the way up the sky. The star is at the end of its life, so it has puffed up to giant proportions.
Cetus spreads across the southeastern quadrant of the sky at nightfall. Diphda, its brightest star, is near its lower right corner, roughly a third of the way up the sky. The star is at the end of its life, so it has puffed up to giant proportions.