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TheSky (c) Astronomy Software 1984-1998

CASSIOPEIA

CEPHEUS

Night sky map September 2016

North BRIGHTNESS

Zero or brighter 1st

nd 2 NE

rd 3 NW 4th BOOTES

SAGITTA

EQUULEUS

AQUILA SERPENS First quarter Mars on 9th P East SAGITTARIUS P Centre of the Antares Zubenelgenubi M7 M6 P on Spica West the 21st

Fomalhaut AUSTRALE Hadar POINTERS Jewel Box Mimosa Coalsack SOUTHERN CROSS SMC South

MENSA CHART KEY SE Bright star HOROLOGIUM SW Faint star LMC MOON PHASE New Moon 01st Celestial First quarter 09th Full Moon 17th P Last quarter 23rd LMC or Large Magellanic South SMC or THE CHART HIGHLIGHTS IN SEPTEMBER 2016 rd The shows the and visible The spring occurs on the 23 of September, in the sky for Sydney, Melbourne, Canberra, Hobart whichPUPPIS marks the movement of the over the

and Adelaide for September 2016 at about 7:30 pm (local equator from the northern to the southern part of the standard time). For Darwin and similar northerly locations sky. The best time to look at the Moon with a small the chart will still apply, but some stars will be lost off the telescope or is a few days either side of its southern edge while extra stars will be visible to the first quarter phase, which falls on the 9th of north. Stars down to a brightness or magnitude limit of September. Saturn and Mars are high in the western

4.5 are shown on the star chart. To use this star chart, skyAdhara throughout the month. To the south-west is the rotate the chart so that the direction you are facing constellation Crux (the Southern Cross), which can (north, south, east or west) is shown at the bottom. The be easily located using the two nearby stars centre of the chart represents the point directly above commonly referred to as the Pointer Stars. The your head, called the point, and the outer circular brighter of the two Pointer Stars, Alpha Centauri, is edge represents the horizon. the closest to our own.

Sydney Observatory is part of the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences. The Sydney Observatory night sky map was created by Dr M. Anderson using the TheSky software. This month’s edition was prepared by Brenan Dew. © 2016 Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, Sydney.