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- Auriga Constellation – Constellation Guide
Auriga is the 21st largest constellation in the night sky It stretches across 657 square degrees of the northern sky It is located in the first quadrant of the northern hemisphere (NQ1) The entire constellation can be seen from locations between the latitudes +90° and -40°
- Auriga Constellation - Key Facts, Star Map, Mythology
Auriga is a beautiful pentagonal constellation that is almost circumpolar, making it visible most of the year round from the northern hemisphere, but best seen during autumn and winter
- Auriga constellation: Facts about the charioteer | Space
Auriga is a constellation of stars shaped like a pentagon The brightest is Capella, which is actually a group of four stars (Image credit: NASA JPL) Auriga is a lesser-known constellation
- Constellation: Auriga
Photo of the constellation Auriga produced by NOIRLab in collaboration with Eckhard Slawik, a German astrophotographer The annotations are from a standardized set of 88 western IAU constellations and stick figures from Sky Telescope
- Auriga Constellation – Features and Facts - The Planets
The Auriga Constellation is located in an area of the sky close to the northern Milky Way (the winter Milky Way) Due to its circumpolar nature, the Constellation of Auriga is visible for most of the year in Northern latitudes, but the best month to view it at its best is in February
- Auriga Constellation Guide for Astronomers | Love the Night Sky
In this article, we’ll be sharing with you everything you need to know about the constellation Auriga, including how to find it, deep space objects contained within it, and how to use it to find other night sky objects more easily
- Hawaiian Astronomical Society - Auriga
Auriga is usually identified with Phaethon, the son of the sun god Helios and Clymene (From the 5th century BCE, Apollo, originally a deity of light, was more and more interpreted as a sun-god) Responding to the desire to confirm that Helios was his real father, Phaethon confronted him about it
- Auriga | Stars, Winter Sky Mythology | Britannica
Auriga, constellation in the northern sky, at about 6 hours right ascension and 45° north in declination The brightest star in Auriga is Capella, the sixth brightest star in the sky The constellation also contains the notable eclipsing binary Epsilon Aurigae
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