A guide to what's up in the sky for Southern Australia
Starwatch for December 2025 - Tue 25th Nov 2025
Published 25th Nov 2025
All the stars we see in the night sky belong to our Milky Way galaxy. However, there are some objects outside of the Milky Way galaxy that can be seen quite clearly with no or little optical power.
Starwatch for November 2025 - Wed 29th Oct 2025
Published 29th Oct 2025
A 101 years ago, on November 23, 1924, the universe got larger.
Starwatch for October 2025 - Thu 2nd Oct 2025
Published 2nd Oct 2025
Astronomical distances can be mind boggling. Our closest neighbour, the Moon, is 380,000 kms away — equal to about 10 trips around Earth’s equator.
Starwatch for September 2025 - Wed 3rd Sep 2025
Published 3rd Sep 2025
A few lingering stars of winter are still in view during the evening. Antares, Altair, Vega have lit up the cold winter nights for us. But there is really only one bright star that puts in its best showing during these early spring nights:
NGC 7293 – The Helix Nebula - Tue 2nd Sep 2025
Published 2nd Sep 2025
Image © Patrick Cosgrove. The Helix Nebula, also known as NGC 7293, is a planetary nebula (PN) located in the constellation Aquarius.
Starwatch for August 2025 - Sun 3rd Aug 2025
Published 3rd Aug 2025
Imagine yourself sitting on a rock on the dark side of Moon, gazing up at the Milky Way. There's no stray lights, no atmosphere to dull your view of the night sky. The stars are so brilliant, so big, you could reach out and touch them.
NGC 4755 - Fri 1st Aug 2025
Published 1st Aug 2025
The Jewel Box Star Cluster. Image © Sergio Equivar, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Starwatch for July 2025 - Thu 3rd Jul 2025
Published 3rd Jul 2025
Look up overhead on any of these frosty winter’s nights, and if you have a dark area away from direct lighting, you’ll see the Milky Way shining brightly.
Galaxy NGC 6744 in Pavo - Wed 2nd Jul 2025
Published 2nd Jul 2025
This is NGC 6744, a spiral galaxy bearing similarities to our home galaxy, the Milky Way.
Starwatch for June 2025 - Mon 2nd Jun 2025
Published 2nd Jun 2025
The winter Milky Way shines across the sky from east to west in a blaze of starlight.
Eta Carinae Nebula (NGC 3372) - Sun 1st Jun 2025
Published 1st Jun 2025
Eta Carinae Nebula (NGC 3372) Distance: 7500 Light Years
Starwatch for May 2025 - Wed 30th Apr 2025
Published 30th Apr 2025
We have recently seen the destructive power of extreme weather events, such as cyclones and the flooding in southwest Queensland. It left in its wake flooded businesses, broken roads, power outages, and other problems. The repair bill will run into billions of dollars.
NGC 5139 - Omega Centauri - Tue 29th Apr 2025
Published 29th Apr 2025
Globular Cluster in Centaurus
Starwatch for April 2025 - Wed 2nd Apr 2025
Published 2nd Apr 2025
The crisp autumn evenings of April offer an ideal opportunity to explore the majesty of the southern sky. Go find yourself a nice dark spot in the back-garden, and let your eyes become accustomed to the darkness. Notice how many more stars you can see, even after a few minutes, as the pupils of your eyes expand to let as much light in as possible.
IC434 -The Horsehead Nebula - Tue 1st Apr 2025
Published 1st Apr 2025
Distance: 1500 Light Years |Constellation - Orion
Starwatch - March 2025 - Mon 3rd Mar 2025
Published 3rd Mar 2025
There's nothing more magical than to lie down on your back lawn on a warm summer evening and gaze up at the brilliant night sky.
Eta Carinae Nebula (NGC 3372) - Sat 1st Mar 2025
Published 1st Mar 2025
Distance: 7500 Light Years
Starwatch - February 2025 - Wed 5th Feb 2025
Published 5th Feb 2025
Two bright beacons hold centre stage in our night sky during February. In the beautiful pastel hues of an Australian summer sunset.
M104 - The Sombrero Galaxy - Tue 4th Feb 2025
Published 4th Feb 2025
Distance: 31 Million Light Years
Starwatch - January 2025 - Wed 1st Jan 2025
Published 1st Jan 2025
There's nothing more magical than to lie down on your back lawn on a warm summer evening and gaze up at the brilliant night sky.
The Pleiades star cluster - Tue 31st Dec 2024
Published 31st Dec 2024
The Pleiades star cluster (The Seven Sisters) Distance: 435 Light Years
Starwatch - December 2024 - Sun 1st Dec 2024
Published 1st Dec 2024
The stars that shine at night do so from immense distances.
Starwatch - November 2024 - Mon 4th Nov 2024
Published 4th Nov 2024
We recently saw the destructive power of hurricanes Milton and Helene, as they cut a path of destruction through various states in the US. They left in their wake flooded businesses, broken roads, power outages, and other problems. The repair bill will run into billions of dollars.
Large Magellanic Cloud - Fri 1st Nov 2024
Published 1st Nov 2024
Distance: 163,000 light years Right Ascension 05 : 23.6 Declination -69 : 45
Starwatch - October 2024 - Mon 30th Sep 2024
Published 30th Sep 2024
After a spectacular encounter with Pluto back in July 2015, the New Horizons spacecraft was redirected to visit a more distant object, known as 2014 MU69.
OCTOBER’S DEEP SKY HIGHLIGHT - Sun 29th Sep 2024
Published 29th Sep 2024
M31—The Andromeda Galaxy Distance: 2.5 million Light Years
Starwatch - September 2024 - Sat 31st Aug 2024
Published 31st Aug 2024
Spring is just around the corner, and with it, comes the promise of warmer evenings and clearer skies. And hopefully the opportunity to spend more time looking up!
NGC 253 – Galaxy in Sculptor - Fri 30th Aug 2024
Published 30th Aug 2024
NGC 253 is the brightest member of the Sculptor Group of galaxies.
Starwatch - August 2024 - Tue 30th Jul 2024
Published 30th Jul 2024
f you're brave enough to venture outside these cold winter nights, you'll be greeted by the heart of our Milky Way galaxy directly overhead. Find yourself a dark space in your backyard on a clear moonless night, and look straight up.
The Swan Nebula - Mon 29th Jul 2024
Published 29th Jul 2024
M17 – The Swan Nebula in Sagittarius
Starwatch July 2024 - Mon 8th Jul 2024
Published 8th Jul 2024
Look up overhead on any of these frosty winter’s nights, and as long as you have a dark area away from direct lighting, you’ll see the band of the Milky Way shining brightly.
Merging Galaxies - Sun 7th Jul 2024
Published 7th Jul 2024
NGC 4038-4039 Merging Galaxies - The Antennae. Distance: 45 million Light Years.
Starwatch June 2024 - Sun 2nd Jun 2024
Published 2nd Jun 2024
About half-way up the northern evening sky, a bright star shines.
The Trifid Nebula - Sat 1st Jun 2024
Published 1st Jun 2024
M20 – The Trifid Nebula in Sagittarius
Starwatch May 2024 - Thu 2nd May 2024
Published 2nd May 2024
A myriad of bright stars adorn the late autumn evening sky.
Galaxy NGC 5128 - Wed 1st May 2024
Published 1st May 2024
Galaxy NGC 5128—Centaurus A
Comet Pons-Brooks - Wed 10th Apr 2024
Published 10th Apr 2024
Looking west on the evening of April 27., 30 minutes after sunset. Locate the orange star Aldebaran, then scan to the left until you come to a fuzzy spot in the sky. Train your binoculars on it, the comet will be 239 million kilometres away. Graphic generated with Stellarium planetarium software.
M104 - The Sombrero Galaxy - Tue 9th Apr 2024
Published 9th Apr 2024
M104 - The Sombrero Galaxy. Distance: 31 Million Light Years
Starwatch - April 2024 - Mon 8th Apr 2024
Published 9th Apr 2024
Some of the brightest stars in the whole sky can be seen during these crisp autumn evenings.
Starwatch - March 2024 - Wed 6th Mar 2024
Published 6th Mar 2024
What a wonderful time of the year this is to be observing the night sky. The weather is warm, the nights clear, and the Milky Way shines directly overhead!
Object of the Month - Mon 4th Mar 2024
Published 4th Mar 2024
Eta Carinae Nebula (NGC 3372)
Distance: 7500 Light Years
Right Ascension: 10 : 43.8 | Declination: -59 : 52
All the stars we see in the night sky belong to our Milky Way galaxy. However, there are some objects outside of the Milky Way galaxy that can be seen quite clearly with no or little optical power.
Look high in the southern sky in the mid-evening. Make sure you are in a dark part of the garden, or even better, under a dark country sky. Approximately half-way between Achernar and the horizon, you will see what looks like a faint cloud. Higher and to the right is a smaller cloud. Known as the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, they were first sighted by Portuguese explorers when they sailed into southern waters in the 15th century. They saw two small, fuzzy blobs in the heavens, faintly glowing clouds that weren't visible from their homeland. They were soon named for Ferdinand Magellan, the explorer who organized the first trip around the world.
But it was not until well into the 20th century that astronomers understood the true nature of the Magellanic Clouds. They are small galaxies containing a few billion stars. The Large Magellanic Cloud is the closer of the two, at a distance of about 170,000 light-years, whilst the Small Magellanic Cloud is about 210,000 light-years away. Both clouds are satellites of our own Milky Way galaxy, and even interact with the Milky Way. Interact is too gentle a word. Let us say it like it really is – the Milky Way galaxy is cannibalising these 2 smaller galaxies. Astronomers have detected streams of stars and gas that are being drawn into our galaxy. In about 2.7 billion years, both of the smaller galaxies will have been entirely absorbed by our hungry monster.
The summer Milky Way rises in the east in the evening. It brings with it sparkling stars like Sirius, Rigel, Betelguese, Aldebaran, Canopus, Achernar and Procyon, providing a formidable brilliance to the eastern sky which is not repeated at any other time of the year.
Of course, December is Christmas month, and if Santa is especially generous this year, you might find something shiny in your Christmas stocking: gold. As you admire it, think about this: that bit of soft, beautiful metal just might have been created during the birth of a black hole.
If gold doesn’t feature on Christmas morning, perhaps a pair of binoculars will. These are a great way to develop your interest in astronomy. They will allow you to see many more stars, the craters on the Moon, the phases of Venus, the moons of Jupiter and many more of the vistas in our night sky. And what better target, than a group of stars known as the Pleiades.
Probably better known by its more common name of “the Seven Sisters”, the cluster marks the shoulder of Taurus, the bull. You can find it low in the north-eastern sky by 10:00pm in early December.
The Pleiades is a cluster of several hundred young stars, 400 light years from Earth, and no more than 6 million years old. Our Sun is a middle-aged star, at an age of approximately 4,500 million years old. If we were orbiting a star embedded in the Pleiades, and looking back toward our own solar system, the Sun would be invisible. It is just too faint to see from that far away. But many of the stars of the Pleiades are hotter and brighter than the Sun, so they are easy to see.
Because they occupy an area of sky larger than the full moon, binoculars offer the best method of viewing these stellar siblings. Whilst seven is the number of stars you should be able to see with the naked eye under dark conditions, your view in binoculars will be rewarded by a sight of some 45 to 50 brilliant stars shining against the blackness of space.
With the multitude of bright stars in the summer sky, none is more brilliant than Sirius, shining brightly, low in the eastern sky. This is the brightest star in the whole sky. Sirius looks so bright for a couple of reasons. First, it IS bright; it produces about 30 times more energy than the Sun. And second, Sirius is a mere nine light-years away. Only a handful of stars are closer than Sirius. Viewed through binoculars in a dark sky, Sirius is a breathtaking sight, sparkling with the fire of a brilliant diamond.
Sirius is actually a binary system; two stars that move through space together, bound by their mutual gravitational pull. The star that we see with the unaided eye is called Sirius A. The other star is Sirius B. Since Sirius is known as the "dog star," Sirius B is nicknamed "the Pup." The two stars orbit each other once every 50 years.
Sirius A is a "main-sequence" star. That means that like our Sun, Sirius is in the prime of life. It's "burning" the hydrogen in its core to make helium, releasing energy in the process. But Sirius A is about twice as heavy as the Sun, so its nuclear furnace burns hotter and faster than the Sun's. As a result, Sirius A will live a shorter life.
Sirius B is a white dwarf; the burned-out core of a star that's at the end of its life. It shines only by releasing the intense heat it built up during hundreds of millions of years of life. It's so small, and so close to Sirius A, that you need a large telescope to see it. It has consumed its nuclear fuel and collapsed into a ball no bigger than Earth. Yet Sirius B is as massive as the Sun, so it's extremely dense.
The same fate awaits the Sun in about five billion years. Sirius A will become a white dwarf, too, although much quicker than the Sun will. So, by studying the Sirius system, astronomers get a high-speed look at how the Sun will age, and a preview of our star's fate.
To the north of Sirius, another bright star beckons us. This is Rigel, which at 900 light years away, is more than 100 times further away than Sirius. Yet, if we swapped the two, then Rigel would shine so bright that it would produce about a fifth the light of the full moon. Rigel is the brighter of the two stars. Sirius appears brighter because it is so much closer.
The Southern Cross and the Pointers are skimming the southern horizon and will not be well placed for easy evening observation until early February next year.
Of course, the story of the Star of Bethlehem is always mentioned at this time of the year. A planetary grouping is sometimes cited as a possible explanation for the Star of Bethlehem. Have you ever ventured outside on Christmas night, as I have, gazed up at a starry sky, and wondered about the truth of this story? Using readily available computer programs, you too can simulate the night sky over Bethlehem at the birth of Christ.
The planetary grouping of June 17, 1 BCE figures high on my list of probable explanations for the Star of Bethlehem, and features Jupiter and Venus. On that evening, they came within 30 arcseconds of each other. This is such a minuscule distance that, to the naked eye, the planets would have appeared as a single dazzling star. The conjunction would have been visible after sunset in the western sky, setting out of sight about two hours later. The only drawback with this explanation is that the Wise Men reported first seeing the star "in the east". Could the combined brightness of these two planets have rendered them visible in daylight? I think so! They would have risen in the east about 8.00am local time.
The Moon is Full on December 5, at Last Quarter on December 12, New on December 20 and at First Quarter on December 28.
Happy observing!
