Asterism Atlas

Named star-patterns beyond the official constellation boundaries.

30 computed sky charts + finder maps

An atlas of named asterisms.

Small recognisable star-patterns: dippers, diamonds, hooks, crowns, clusters, and seasonal guideposts. Each detail page now pairs the measured member-star chart with a schematic wider finder map and practical observing/imaging notes for roughly 50°N.

Rank by latitude + month Observing guide (PDF)

Tonight / season planning

Use winter evenings for Orion, Taurus, Auriga, Gemini, and the low southern False Cross context; spring for Leo, Boötes, Virgo, Coma, and the Dippers; summer for Lyra–Cygnus–Aquila, Hercules, Scorpius, Sagittarius, and Delphinus; autumn for Pegasus, Cassiopeia, Perseus, Aquarius, Pisces, and Cetus. Circumpolar northern patterns can be checked whenever they ride clear of haze and trees.

Megrez / 69Del UMa — V 3.31Phecda / 64Gam UMa — V 2.44Merak / 48Bet UMa — V 2.37Mizar / 79Zet UMa — V 2.27Alkaid / 85Eta UMa — V 1.86Dubhe / 50Alp UMa — V 1.79Alioth / 77Eps UMa — V 1.77AliothDubheAlkaidMizarMerakPhecdaMegrez

Big Dipper

Ursa Major · March–June evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

The famous ladle is the brightest northern guide-pattern: use Merak-to-Dubhe to hop to Polaris, then follow the bent handle to Arcturus. At 50°N it is circumpolar but rides highest on spring evenings.

Span: 25.7° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 25.7°; use at least 36.0° field for context.

Brightest: V 1.77 · Sample: Alioth, Dubhe, Alkaid, Mizar

21Eta UMi — V 4.9523Del UMi — V 4.3616Zet UMi — V 4.3222Eps UMi — V 4.23Pherkad / 13Gam UMi — V 3.05Kochab / 7Bet UMi — V 2.08Polaris / 1Alp UMi — V 2.02PolarisKochabPherkad22Eps UMi16Zet UMi23Del UMi21Eta UMi

Little Dipper

Ursa Minor · Year-round from 50°N; best when highest above the pole · naked-eye

skylore / traditional name · medium confidence

A fainter dipper wrapped around the north celestial pole. Polaris and Kochab are easy; the middle stars are a useful naked-eye transparency test from Alberta suburbs.

Span: 18.9° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 18.9°; use at least 26.4° field for context.

Brightest: V 2.02 · Sample: Polaris, Kochab, Pherkad, 22Eps UMi

Deneb / 50Alp Cyg — V 1.25Altair / 53Alp Aql — V 0.77Vega / 3Alp Lyr — V 0.03VegaAltairDeneb

Summer Triangle

Lyra / Cygnus / Aquila · June–September evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

Vega, Deneb, and Altair frame the Milky Way's summer river. The triangle is huge, high, and forgiving: start with Vega overhead, then sweep east to Deneb and south to Altair.

Span: 38.0° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 38.0°; use at least 53.2° field for context.

Brightest: V 0.03 · Sample: Vega, Altair, Deneb

Albireo / 6Bet1Cyg — V 3.08Delta Cygni / 18Del Cyg — V 2.87Gienah / 53Eps Cyg — V 2.46Sadr / 37Gam Cyg — V 2.20Deneb / 50Alp Cyg — V 1.25DenebSadrGienahDelta CygniAlbireo

Northern Cross

Cygnus · June–September evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

The long axis of Cygnus turns into a cross flying down the Milky Way. Binoculars enrich the field around Sadr, but the cross itself is cleanly naked-eye.

Span: 22.3° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 22.3°; use at least 31.2° field for context.

Brightest: V 1.25 · Sample: Deneb, Sadr, Gienah, Delta Cygni

Algenib / 88Gam Peg — V 2.8354Alp Peg — V 2.4953Bet Peg — V 2.42Alpheratz / 21Alp And — V 2.06Alpheratz53Bet Peg54Alp PegAlgenib

Great Square of Pegasus

Pegasus / Andromeda · September–December evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

Four second-magnitude corner stars make autumn's large empty-looking square. The northeast corner, Alpheratz, now belongs to Andromeda even though the pattern is still the Great Square.

Span: 20.6° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 20.6°; use at least 28.9° field for context.

Brightest: V 2.06 · Sample: Alpheratz, 53Bet Peg, 54Alp Peg, Algenib

Betelgeuse / 58Alp Ori — V 0.50Procyon / 10Alp CMi — V 0.38Sirius / 9Alp CMa — V -1.46SiriusProcyonBetelgeuse

Winter Triangle

Orion / Canis Major / Canis Minor · December–March evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

Betelgeuse, Sirius, and Procyon make a compact winter landmark. From 50°N it clears the southeast in early evening by midwinter and is brilliant even through light haze.

Span: 27.1° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 27.1°; use at least 37.9° field for context.

Brightest: V -1.46 · Sample: Sirius, Procyon, Betelgeuse

Castor / 66Alp Gem — V 1.98Elnath / 112Bet Tau — V 1.65Pollux / 78Bet Gem — V 1.14Procyon / 10Alp CMi — V 0.38Rigel / 19Bet Ori — V 0.12Capella / 13Alp Aur — V 0.08Sirius / 9Alp CMa — V -1.46SiriusCapellaRigelProcyonPolluxElnathCastor

Winter Hexagon

Auriga / Taurus / Orion / Canis Major / Canis Minor / Gemini · December–March evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

A tour of the brightest winter sky: Capella, Aldebaran, Rigel, Sirius, Procyon, Pollux, and Castor. It is too large for one binocular field, so use it as an evening route-map.

Span: 65.8° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 65.8°; use at least 92.2° field for context.

Brightest: V -1.46 · Sample: Sirius, Capella, Rigel, Procyon

Mintaka / 34Del Ori — V 2.23Alnitak / 50Zet Ori — V 2.05Alnilam / 46Eps Ori — V 1.70AlnilamAlnitakMintaka

Orion's Belt

Orion · December–March evenings · naked-eye

skylore / traditional name · medium confidence

Mintaka, Alnilam, and Alnitak form the straight belt that makes Orion unmistakable. The line points down toward Sirius and up toward Aldebaran.

Span: 2.7° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 2.7°; use at least 3.8° field for context.

Brightest: V 1.70 · Sample: Alnilam, Alnitak, Mintaka

41The1Ori — V 5.1343The2Ori — V 5.0842 Ori — V 4.5944Iot Ori — V 2.7744Iot Ori42 Ori43The2Ori41The1Ori

Orion's Sword

Orion · December–March evenings · small scope

common observer pattern · high confidence

The short hanging sword below the belt contains the Orion Nebula around Theta Orionis. Naked-eye it is a misty patch; 7x50 binoculars show the glow, and a small scope starts resolving the Trapezium area.

Span: 1.1° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 1.1°; use at least 3.0° field for context.

Brightest: V 2.77 · Sample: 44Iot Ori, 42 Ori, 43The2Ori, 41The1Ori

Hyadum II / 68Del3Tau — V 4.29Theta1 Tauri / 77The1Tau — V 3.84Delta1 Tauri / 61Del1Tau — V 3.76Hyadum I / 54Gam Tau — V 3.65Ain / 74Eps Tau — V 3.53Theta2 Tauri / 78The2Tau — V 3.40Aldebaran / 87Alp Tau — V 0.85AldebaranTheta2 TauriAinHyadum IDelta1 TauriTheta1 TauriHyadum II

Hyades V

Taurus · December–March evenings · 7x50

catalogue / cluster listing · high confidence

The nearest prominent open-cluster pattern forms a broad V around Aldebaran, which is a foreground star projected onto the group. It overflows binoculars but rewards slow sweeping.

Span: 4.1° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 4.1°; use at least 5.8° field for context.

Brightest: V 0.85 · Sample: Aldebaran, Theta2 Tauri, Ain, Hyadum I

Pleione / 28 Tau — V 5.09Taygeta / 19 Tau — V 4.30Merope / 23 Tau — V 4.18Maia / 20 Tau — V 3.87Electra / 17 Tau — V 3.70Atlas / 27 Tau — V 3.63Alcyone / 25Eta Tau — V 2.87AlcyoneAtlasElectraMaiaMeropeTaygetaPleione

Pleiades Seven Sisters

Taurus · December–March evenings · 7x50

catalogue / cluster listing · high confidence

The tiny blue dipper of the Pleiades is the classic binocular showpiece. Most observers see six or seven stars naked-eye; 7x50s turn it into a bright granular swarm.

Span: 1.0° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 59′; use at least 3.0° field for context.

Brightest: V 2.87 · Sample: Alcyone, Atlas, Electra, Maia

Saclateni / 8Zet Aur — V 3.75Haedus II / 10Eta Aur — V 3.17Almaaz / 7Eps Aur — V 2.99AlmaazHaedus IISaclateni

Kids of Auriga

Auriga · December–March evenings · naked-eye

skylore / traditional name · medium confidence

The three small stars near Capella are the goat-kids carried by the Charioteer. They sit high in Alberta winter skies and make a compact naked-eye side quest beside Capella.

Span: 2.7° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 2.7°; use at least 3.8° field for context.

Brightest: V 2.99 · Sample: Almaaz, Haedus II, Saclateni

24Mu Leo — V 3.8830Eta Leo — V 3.5236Zet Leo — V 3.4417Eps Leo — V 2.98Algieba / 41Gam1Leo — V 2.61Regulus / 32Alp Leo — V 1.35RegulusAlgieba17Eps Leo36Zet Leo30Eta Leo24Mu Leo

Sickle of Leo

Leo · March–June evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

A backward question mark above Regulus sketches the lion's head and mane. It is one of the easiest ways to find Leo before the spring galaxy fields rise.

Span: 14.5° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 14.5°; use at least 20.3° field for context.

Brightest: V 1.35 · Sample: Regulus, Algieba, 17Eps Leo, 36Zet Leo

21 Com — V 5.4617 Com — V 5.2913 Com — V 5.1816 Com — V 5.0014 Com — V 4.9531 Com — V 4.9435 Com — V 4.9012 Com — V 4.8123 Com — V 4.8141 Com — V 4.8015Gam Com — V 4.3643Bet Com — V 4.2643Bet Com15Gam Com41 Com12 Com23 Com35 Com31 Com

Coma Star Cluster

Coma Berenices · March–June evenings · 7x50

catalogue / cluster listing · high confidence

Melotte 111 is a loose naked-eye haze under dark skies and a perfect binocular cluster. Its sparse arc of fourth- and fifth-magnitude stars fits the spring transition from Leo toward Boötes.

Span: 11.2° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 11.2°; use at least 15.7° field for context.

Brightest: V 4.26 · Sample: 43Bet Com, 15Gam Com, 41 Com, 12 Com

58Eps Her — V 3.9244Eta Her — V 3.5367Pi Her — V 3.1640Zet Her — V 2.8140Zet Her67Pi Her44Eta Her58Eps Her

Keystone of Hercules

Hercules · June–September evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

The lopsided four-star keystone anchors Hercules and points the way to M13 on the western edge. From 50°N it is a high summer pattern, best when the Milky Way is climbing.

Span: 8.8° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 8.8°; use at least 12.3° field for context.

Brightest: V 2.81 · Sample: 40Zet Her, 67Pi Her, 44Eta Her, 58Eps Her

11Del Del — V 4.43Gamma2 Delphini / 12Gam2Del — V 4.27Epsilon Delphini / 2Eps Del — V 4.03Sualocin / 9Alp Del — V 3.77Rotanev / 6Bet Del — V 3.63RotanevSualocinEpsilon DelphiniGamma2 Delphini11Del Del

Job's Coffin

Delphinus · June–September evenings · naked-eye

skylore / traditional name · medium confidence

Delphinus's compact diamond and tail has long been nicknamed Job's Coffin. It is small, neat, and easy to hold in a single binocular field east of Altair.

Span: 5.8° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 5.8°; use at least 8.2° field for context.

Brightest: V 3.63 · Sample: Rotanev, Sualocin, Epsilon Delphini, Gamma2 Delphini

14Iot CrB — V 4.9910Del CrB — V 4.6313Eps CrB — V 4.154The CrB — V 4.148Gam CrB — V 3.843Bet CrB — V 3.68Alphecca / 5Alp CrB — V 2.23Alphecca3Bet CrB8Gam CrB4The CrB13Eps CrB10Del CrB14Iot CrB

Crown of Corona Borealis

Corona Borealis · March–June evenings · naked-eye

skylore / traditional name · medium confidence

A delicate semicircle between Boötes and Hercules, centred on bright Alphecca. It is a simple naked-eye crown on late-spring evenings and a good bridge toward the summer sky.

Span: 7.4° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 7.4°; use at least 10.3° field for context.

Brightest: V 2.23 · Sample: Alphecca, 3Bet CrB, 8Gam CrB, 4The CrB

13Mu Sgr — V 3.86Tau Sagittarii / 40Tau Sgr — V 3.32Phi Sagittarii / 27Phi Sgr — V 3.17Kaus Borealis / 22Lam Sgr — V 2.81Kaus Media / 19Del Sgr — V 2.70Ascella / 38Zet Sgr — V 2.60Nunki / 34Sig Sgr — V 2.02Kaus Australis / 20Eps Sgr — V 1.85Kaus AustralisNunkiAscellaKaus MediaKaus BorealisPhi SagittariiTau Sagittarii

Teapot

Sagittarius · June–September evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

Sagittarius becomes a squat teapot pouring steam into the Milky Way. From Alberta it stays low, so choose a clear southern horizon and transparent summer night.

Span: 14.1° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 14.1°; use at least 19.7° field for context.

Brightest: V 1.85 · Sample: Kaus Australis, Nunki, Ascella, Kaus Media

5Rho Sco — V 3.88Eta Sco — V 3.336Pi Sco — V 2.8920Sig Sco — V 2.8923Tau Sco — V 2.8234Ups Sco — V 2.697Del Sco — V 2.3226Eps Sco — V 2.29The Sco — V 1.8735Lam Sco — V 1.63Antares / 21Alp Sco — V 0.96Antares35Lam ScoThe Sco26Eps Sco7Del Sco34Ups Sco23Tau Sco

Fish Hook of Scorpius

Scorpius · June–September evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

The northern claws and red Antares curve into the scorpion's long low hook. At 50°N only the upper hook is comfortable; the tail needs a flat southern horizon.

Span: 28.6° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 28.6°; use at least 40.1° field for context.

Brightest: V 0.96 · Sample: Antares, 35Lam Sco, The Sco, 26Eps Sco

52Pi Aqr — V 4.66Zeta1 Aquarii / 55Zet1Aqr — V 4.59Zeta2 Aquarii / 55Zet2Aqr — V 4.4243The Aqr — V 4.16Eta Aquarii / 62Eta Aqr — V 4.0248Gam Aqr — V 3.8448Gam AqrEta Aquarii43The AqrZeta2 AquariiZeta1 Aquarii52Pi Aqr

Water Jar

Aquarius · September–December evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

A small Y-shaped jar near the celestial equator marks the water-bearer's stream. It is subtle but satisfying once the bright summer stars have moved west.

Span: 9.4° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 9.4°; use at least 13.2° field for context.

Brightest: V 3.84 · Sample: 48Gam Aqr, Eta Aquarii, 43The Aqr, Zeta2 Aquarii

19 Psc — V 5.048Kap Psc — V 4.9418Lam Psc — V 4.5010The Psc — V 4.2817Iot Psc — V 4.1328Ome Psc — V 4.016Gam Psc — V 3.696Gam Psc28Ome Psc17Iot Psc10The Psc18Lam Psc8Kap Psc19 Psc

Circlet of Pisces

Pisces · September–December evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

This modest oval of fourth- and fifth-magnitude stars is the western fish of Pisces. It is a dark-sky naked-eye pattern and a useful autumn test of sky contrast.

Span: 11.1° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 11.1°; use at least 15.5° field for context.

Brightest: V 3.69 · Sample: 6Gam Psc, 28Ome Psc, 17Iot Psc, 10The Psc

7 Vul — V 6.3314 Vul — V 5.675 Vul — V 5.6316 Vul — V 5.224 Vul — V 5.1617 Vul — V 5.079 Vul — V 5.0012 Vul — V 4.9515 Vul — V 4.6413 Vul — V 4.5813 Vul15 Vul12 Vul9 Vul17 Vul4 Vul16 Vul

Coathanger

Vulpecula · June–September evenings · 7x50

modern informal / binocular asterism · high confidence

Brocchi's Cluster is the binocular asterism that really looks like its name: a straight bar with a dangling hook. It is easy to sweep up between Altair and Albireo.

Span: 11.4° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 11.4°; use at least 15.9° field for context.

Brightest: V 4.58 · Sample: 13 Vul, 15 Vul, 12 Vul, 9 Vul

Cor Caroli / 12Alp2CVn — V 2.90Denebola / 94Bet Leo — V 2.14Spica / 67Alp Vir — V 0.98Arcturus / 16Alp Boo — V -0.04ArcturusSpicaDenebolaCor Caroli

Great Diamond

Boötes / Canes Venatici / Leo / Virgo · March–June evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

Arcturus, Cor Caroli, Denebola, and Spica make a huge spring diamond spanning several constellations. It frames the Coma-Virgo galaxy region for binocular and telescope planning.

Span: 49.9° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 49.9°; use at least 69.9° field for context.

Brightest: V -0.04 · Sample: Arcturus, Spica, Denebola, Cor Caroli

Kap Vel — V 2.50Iot Car — V 2.25Del Vel — V 1.96Eps Car — V 1.86Eps CarDel VelIot CarKap Vel

False Cross

Vela / Carina · December–March evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

A southern four-star cross often mistaken for Crux from lower latitudes. It is essentially not observable from Alberta, but it belongs in an atlas because it is a classic navigation trap.

Span: 9.2° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 9.2°; use at least 12.9° field for context.

Brightest: V 1.86 · Sample: Eps Car, Del Vel, Iot Car, Kap Vel

24Nu 1Dra — V 4.8825Nu 2Dra — V 4.8732Xi Dra — V 3.75Rastaban / 23Bet Dra — V 2.79Eltanin / 33Gam Dra — V 2.23EltaninRastaban32Xi Dra25Nu 2Dra24Nu 1Dra

Lozenge of Draco

Draco · June–September evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

Draco's head is a small tilted lozenge north of Hercules, with the Nu Draconis pair on one corner. It is circumpolar from 50°N and best placed on summer evenings.

Span: 5.7° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 5.7°; use at least 7.9° field for context.

Brightest: V 2.23 · Sample: Eltanin, Rastaban, 32Xi Dra, 25Nu 2Dra

6Zet1Lyr — V 4.3612Del2Lyr — V 4.3010Bet Lyr — V 3.4514Gam Lyr — V 3.24Vega / 3Alp Lyr — V 0.03Vega14Gam Lyr10Bet Lyr12Del2Lyr6Zet1Lyr

Lyra Parallelogram

Lyra · June–September evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

Vega dominates Lyra, but the little parallelogram below it holds the Ring Nebula between Beta and Gamma. Naked-eye it is compact; a small scope gives the famous payoff.

Span: 7.6° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 7.6°; use at least 10.6° field for context.

Brightest: V 0.03 · Sample: Vega, 14Gam Lyr, 10Bet Lyr, 12Del2Lyr

8Zet Sge — V 5.005Alp Sge — V 4.376Bet Sge — V 4.377Del Sge — V 3.8212Gam Sge — V 3.4712Gam Sge7Del Sge5Alp Sge6Bet Sge8Zet Sge

Sagitta Arrow

Sagitta · June–September evenings · naked-eye

skylore / traditional name · medium confidence

Sagitta is one of the few constellations whose main figure is also an obvious asterism: a tiny arrow in the Milky Way. It sits neatly between Altair and Albireo.

Span: 4.7° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 4.7°; use at least 6.5° field for context.

Brightest: V 3.47 · Sample: 12Gam Sge, 7Del Sge, 5Alp Sge, 6Bet Sge

Segin / 45Eps Cas — V 3.38Ruchbah / 37Del Cas — V 2.68Gamma Cassiopeiae / 27Gam Cas — V 2.47Caph / 11Bet Cas — V 2.27Schedar / 18Alp Cas — V 2.23SchedarCaphγ CasRuchbahSegin

Cassiopeia W

Cassiopeia · September–December evenings · naked-eye

common observer pattern · high confidence

The zig-zag W is circumpolar from Alberta and flips to an M when it passes over the pole. It is the northern autumn counterweight to the Big Dipper.

Span: 13.3° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 13.3°; use at least 18.6° field for context.

Brightest: V 2.23 · Sample: Schedar, Caph, γ Cas, Ruchbah

34 Per — V 4.6735Sig Per — V 4.3637Psi Per — V 4.2341Nu Per — V 3.7739Del Per — V 3.0145Eps Per — V 2.8944Zet Per — V 2.85Mirfak / 33Alp Per — V 1.79Mirfak44Zet Per45Eps Per39Del Per41Nu Per37Psi Per35Sig Per

Alpha Persei Cluster

Perseus · September–December evenings · 7x50

catalogue / cluster listing · high confidence

The bright association around Mirfak is a sprawling binocular field rather than a tight cluster. Sweep it after Cassiopeia rises: the stars look like a loose river running through Perseus.

Span: 18.8° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 18.8°; use at least 26.3° field for context.

Brightest: V 1.79 · Sample: Mirfak, 44Zet Per, 45Eps Per, 39Del Per

65Xi 1Cet — V 4.3773Xi 2Cet — V 4.2887Mu Cet — V 4.2786Gam Cet — V 3.47Menkar / 92Alp Cet — V 2.53Menkar86Gam Cet87Mu Cet73Xi 2Cet65Xi 1Cet

Head of Cetus

Cetus · September–December evenings · naked-eye

skylore / traditional name · medium confidence

Menkar and nearby third- and fourth-magnitude stars form the whale's head below Pisces and Aries. It is best on quiet autumn nights when the eastern sky is relatively dim.

Span: 13.1° · Frame: Approximate member-star span: 13.1°; use at least 18.4° field for context.

Brightest: V 2.53 · Sample: Menkar, 86Gam Cet, 87Mu Cet, 73Xi 2Cet

Sources