Naked eye
Primary naked-eye pattern; suburban skies should show the main stars unless the description notes a low horizon or dark-sky need.
Named star-patterns beyond the official constellation boundaries.
Delphinus
Delphinus diamond
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.
This wider chart is deliberately schematic: it uses nearby bright-star context and boxes the asterism’s member-star footprint, but it does not draw official constellation boundaries or promise horizon/season precision.
Framing: Approximate member-star span: 5.8°; use at least 8.2° field for context.
Primary naked-eye pattern; suburban skies should show the main stars unless the description notes a low horizon or dark-sky need.
Binoculars are optional: use them to check colours, nearby doubles, or richer Milky Way background.
A telescope is usually too narrow for the whole shape; use it after the pattern has guided you to a target.
Frame as a wide-field scene in/near Delphinus; a field of view around 8° keeps context without claiming exact constellation boundaries.
Uses this asterism’s centroid RA/Dec: transit altitude, hours above 20°, and a month-scale evening window. Default is Edmonton-ish 50°N.
Approximate limiting magnitudes: Bortle 3 ≈ V 6.6, Bortle 5 ≈ V 5.6, Bortle 7 ≈ V 4.6. The shape is counted recognisable when at least 70% of defining stars clear the limit.
| Name | Bayer / Flamsteed | HR | RA J2000 | Dec J2000 | V mag |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rotanev | 6Bet Del | HR 7882 | 20h 37m 33.0s | +14° 35′ 43″ | 3.63 |
| Sualocin | 9Alp Del | HR 7906 | 20h 39m 38.3s | +15° 54′ 43″ | 3.77 |
| Epsilon Delphini | 2Eps Del | HR 7852 | 20h 33m 12.8s | +11° 18′ 12″ | 4.03 |
| Gamma2 Delphini | 12Gam2Del | HR 7948 | 20h 46m 39.5s | +16° 07′ 27″ | 4.27 |
| 11Del Del | 11Del Del | HR 7928 | 20h 43m 27.5s | +15° 04′ 28″ | 4.43 |
skylore / traditional name; medium confidence. Traditional or folk name carried through older public-domain star-name literature; the plotted stars are still BSC5 positions.