Naked eye
Visible as a compact naked-eye cue from dark or transparent skies, but detail waits for optics.
Named star-patterns beyond the official constellation boundaries.
Orion
Sword of Orion
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.
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: 1.1°; use at least 3.0° field for context.
Visible as a compact naked-eye cue from dark or transparent skies, but detail waits for optics.
Binoculars confirm the field and surrounding guide stars before you switch instruments.
Use a small telescope at low-to-medium power for the compact structure and nearby deep-sky context.
Compact: a short telephoto or small refractor can frame the whole pattern with surrounding context.
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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 44Iot Ori | 44Iot Ori | HR 1899 | 05h 35m 26.0s | −05° 54′ 36″ | 2.77 |
| 42 Ori | 42 Ori | HR 1892 | 05h 35m 23.2s | −04° 50′ 18″ | 4.59 |
| 43The2Ori | 43The2Ori | HR 1897 | 05h 35m 22.9s | −05° 24′ 58″ | 5.08 |
| 41The1Ori | 41The1Ori | HR 1895 | 05h 35m 16.5s | −05° 23′ 23″ | 5.13 |
common observer pattern; high confidence. Commonly used constellation-part or seasonal guide-pattern name, with member-star positions plotted from BSC5.