Jap sky on Sunday, December 7 as seen from Adelaide at 23:52 ACDST. Jupiter is rising and is near the waning Moon.
Comparable views might be seen from the remainder of Australia at roughly the equal native time.
Overview:
| December | |
| 5 December 2025 | Perigee Full Moon (“tremendous” Moon) |
| 7 December 2025 | Jupiter close to waning Moon (4° aside) in morning sky, forming a line with the intense star Pollux. |
| 14/15 December 2025 | Geminid Meteor bathe within the morning, some Moon interference |
| 19 December 2023 | Mercury, the skinny Crescent Moon and the intense star Antares from a triangle low within the morning twilight, may want binoculars |
| 22 December 2025 | Earth is at Solstice |
| 27 December 2025 | Almost First Quarter Moon close to close to Saturn (4° aside) within the early night sky |
Moon:
| December 4 | Moon at perigee |
| December 5 | Full Moon (perigee full Moon) |
| December 12 | Final Quarter Moon (excellent for star gazing) |
| December 17 | Moon at apogee |
| December 20 | New Moon (additionally excellent for star gazing) |
| December 28 | First Quarter Moon |
Northern morning
sky on Sunday, December 14 as seen from Adelaide at 03:13 ACDST, when the Geminid meter bathe is at it is highest.
Jupiter and the intense stars Pollux and Castor kind a line. The Geminid meteor bathe radiant is roughly beneath Castor and is marked with a star burst.
Comparable views might be seen from the remainder of Australia at roughly the equal native time.
Meteor Bathe:
Geminids December the 14th contends with a final Quarter moon.
| Areas on the identical latitude as… | December 12 | December 13 | December 14 (peak) | December 15 |
| Darwin | 7 meteors/hr | 14 meteors/hr | 36 meteors/hr | 29 meteors/hr |
| Brisbane/Perth | 5 meteors/hr | 9 meteors/hr | 23 meteors/hr | 23 meteors/hr |
| Sydney/Adelaide/Canberra | 4 meteors/hr | 7 meteors/hr | 18 meteors/hr | 16 meteors/hr |
Sky trying south on Saturday December 20 s seen from Adelaide at 22:15 ACDST (90 minutes after sundown).
Comparable views might be seen from the remainder of Australia at roughly the equal native time (90 minutes after sundown).
Stars:
Within the Southern sky the dwarf galaxies, the Magellanic clouds, are rising. The Giant Magellanic cloud might be in a wonderful viewing place within the late night. The Giant Magellanic cloud and the Tarantula nebula are magnificent objects.
In the event you look due South after astronomical twilight (and hour and a half after sundown) in a darkish sky location you will note what appears to be like like two wispy clouds however not like clouds they don’t transfer, these are the Magellanic clouds, the dwarf companion galaxies to ours. The most important of the wisps, to the left of due south is the big Magellanic cloud. The Giant Magellanic cloud lies at an approximate distance of 163,000 gentle years from us. The LMC has a outstanding bar in its central area, which signifies that it might have beforehand been a barred spiral galaxy.
A line by means of Sirius and Canopus carried on will piece the center of the LMC. Throughout the hazy disk of the LMC is a fuzzy star, that is the tarantula nebula. Whereas it’s not a lot to the unaided eye, and a mere fuzzy patch in binoculars, in a telescope it’s excellent. It’s the most lively star-forming area within the 30-odd galaxies together with the Milky Method that make up the Native Group In a telescope you possibly can see the spidery look for which it’s named, a dozen or so extremely sizzling huge stars on the centre of lengthy tendrils of sizzling fuel (why not octopus?).
There are additionally a number of open clusters and nebula and a globular cluster to discover with binoculars, so you possibly can spend fairly a little bit of time on the LMC alone. In a telescope they’re even higher. Simply south of the Tarantula nebula is a posh of clusters that repays exploration.
As effectively, the skies function Orion the Hunter striding throughout the sky, The distinctive V form of the Taurus the bull, and the gorgeous Pleiades cluster. For us within the southern hemisphere the Pleaides are nearly due moth at astronomical twilight. Strive counting what number of stars you see. One other title for the Pleiades is the seven sisters, are you able to see seven stars?
The Southern Pleiades, a gaggle of stars clustered across the star theta carina, is now readily seen two hand-spans above the southern cross.
The Christmas vacation season might be a improbable time to discover our skies.
Labels: Month-to-month sky, unaideed eye


