2025 Guide to the Night Sky Southern Hemisphere
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2025 Guide to the Night Sky Southern Hemisphere
The ideal gift for all amateur and seasoned astronomers.
A comprehensive handbook to the planets, stars and constellations visible from the southern hemisphere. 6 pages for each month covering January–December 2025.
The ideal gift for all amateur and seasoned astronomers.
2025 Guide to the Night Sky Southern Hemisphere is a comprehensive handbook to the planets, stars, and constellations visible from the southern hemisphere. It includes 6 pages for each month, covering January–December 2025.
Diagrams are drawn for the latitude of southern Australia but include events visible from New Zealand and South Africa.
Written and illustrated by astronomical experts, the content includes:
- Advice on where to start looking
- Easy-to-use star maps for each month with descriptions of what to see
- Special, detailed charts for positions of planets, minor planets, and comets in 2025
- Seasonal charts
- Details of dark sky sites
- Details of objects and events you might see in 2025
- Diagrams of notable events visible from Australia, with some for New Zealand and South Africa
Also available: A month-by-month guide to exploring the skies above Britain and Ireland and a month-by-month guide to exploring the skies above North America.
Book Details
INFORMATION
ISBN: 9780008688158
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Format: Paperback / softback
Date Published: 29 August 2024
Country: United Kingdom
Imprint: Collins
Audience: General / adult
DIMENSIONS
Spine width: 10.0mm
Width: 148.0mm
Height: 210.0mm
Weight: 160g
Pages: 112
About the Author
Storm Dunlop has written numerous books on astronomy and meteorology, and has acted as editor and consultant on many more. He is a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society, a member of both the International Astronomical Union and the American Association of Variable Star Observers, and is a former President of the British Astronomical Association. Storm is a Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Sussex. Wil Tirion was trained in graphic arts and has always had an interest in astronomy and especially star charts. In 1983 he became a self-employed full time Uranographer. Since then he has contributed to many atlases, books and magazines. In 1987 he received the 'Dr. J. van der Bilt-prize', a Dutch award for amateur astronomers. In 1993 this was followed by a second, more international 'award', when a minor planet was named after him: (4648) Tirion = 1931 UE. The Royal Observatory, Greenwich is the home of Greenwich Mean Time and the Prime Meridian of the World, making it the official starting point for each new day and year. It is also home to London's only planetarium, the Harrison timekeepers and the UK's largest refracting telescope. It runs the annual Astronomy Photographer of the Year exhibition.
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