by mfavret » Mon Jan 23, 2017 6:46 am
I'm french and I hope that you will excuse my poor English.
When I learned the winter sky, many years ago, my astronomers friends teached me another asterism including ALL the brightest stars of this part of the sky, including the Orion's "shoulders" Bellatrix and Betelgeuse.
This is the "big G" of winter : starting with Aldebaran, then Capella and it's neighbour Menkalinan (Bet Aur, that's produce a more "round" shape), Castor and Pollux, Procyon and Sirius, Rigel, and last the right line of the "G" formed with Bellatrix and Betelgeuse.
You can see it on the simple sky map included my "the monthly sky" (Le ciel du mois), the most visited page of my professionnal web site (I teach the sky in schools with an inflatable planetarium as you can read in the others pages -in French, sorry-) :
http://www.constellationsetgalaxies.org/cielmois.html
I don't know if it's a specific way to draw the winter sky in France or Europe ?!?
Michel FAVRET
I'm french and I hope that you will excuse my poor English.
When I learned the winter sky, many years ago, my astronomers friends teached me another asterism including ALL the brightest stars of this part of the sky, including the Orion's "shoulders" Bellatrix and Betelgeuse.
This is the "big G" of winter : starting with Aldebaran, then Capella and it's neighbour Menkalinan (Bet Aur, that's produce a more "round" shape), Castor and Pollux, Procyon and Sirius, Rigel, and last the right line of the "G" formed with Bellatrix and Betelgeuse.
You can see it on the simple sky map included my "the monthly sky" (Le ciel du mois), the most visited page of my professionnal web site (I teach the sky in schools with an inflatable planetarium as you can read in the others pages -in French, sorry-) :
[url]http://www.constellationsetgalaxies.org/cielmois.html[/url]
I don't know if it's a specific way to draw the winter sky in France or Europe ?!?
Michel FAVRET