Your star will be in the constellation of Apus (Bird of Paradise, change the constellation or read more on this constellation).
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In January, this star can be viewed from in the morningin the evening.
Around 12:12am in early 01 (EST), it can be found at an elevation of 0° in the 0. Please make sure that no obstacles (such as building, mountains, or trees) are impeding your view.
Show more astronomical data for this star
The star has a magnitude of 13.83 mag and is at a distance of many light years.
It is at coordinates -72.8997° (declination) and 14h 52m 58.85s (right ascension).
Magnitude:
The magnitude (brightness) is measured on a logarithmic scale. Small numbers mean bright stars: A star with a brightness of 1 mag is 100 times brighter that an star with 6 mag.
13.83 mag
Star name:
UCAC3 catalog star 2604682
Tycho-Identifier:
HIP-Identifier:
UCAC3-Identifier:
This star belongs to the huge UCAC 3 catalog. It is identified by this number in the UCAC 3 catalog.
2604682
HIP-Identifier:
Declination:
-72.8997°
Right ascension:
14h 52m 58.85s (223.24521°)
Distance:
The distance is measured in light years (LY). A light year is the distance, that light travels within one year. 1 LJ is equal to about 5,878,630,000,000 miles.
many LY
Spectral type:
not in database
Constellation:
Every star belongs to a constellation, and 12 of those constellations are part of the zodiac.
Apus (Bird of Paradise)
This is a rather small and not very distinct constellation close to the southern pole in the sky. It was introduced by Johann Bayer in 1603.
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