BBC Sky at Night

Balmy nights of brilliant sights

When I was getting into astronomy it was always said that, as summer arrives, the lighter nights make observing sessions rather pointless. What I eventually learnt is that while chasing the dimmest faint fuzzies at the eyepiece might be out of the question in June, the warm evenings can still be a time when treasured celestial memories are made. There’s certainly no reason to leave the telescope or binoculars gathering dust this month, with some fine star clusters, noctilucent clouds, planetary alignments and more to be seen. In this article we’ve picked out a selection of phenomena that will hopefully provide some satisfying observing and imaging challenges during the nights of June. And while our list is tailored slightly more to the interests of an intermediate-level astronomer with photographic kit to hand, there are some great beginner targets scattered among them.

Will Gater is an astronomy journalist and science presenter. His latest book, The Mysteries of the Universe, is published by DK

The Beehive Cluster

We begin our journey around June’s night skies with a goodbye of sorts, looking at a spring target that’s sinking into the west now that summer’s here. On the night of 1 June you’ll

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC Sky at Night

BBC Sky at Night2 min read
Binocular Tour
10 x 50 In the days before Herman Snellen introduced his eponymous eye-test chart, mag. +2.2 Mizar (Zeta (ζ) Ursae Majoris) and mag. +4.0 Alcor (80 Ursae Majoris) were used as an eyesight test: if you couldn’t see two stars, you knew you needed spect
BBC Sky at Night3 min read
Saturn
PICK OF THE MONTH Best time to see: 31 May, 04:00 BST (03:00 UT) Altitude: 12° Location: Aquarius Direction: Southeast Features: Rings, subtle atmospheric banding, brighter moons Recommended equipment: 75mm or larger telescope There’s no getting away
BBC Sky at Night2 min read
Looking back: The Sky at Night 15 May 1974
On the 15 May 1974 episode, Patrick Moore spoke with US astronomer Carl Sagan about the many investigative strands when looking for alien life. “One is laboratory work on the question of the origin of life, making the molecules which [would]… lead ev

Related Books & Audiobooks