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April 20, 2021 04:54 ET | Source: ReportLinker ReportLinker Lyon, FRANCE
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Mon Mar 1, 2021 LEO S RETURN
March, it’s said, comes in like a lion. This is meant to refer to the changeable weather of the new month, as cold winter air meets the warm breezes of spring. But there’s also an astronomical connection. Look south this evening and there you will find the bright stars of winter. Chief among them is Orion the Hunter. Along with him are the constellations Taurus the Bull, the Big and Little Dogs, Auriga the Charioteer, and the Gemini, all marked by bright stars. Now look toward the east. Not much there. But toward the eastern horizon, you ll find another star called Regulus, and it represents the heart of the constellation Leo the Lion. There are several other stars nearby which, with Regulus, form the outline of a backwards question mark in the sky – the lion’s head and mane. Leo is the first of our springtime constellations. The Lion always comes into our eastern evening sky when March begins.
Las Malvinas, la China y la Cruz del Sur aimdigital.com.ar - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from aimdigital.com.ar Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Stars, galaxies, dust clouds and Uranus: take a tour of the January night sky
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The belt of Orion aka The Saucepan dominates the northern sky in summer.
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January is the month to go star-hopping to see how many constellations you can spot.
You might also see a galaxy if you ve headed bush for the holidays and the skies are clear.
And, if you ve packed some binoculars, a camera or a telescope, you can see stunning dust clouds, star clusters and distant planets too.
It s a bumper of a month, according to amateur astronomer Ian Musgrave.